
Biography
Kitagawa Utamaro (喜多川歌麿, c. 1753–1806) stands as the supreme master of bijin-ga, the art of depicting beautiful women in the Japanese woodblock print tradition. Working at the height of the ukiyo-e movement in the late eighteenth century, Utamaro transformed the genre from formulaic representations of courtesans and entertainers into penetrating psychological studies of femininity. His invention of the okubi-e format — large-head bust portraits that filled the picture plane with a single face — represented a radical departure from existing conventions and produced some of the most iconic images in the history of Japanese art.
The details of Utamaro's early life remain frustratingly obscure. He was born around 1753, though some scholars place his birth as early as 1750 or as late as 1754. His birthplace is disputed, with Edo (present-day Tokyo), Kawagoe, Kyoto, and Osaka all proposed by various authorities. Even his original family name is uncertain; Kitagawa may have been adopted from his teacher or assumed later in his career.
Utamaro's artistic training almost certainly began under Toriyama Sekien, a painter of the Kano school who had turned to ukiyo-e and was known for his illustrated books of supernatural creatures and folklore. Under Sekien's tutelage, Utamaro received thorough grounding in brushwork, composition, and the conventions of both classical Japanese painting and the more populist ukiyo-e tradition. His earliest known works, produced under the art name Kitagawa Toyoaki, date from the mid-1770s and consist primarily of modest illustrations for popular fiction and theatrical prints of kabuki actors. By the early 1780s, he had adopted the name Utamaro and was beginning to develop a more distinctive voice, particularly in his illustrated books of natural history, including detailed studies of insects, birds, and shells that demonstrated his exceptional powers of observation.
The decisive turning point came through his association with Tsutaya Juzaburo, the most ambitious and artistically discerning publisher in Edo. Tsutaya, whose shop stood at the entrance to the Yoshiwara pleasure quarter, had an unerring instinct for commercial potential. Beginning around 1789 or 1790, the partnership deepened into an artistic collaboration. Tsutaya provided Utamaro with the finest materials — premium pigments, skilled carvers, experienced printers, and luxurious paper — while encouraging him to pursue his most experimental ideas.
Utamaro's great innovation came in the early 1790s with his development of the okubi-e format for portraying beautiful women. Where previous bijin-ga artists had typically shown their subjects at full length, situated within identifiable settings and defined largely by their elaborate costumes, Utamaro brought the viewer startlingly close. His bust portraits cropped the figure at the chest or shoulders and enlarged the face to fill the sheet, often against a plain ground of mica or pale color. This radical simplification directed attention entirely to the woman's face and expression.
In series such as Fujin Sogaku Juttai (Ten Studies in Female Physiognomy) and Kasen Koi no Bu (Anthology of Poems: The Love Section), Utamaro used the subtlest means — the angle of a glance, the set of the lips, the tilt of the head — to suggest distinct psychological states. His prints conveyed contemplation, longing, vanity, tenderness, and quiet amusement with a sophistication that had no precedent in the popular print tradition.
The 1790s represented Utamaro's period of supreme achievement. His subjects ranged from named courtesans of the Yoshiwara to anonymous women of the townsman class engaged in everyday activities. His triptych Women Engaged in the Sericulture Industry depicted the stages of silk production with monumental dignity. He also produced accomplished shunga (erotic prints), including the celebrated Utamakura (Poem of the Pillow, 1788), which combined frank sensuality with extraordinary compositional refinement.
The death of Tsutaya Juzaburo in 1797 deprived Utamaro of his greatest champion. Though he continued to produce work for other publishers, some scholars detect a gradual coarsening in his output after this date.
In 1804, Utamaro produced a triptych depicting the historical figure Toyotomi Hideyoshi feasting with his concubines. The Tokugawa shogunate, acutely sensitive to any depiction sympathetic to the Toyotomi legacy, arrested Utamaro. He was sentenced to fifty days in manacles — a punishment involving heavy wooden restraints that prevented him from drawing. Though he resumed work after his release, contemporaries noted a profound change in his demeanor and output. He died on October 31, 1806, in Edo.
Utamaro's work was among the first Japanese art to reach Europe in significant quantities after Japan opened to international trade. His flattened pictorial space, bold outlines, and subtle color harmonies exerted a powerful influence on Western modernism. Edgar Degas adopted his unconventional vantage points. Mary Cassatt drew directly on his mother-and-child compositions. Art Nouveau designers found in his flowing lines a model for their synthesis of fine and applied art. Utamaro's achievement was to bring the full resources of artistic genius to the depiction of beautiful women, transforming commercial entertainment into penetrating human portraiture.
Key Facts
- Active Period
- 1753–1806
- Movement
- Ukiyo-e
- Works Indexed
- 198
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Kitagawa Utamaro known for?
Kitagawa Utamaro (喜多川歌麿, c. 1753–1806) stands as the supreme master of bijin-ga, the art of depicting beautiful women in the Japanese woodblock print tradition. Working at the height of the ukiyo-e movement in the late eighteenth century, Utamaro transformed the genre from formulaic representations of courtesans and entertainers into penetrating psychological studies of femininity. His invention of the okubi-e format — large-head bust portraits that filled the picture plane with a single face — represented a radical departure from existing conventions and produced some of the most iconic images in the history of Japanese art.
When was Kitagawa Utamaro active?
Kitagawa Utamaro was active from 1753 to 1806. They were associated with the Ukiyo-e movement.
What artistic movements influenced Kitagawa Utamaro?
Kitagawa Utamaro's work was shaped by the Ukiyo-e tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Ukiyo-e: Ukiyo-e ("pictures of the floating world") is the dominant tradition of Japanese woodblock printing, flourishing from the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries.
Where can I see Kitagawa Utamaro's original prints?
Original prints by Kitagawa Utamaro can be found in collections including Cleveland Museum of Art, Harvard Art Museums, Art Institute of Chicago, Victoria and Albert Museum.
External Resources
Woodblock Prints by Kitagawa Utamaro (198)

