Photo of collection object Graffiti on a Storehouse Wall
Utagawa Kuniyoshi. Graffiti on a Storehouse Wall, 1847. Color woodblock print on paper, approx.: 10 × 15 in. (25.4 × 38.1 cm). Gift of John C. Copoulos, 2016.12. No known copyright restrictions.

Graffiti on a Storehouse Wall

1847

Utagawa Kuniyoshi

Japanese, 1798-1861

Asian Art

In the early 1840s, the Japanese government passed laws to limit what it saw as excessive freedom of expression among Japan’s urbanites. The laws banned the overt representation of current events in works of art and theater. Although actor images were still allowed, adding written information about the actor or his current production was forbidden. The artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi poked fun at those restrictions when he released a series of prints that purported to illustrate a wall covered with graffiti but actually contained multiple actor portraits, many accompanied by notes that hinted at the roles they were playing. The artist chose a specific term for the graffiti, nitakaragura, because it incorporates the Japanese phrase nita kara, meaning “don’t they look like?” Apparently the joke was subtle enough, because two different government censors left their seals of approval on the page.
Maker/Artist
Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Classification
Print
Formatted Medium
Color woodblock print on paper
Locations
Place made: Japan
Dimensions
approx.: 10 × 15 in. (25.4 × 38.1 cm)
Departments
Asian Art
Accession Number
2016.12
Credit Line
Gift of John C. Copoulos
Rights Statement
No known copyright restrictions
Dominant Colors

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