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The Lovers Shirai Gonpachi and Komurasaki of the Miuraya
The Lovers Shirai Gonpachi and Komurasaki of the Miuraya
Public domain: Image courtesy of the Worcester Art Museum.

The Lovers Shirai Gonpachi and Komurasaki of the Miuraya

Artist (Japanese, active late 1780s-early 1800s)
Dateabout 1793
Mediumwoodblock print; ink and color on paper
Dimensions32 x 22.2 cm (12 5/8 x 8 3/4 in.)
ClassificationsPrints
MarkingsCensor's seal: kiwame Publisher's seal: Mura
Credit LineJohn Chandler Bancroft Collection
Object number1901.59.2178
DescriptionStanding figures of the famous lovers. According to the inscription: "In the style of a picture by Suzuki Harunobu." A similar print bearing the same inscription was also designed by Utamaro. Neither in that nor in this rendereing is there any real resemblance to the style of Harunobu save a certain serenity. The figures, as in the case of
Label TextTragic love stories taken from real life and dramatized were a staple of stage and print; the darkly romantic combination of desire and death was hugely popular in the eighteenth century. Shirai Gompachi was a warrior of the Tottori fief in western Japan who fled to Edo after committing a murder. He was apprehended and sentenced to death in 1679. His distraught lover, the courtesan Komurasaki, committed suicide at his grave.
On View
Not on view
Lovers at the Yoshiwara Pleasure Quarters, scene 23
Suzuki Harunobu 鈴木 春信
1768–1770
A New Year's Day Gathering
Eishosai Choki
about 1794
The Lovers O'Hana And Hanshichi
Eishosai Shiko
about 1800
Komurasaki Lamenting at the Grave of Shirai Gompachi
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 月岡 芳年
March 22nd, 1886
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Northern German
1555–1560
The Lovers Urazato and Tokijiro
Kikukawa Eizan 菊川 英山
about 1814–1815
Akasaka Palace
Hiratsuka, Un'ichi
1945
Takeda Shingen
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 月岡 芳年
October 20, 1886
Rebecca Orne
Joseph Badger
1757
Reference Image - Not for Reproduction
Chinese
960–1279, late Song Dynasty (1200s–1300s)