Headquarters at Sentoguchi, Kumamoto

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Headquarters at Sentoguchi, Kumamoto

Alternate Title: 熊本 川尻口 本管 之 圖
Series: An Oral Account of the Subjugation of Kagoshima
Japan, 1877, March
Prints; woodblocks
Triptych; color woodblock print
13 7/8 x 27 15/16 in. (35.2 x 70.9 cm)
Herbert R. Cole Collection (M.84.31.319a-c)
Not currently on public view

About The Era

The Meiji Restoration (1868) ended the Tokugawa shogunate (military bureaucracy) and the reign of the samurai, but the popularity of samurai legend and lore remained....
The Meiji Restoration (1868) ended the Tokugawa shogunate (military bureaucracy) and the reign of the samurai, but the popularity of samurai legend and lore remained. While Meiji administrators began developing a new style of government based on European models, Japanese artists learned techniques of Western art, employing them to a greater or lesser extent. Warriors and the ideals they represented remained a major subject of Japanese prints, especially as Tokugawa censorship laws were lifted and artists were free to chronicle current events. Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) embraced journalistic veracity; an eyewitness to several major battles, his prints after 1868 are striking in their realism and unflinching depictions of war time. Yoshitoshi and other artists illustrated the last stand of the samurai, a war fought on the southern island of Kyushū, creating bloody and often romantic images of a martial culture in peril. The heroes of these prints were not the imperial Japanese army, who triumphed in the end, but the samurai rebels, who fought fiercely to maintain the power and ideals of their clans.
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