Kokugikan enjō (The National Sumō Arena in Flames), from the series Taishō shinkasai mokuhangashū (Collection of Woodblock Prints of the Taishō Earthquake)
Nishizawa Tekiho, Kokugikan enjō (The National Sumō Arena in Flames), from the series Taishō shinkasai mokuhangashū (Collection of Woodblock Prints of the Taishō Earthquake), 1924, color woodblock print on paper, Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Paquet, © Heirs of Nishizawa Tekiho, 88.6.5
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- Title
Kokugikan enjō (The National Sumō Arena in Flames), from the series Taishō shinkasai mokuhangashū (Collection of Woodblock Prints of the Taishō Earthquake)
- Related Titles
original language: 国技館炎上
series (original language): 大正震火災木版画集
series (translated): Collection of Woodblock Prints of the Taishō Earthquake
series (transliterated): Taishō shinkasai mokuhangashū
translated: The National Sumō Arena in Flames
transliterated: Kokugikan enjō
- Artist
- Date
1924
- Period
Japan: Taishō period (1912-1926)
- Medium
color woodblock print on paper
- Dimensions (H x W x D)
image: 8 1/4 in x 11 3/8 in; sheet: 8 3/4 in x 11 7/8 in
- Inscriptions & Markings
title: 国技館炎上, printed in black ink, center left Transliteration (Translation): Kokugikan enjō (National Sumō Arena in flames) Language: Japanese
seal: , printed in red relief within oval cartouche, center left Translation: [seal of the artist Nishizawa Tekiho 西沢笛畝] Language: Japanese Description: Undeciphered seal
signature: 笛畝画, printed in black ink, center left Transliteration (Translation): Tekiho ga (picture [by] Tekiho) Language: Japanese
- Collection Area
Asian Art; Graphic Arts
- Category
Books, Portfolios, and Manuscripts
Japanese Traditional Prints
- Object Type
relief print
- Culture
Japanese
- Credit Line
Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Paquet
- Accession Number
88.6.5
- Copyright
© Heirs of Nishizawa Tekiho
- Terms
Taishô shinkasai mokuhangashû (Collection of Woodblock Prints of the Taishô Earthquake), 1924
In 1924, the Japanese publisher Hoshino Seki issued a set of thirty-six prints depicting scenes from the aftermath of the September 1, 1923 great Tokyo earthquake. He commissioned six artists to each produce six designs based on eye witness sketches and accounts, which the master carver Nagashima Kiichi and printer Tamura Tetsunosuke then translated into color woodblock prints for the portfolio.
An important part of the Portland Art Museum collection of Japanese prints (88.6.1-36), the Museum is placing this historic series online at this time to honor the victims of the March 11, 2011 earthquake in northeastern Japan.
To donate to the international relief effort, please click on one of the links below.
RED CROSS: http://american.redcross.org/site/PageServer?pagename=ntld_main
MERCY CORPS: https://www.mercycorps.org/donate/japan
- Exhibitions
2011 The Artist's Touch, The Craftsman's Hand: Three Centuries of Japanese Prints from the Portland Art Museum Portland Art Museum