Ukiyo-e prints appear in Japan around the time the Tokugawa Shoguns were consolidating their rule (1603 to 1868). After centuries of permanent civil warfare, the power of the Shoguns brought a long period of peace and was based in a military Dictatorship imposed on a society strongly controlled and in a very strict separation of the four major classes: warrior, farmer, artisan and trader.
One of the most effective security devices created by the Tokugawa was the principle of alternate residence , or sankin kotai, daimyos to reside in alternate periods in their fiefs and the military and political capital, Edo (present Tokyo). While the daimyos resided in their fiefs, their families were forced to remain in Edo.
This concentration of a significant part of the ruling class in Edo attracted a large number of artisans and traders who constituted, together with the minor functionaries dependent of the Tokugawa administration and of the daimyos, a kind of urban middle class. Thus, Edo was transformed from a small provincial town into metropolis of one million persons, one of the largest cities in the world.
The daimyos, their families and entourage , formed a very concentrated market, almost captive, which gave a big impetus to the activities of the traders and artisans. Their welfare rose in proportion
The plebeian urban classes, in strict isolation from the dominant classes, developed their own social, cultural and artistic expressions. These forms and expressions developed in a context of entrepreneurship, and having always in their view the enlarged market of the urban middle classes.
Another very important aspect of this movement is the extraordinary importance given to luxury and to the pleasures of life. From this developed a complex of theaters, brothels, tea-houses, restaurants and guest-houses. It was to these pleasure quarters and to the connected houses, people and activities that the name Ukiyo, or floating world was given.
As a result of these two essential aspects, Ukiyo-e were considered a commercial activity, not related to "serious" art. This commercial character is essential to understand the preponderance of certain themes, characteristic of Ukiyo-eprints, and also plays a great role in explaining why some of the greatest artists of this form had so much difficulty in gaining recognition.
Kisaku Tanaka has written: 'Ukiyoe' -- subject(s): Ukiyoe
Tetsu Takahashi has written: 'Ukiyoe' -- subject(s): Sex in art, Ukiyoe
Fujio Tsuruya has written: 'Ukiyoe monogatari' -- subject(s): Sex in art, Ukiyoe
The cast of Ukiyoe - 2005 includes: Fumiaki Asahiya Yusuke Ogura Atsuko Terao
Naoji Kanamori has written: 'Ukiyoe ikkan hyakushu' -- subject(s): Ukiyoe, Seashore in art
Masako Tanabe has written: 'Sugu wakaru tanoshii Edo no ukiyoe' -- subject(s): Japanese Color prints, Ukiyoe, Art and society
Muneshige Narazaki has written: 'Hokusai' -- subject(s): Fuji, Views 'Ukiyo-E: Masterpieces in European Collections :Victoria and Albert Museum Ii/With English Supplement (Ukiyo-E Masterpieces in European Collections)' 'Shoki ukiyse' -- subject(s): Ukiyoe 'Sharaku' -- subject(s): Actors in art, Ukiyoe 'Ukiyo-E Masterpieces in European Collections' 'Studies in nature: Hokusai-Hiroshige' 'The Japanese print: its evolution and essence' -- subject(s): Japanese Color prints, Ukiyoe 'Ukiyo-E Masterpieces in European Collections 9' 'Early paintings' -- subject(s): Japanese Screen painting, Japanese Scrolls, Ukiyoe 'Nikuhitsu ukiyoe' -- subject(s): Japanese Painting, Ukiyoe
Kazuhiko Fukuda has written: 'Ukiyoe' -- subject(s): Art, Japanese, Catalogs, Collectors and collecting, Errotic art, Japanese Art, Ukiyoe 'Edo ukiyoeshitachi' -- subject(s): Artists, Biography, Color prints, Japanese, Japanese Color prints, Japanese Painting, Painting, Japanese, Ukiyoe
Eisen Ikeda has written: 'Eisen ukiyoe ten'
Toyokuni Utagawa has written: 'Toyokuni' -- subject(s): Ukiyoe, Kabuki in art
Katsuhiko Takahashi has written: 'Sharaku satsujin jiken' -- subject(s): Fiction, Ukiyoe
Sandy Kita has written: 'The last Tosa' -- subject(s): Painters, Ukiyoe, Biography