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Fan print with two bugaku dancers : ウィキペディア英語版 | Fan print with two bugaku dancers
Fan print with two bugaku dancers is an ''ukiyo-e'' woodblock print dating to sometime between the mid 1820s and 1844 by celebrated Edo period artist Utagawa Kunisada, also known as Toyokuni III. This print is simultaneously an example of the ''uchiwa-e'' (fan print) and ''aizuri-e'' (monochromatic blue print) genres. It is part of the permanent collection of the Prince Takamado Gallery of Japan at the Royal Ontario Museum, Canada. ==''Uchiwa-e''== ''Uchiwa'' (団扇) are non-folding, flat, oval fans. They are still used today for cooling rice in the preparation of sushi, in dance performances, and as a cooling tool. Historically, ''uchiwa'' were a predominantly female accessory, men typically carrying folding fans known as ''ōgi'' (扇), ''suehiro'' (末広) or ''sensu'' (扇子).〔Salter 2006, 25〕〔() 〕 They are associated with summer, traditionally having been sold only during the summer months, and decorated with summer imagery.〔 At least one modern critic argues that, due to their use by women during periods of heat, ''uchiwa'' "can have suggestive connotations."〔Salter 2006, 79〕 Like ''ōgi-e'' (扇絵) folding fan prints, ''uchiwa-e'' were traditionally made from ''washi'' rice paper mounted on a wooden frame. Images were printed on paper, then cut along the margins and pasted onto a skeletal bamboo frame.〔Bell 2004, xiv〕〔Marks 2010, 14〕 As a result of their frequent handling, few pristine mounted examples remain.〔Harris 2010, 106〕
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