is the Japanese term for picture books. It may be applied in the general sense, or may refer specifically to a type of woodblock printed illustrated volume published in the Edo period (1603–1867).
The first were religious items with images by Buddhist painters.[1] Those from the Muromachi period are typically known as .[2] In the early modern period (1600–1868) illustrated books exploded in popularity. They covered a diverse range of subjects with experimentation in production techniques.
production was a significant part of the Japanese publishing industry (particularly) during the 19th century; most Japanese woodblock print artists of the period produced designs (often in large quantities), as commercial work.[3]
Toward the end of the 19th century, chapter-books were eclipsed in popularity by the new "Western" concept of literary magazines. These were larger books which contained more, and a wider range of material per-issue, but usually fewer pictures (measured on a text-to-images ratio). They often used more modern printing methods; the increase in production costs was offset by increased efficiency, larger-scale printing and distribution, and the introduction of advertising. Typically, a magazine would include one large folded, polychrome illustration referencing some "feature" story in the volume, as a frontispiece. Such pictures, woodblock-printed in colour, are known as . The new format also absorbed most of the remaining talent and market for ukiyo-e style prints.
Artist manuals or model books [4] were treasured by art schools and became popular with the public. Ōoka Shunboku's ('Hand mirror') of 1720 demonstrated characteristic styles of different artists. Illustrations which were either handpainted or stenciled appear in his of 1746, based on the successful Chinese Manual of the Mustard Seed Garden of 1679 which was released as a Japanese version,, in 1748.
In 1765 polychrome woodblock printing was developed in Edo. The prints were called, 'brocade pictures', because of their similarity to color silk brocades . The first large-scale commercial book with full-color printing was in 1770, with artwork by ukiyo-e artists Katsukawa Shunshō and Ippitsusai Bunchō. The book featured realistic depictions of kabuki actors and was popular with theatergoers.[5] The same year saw the publication of Tachibana Minkō's which was colored with a stenciling technique known as . It depicted craftsmen at work at was immediately successful. Also published in 1770 was by Suzuki Harunobu which combined poetry with images of courtesans from the Yoshiwara brothel district.
In 1790 the Tokugawa shogunate introduced severe censorship laws for publishers. They targeted "luxurious" works and for a while publishers ceased production of color woodblock-printed books.
The famous ukiyo-e artist Hokusai worked on dozens of early in his career. In 1814 the first volume of his was published which featured hundreds of drawings colored with gray and rose pink tones. Its popularity with multiple subsequent volumes appears to have influenced other publishers to use a simplified palette of subdued color. One of the finest ehon works is his 100 Views of Mount Fuji released in 1834–1835 in two volumes by Nishimuraya Yohachi with extremely fine carving by the workshop of Egawa Tomekichi and exquisite grey gradations . It is seen as the pinnacle of monochrome printing.[6] [7]
Nara picture books, or, are lavishly handmade illustrated manuscripts which date from the mid-16th century to the late 17th-century. The contents of these manuscripts consists mostly of which are short narratives concerning war epics, folklore or Shinto and Buddhist legends. loosely refers to manuscripts that are either in book or scroll formats. The term is believed to emanate from illustrators who came from major Buddhist temples in and around the Nara region, such as Tōdai-ji and Kōfuku-ji or the Kasuga-taisha.[8] [9] The manuscripts are decorated with ink, colour pigments, gold, as well as silver-decorated endleaves.[10] When the amount of commissions from the nobility at these temples declined, the artists left for Kyoto to set up studios and took orders for work, similar to local painters.[11]
Most of the Edo period were made with side-stitched binding. They used highly durable washi paper. A page is made from a single sheet printed on one side which is folded printed side out. These folded sheets are bound at their open ends with cords of twisted paper which go through two holes made in the stack of sheets. The bookcover is glued to blank outer pages and attached to the stack of pages with a hemp cord stitched through four holes which penetrate the covers and book block. This method of binding is called .[12]