Skip to main content
Collections Menu
SAM'S collection
Photo: Beth Mann
Otsu-e Painting: Wisteria Girl
Photo: Beth Mann

Otsu-e Painting: Wisteria Girl

Date17th-18th century
Label TextOtsu-e got their name from the town of Otsu, a popular destination for pilgrims in the 17th–­19th centuries. As souvenirs for travelers, Otsu-e paintings were made to be inexpensive, simple, and easily reproducible, characteristics that are at the core of Yanagi’s criterion of beauty. This example shows Wisteria girl (an ideal beauty), a recognizable figure that was commonly depicted in Otsu-e. This genre of painting commonly expressed good morals and duties but was sometimes also seen as satirically parodying the elite.
Object number49.585
Photo CreditPhoto: Beth Mann
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Exceptionally Ordinary: Mingei 1920–2020, Dec. 14, 2019 - Sept. 6, 2021.
Credit LineEugene Fuller Memorial Collection
Dimensions24 3/4 x 9 5/8 in. (62.87 x 24.45 cm) Overall h.: 42 in. Overall w.: 11 1/8 in.
MediumInk and color on paper
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
17th-18th century
Object number: 49.586
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
17th-18th century
Object number: 49.587
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
17th-18th century
Object number: 49.588
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 33.1730
Japanese
ca. 1900
Object number: 2010.41.118
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
17th century
Object number: 49.272
Battle Scene
Japanese
14th century
Object number: 48.173
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
16th century
Object number: 34.100
Photo: Beth Mann
Japanese
early 18th century
Object number: 34.115
Photo: Scott Leen
Japanese
Object number: 92.47.323.30