Drying Clothes (Monohoshi)
c. 1790
Color woodblock prints; oban triptych

Girl Reading Letter while Mother and Child Gaze at Sparrows
c. 1791
Color woodblock print; aiban

The Fourth Month (Shigatsu), from an untitled series of genre scenes in the twelve months, with kyoka poems
c. 1792/93
Color woodblock print; chuban

Woman Reading a Letter, from the series Ten Classes of Women's Physiognomy (Fujo ninso juppon) (Fumi yomu onna)
c. 1792/93
Color woodblock print; oban

The Interesting Type (Omoshiroki so), from the series “Ten Types in the Physiognomic Study of Women" ("Fujin sogaku juttai")
c. 1792/93
Color woodblock print; oban

Naniwaya Okita
c. 1793
Color woodblock print; oban

Seiro niwaka onna geisha no bu : Asazumabune Ogiuri Uta.....
1793
Color woodblock print; oban

Tomimoto Toyohina
c. 1793
Color woodblock print; oban

Reflective Love, from the series "Anthology of Poems: The Love Section (Kasen koi no bu) (Mono-omou koi)"
c. 1793/94
Color woodblock print, oban

The Flirtatious Type, from Ten Types in the Physiognomy of Women
c. 1793
color woodblock print

Okita and Ofuji
c. 1793/94
Color woodblock print; oban

Parody of a scene from "The Pillow Book"
c. 1793/97
Color woodblock print; horizontal o-tanzaku, surimono

Hanamurasaki of the Tamaya, (kamuro:) Shirabe, Teriha, Flowers from the series Snow, Moon and Flowers in Yoshiwara (Seiro setsugekka) (Tamaya uchi Hanamurasaki, Shirabe, Teriha)
1793
Color woodblock print; oban

Wakaume of the Tamaya in Edo-cho itchome, and her child attendants Mumeno and Iroka (Edo-cho itchome, Tamaya uchi Wakaume Mumeno Iroka)
c. 1793/94
Color woodblock print; oban
Three Beauties of the Present Day
c. 1793
Woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper with mica ground

Woman Holding a Fan (from the series Ten Aspects of the Physiognomy of Women)
c. 1793
color woodblock print

Three Beauties of Yoshiwara (Seiro san bijin)
1793
Color woodblock print; oban
![A Low Class Prostitute (Gun [teppo]), from the series “Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter" ("Hokkoku goshiki-zumi") by Kitagawa Utamaro](https://www.artic.edu/iiif/2/ed82be98-8a83-4163-ccc4-e2f7210cce55/full/843,/0/default.jpg)
A Low Class Prostitute (Gun [teppo]), from the series “Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter" ("Hokkoku goshiki-zumi")
c. 1794/95
Color woodblock print; oban

