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Source Description

This is a simple wooden printing block used to produce a single color image. It is carved on both sides with stereotypical scenes of Japanese women and flowers. The obverse carries a scene of a woman in a kimono decorated with large peony flowers. She is shown pulling a cart with a vase of summer flowers. On the reverse, two women in flowered robes are harvesting grasses. They are joined by a poem in running script on the theme of picking grasses.Generally, blocks of this type used for the production of Japanese prints are neither collected nor retained as works of art. They are tools that were used and either sanded down after their images became worn or burned as fuel when their usefulness had run out. This block was likely made to produce a small number of prints following the general decline of the print tradition toward the end of the nineteenth century or beginning of the twentieth. It shows signs of having been used to produce prints, but it is only lightly worn on each side. It was likely saved for its decorative quality and later sold as a curiosity.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
83527
label
Wooden Printing Block
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
2
Source metadata
id
83527
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Wooden Printing Block
description
This is a simple wooden printing block used to produce a single color image. It is carved on both sides with stereotypical scenes of Japanese women and flowers. The obverse carries a scene of a woman in a kimono decorated with large peony flowers. She is shown pulling a cart with a vase of summer flowers. On the reverse, two women in flowered robes are harvesting grasses. They are joined by a poem in running script on the theme of picking grasses.Generally, blocks of this type used for the production of Japanese prints are neither collected nor retained as works of art. They are tools that were used and either sanded down after their images became worn or burned as fuel when their usefulness had run out. This block was likely made to produce a small number of prints following the general decline of the print tradition toward the end of the nineteenth century or beginning of the twentieth. It shows signs of having been used to produce prints, but it is only lightly worn on each side. It was likely saved for its decorative quality and later sold as a curiosity.
provenance
Erna Hoffberger, Upperville, Virginia [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Monika Griff, Maryland, October 19, 2010, by inheritance [from her sister Erna Hoffberger]; Walters Art Museum, 2011, by gift.
date
ca. 1900
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
printing blocks
imageCount
2
pageCount
2
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
33.4
height
23.2
depth
1.8
dimensionsRaw
H: 13 1/8 x W: 9 1/8 x D: 11/16 in. (33.4 x 23.2 x 1.8 cm)
Source extras
med
wood (cherry)
creator_ids
6194
collection_ids
JPK
exhibition_ids
3514
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
b7ec8423277e2e00
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
b23c15f733a318c9
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no