Otani Tokuji as the Servant Sodesuke in Flowering Irises: A Soga Vendetta of the Bunroku Era

Description

The actor portrays a servant in the play Blooming Iris: Soga Vendetta, which opened at the Miyako Theater in June 1794. The play relates a 12th-century story about brothers who avenge the death of their murdered father. The clenched fist and mouth express the character’s determination.

Sharaku is mentioned in the most important biographical resource for actors compiled during the Kansai era (1789-1801). Since Sharaku’s career was so short, the text may reflect public reaction to his portraits: "Sharaku: another artist who did likenesses of actors, but his excess of zeal to draw the real realistically led him to produce strange works, so that his popularity did not last long, and he ceased to work within a year or two."

Provenance

(Yamanaka & Co., New York, NY, ?-1925, sold to Edward Loder Whittemore) (?-1925); Edward Loder Whittemore [1862-1930], Cleveland, OH, 1925-1930, bequest to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1925-1930); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1930-present (1930-)

Otani Tokuji as the Servant Sodesuke in Flowering Irises: A Soga Vendetta of the Bunroku Era

Tōshūsai Sharaku

1794

Accession Number

1930.206

Medium

color woodblock print

Dimensions

36.2 x 25.2 cm (14 1/4 x 9 15/16 in.)

Classification

Print

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Edward L. Whittemore