Kisegawa of the Matsubaya, from the series "Comparing the Charms of Five Beauties (Gonin bijin aikyo kurabe)"
c. 1795/96
Color woodblock print; oban

Drying and stretching cloth
c. 1796-97
Color woodblock print, ōban, left sheet of a triptych

Geisha Style (geisha fū) from the series Guide to Contemporary Styles (Tōsei fūzoku tsū)
1801
Color woodblock print; oban

Yosooi of the Matsubaya, from the series Selections from Six Houses in Yoshiwara (Seiro rokkasen) (Matsubaya Yosooi)
c. 1801/02
Color woodblock print; oban

Parody of Minamoto no Yoritomo releasing cranes at Yuigahama
c. 1805
Color woodblock print; oban triptych

Sankatsu and Hanshichi, from the series Fashionable Patterns in Utamaro Style (Ryuko moyo Utamaro-gata) (Sankatsu, Hanshichi)
Woodblock print

Utamaro's Stylish Patterns (Ryuku moyu Utamaro gata) : Komurasaki and Gonpachi
Woodblock print

Five Amorous Festivals of Love (Aibore iro no go sekku): The Ninth Month
Woodblock print

Yaoya Oshichi and Koshô Kichisaburô (Yaoya Oshichi and Koshô Kichisaburô)
Woodblock print

Bow (Hamayumi)
Woodblock print

Ten Types of Female Physiognomy (Fujin sôgaku jittai) : An Interesting Face (Omoshiroki sô)
Woodblock print

Abalone Divers
Woodblock print

Famous Flowers of Beauty from the Pleasure Quarters (Seiro bijin meika awase): Tsukioka of the Hyogoya
Woodblock print

Ayatsuri moyo take no hitofushi: Awa no Naruto
Woodblock print

Double Pillow
Woodblock print

Komurasaki of the Miuraya and Shirai Gompachi (Miuraya Komurasaki, Shirai Gompachi)
Woodblock print

kitagawa-utamaro
Woodblock print

Yamauba Holding Chestnuts while Kintarô Reaches for Them
Woodblock print

A Standing Screen Depicting Narihira’s Journey to the East
Woodblock print

Takigawa of the Ogiya (Ogiya uchi Takigawa, Onami, Menami, Kisagawa, Hanamichi, Himekawa, Kumegawa)
Woodblock print

Beauty with Pipe
Woodblock print

High-ranked Courtesan, from the series Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter (Hokkoku goshiki-zumi) (Oiran)
Woodblock print

Hokkoku goshiki zumi : Teppo
Woodblock print

Seven Beauties of the Pleasure Quarters (Seiro nana komachi): Kisegawa of the Matsubaya with Attendants Sasano and Takeno
Woodblock print

Eight Famous Views of Women (Meisho koshikake hakkei) : Woman Holding a Mirror
Woodblock print

Man and woman (Lovers) beside a freestanding screen
Woodblock print

Takigawa of the Ogiya Green house
Woodblock print

Hanaogi of the Ogiya-uchi (Brothel)
Woodblock print

A young fan seller and a beauty
Woodblock print

Ha.... Of the southern station
Woodblock print

Abalone Divers at Chopping Block Rock at Iwaya in Enoshima
Woodblock print

Abuna-e for a shunga series
Woodblock print

Hambei, the greengrocer, and his wife Ochiyo
Woodblock print

Imose of the Akatsuta-ya with her kamuro
Woodblock print

Three young people celebrating the Niwaka Estival
Woodblock print

Ichikawa of the Matsbara-ya
Woodblock print

Ichikawa and Takigawa of the Matsubara-ya
Woodblock print

Hour of the Snake - 10 AM
Woodblock print
Yūgiri and Izaemon, from the series Tailored Journeys of Couple's Crests (Hiyoku mon michiyuki shitate)
early 19th century
Woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
Three Puppies Playing
late 18th-early 19th century
Ukiyo-e woodblock printed surimono; ink and colors on paper

Peonies
n.d.
Color woodblock print; surimono

A Test of Skill - the Headwaters of Amorousness (Jitsu kurabe iro no minakami): Osan and Mohei
n.d.
Color woodblock print; oban