Kabukidō Enkyō (Japanese: 歌舞伎堂 艶鏡, fl.) was a Japanese artist who designed ukiyo-e woodblock prints. Nothing is known of Enkyō's life, and only seven of his works are known, all of which are ōkubi yakusha-e, bust portrait prints of kabuki actors. Scholars divide them into two groups based on differences in the signatures, and the second group appears to be a set, as the prints depict three brothers from the same play. Enkyō's identity has been subject to speculation: a student of Sharaku's, even Sharaku himself, or a kyōgen playwright.
Ukiyo-e art flourished in Japan during the Edo period from the 17th to 19th centuries. Its subjects were of the courtesans, kabuki actors, and others associated with the ukiyo hedonistic "floating world" lifestyle of the pleasure districts. Mass-produced woodblock prints were a major form of the genre. After the mid-18th century, full-colour prints became common, printed with a large number of woodblocks, one for each colour. Shunshō of the Katsukawa school introduced the ōkubi-e "large-headed picture" in the 1760s. He and his school soon popularized ōkubi yakusha-e, prints of actors from kabuki, a flamboyant theatrical form that enjoyed popularity with the masses.
The enigmatic print designer Sharaku's works are amongst ukiyo-e's best known. They began to appear suddenly in 1794. Sharaku introduced a greater level of realism into his yakusha-e prints that emphasized the differences between the actor and the portrayed character. The expressive, contorted faces he depicted contrasted sharply with the serene, mask-like faces more common to artists such as Harunobu or Utamaro. Sharaku's work found resistance, and in 1795 his output ceased as mysteriously as it had appeared; his identity is still unknown. Kabukidō Enkyō's ōkubi yakusha-e appeared sixteen months after Sharaku's work ceased. Nothing is known of Enkyō's life or identity beyond the bare fact that he flourished as an artist in Japan at the end of the eighteenth century.
Enkyō appears not to have been a prolific artist. Seven portraits were confirmed as Enkyō's in the early 20th century, and no further works have been discovered. The ōban-size yakusha-e woodblock print portraits of kabuki actors are all ōkubi-e bust portraits dated to . None bear a publisher's seal. Scholars divide them into two groups based on differences in the artist's seal.
The first group bears the seal "Kabukidō Enkyō Ga" (Japanese: 歌舞伎堂艶鏡画, "drawn by Kabukidō Enkyō") and is made up of:
Ichikawa Omezō I portrays a character from the kabuki play Sumida no Haru Geisha Katagi (1796). Enkyō's depiction of the warrior-like character invites comparison to Sharaku's portrait of the same, though they achieve different effects. Sharaku's has greater depth of expression, while Enkyō's simpler, more greatly exaggerated depiction with larger eyebrows leaves a strong immediate expression. Enkyō gives his Omezō a facetious expression and delineates his rounder features with a milder line. He colours the irises with thinned sumi ink, a technique Enkyō may have borrowed from Shun'ei, Toyokuni, and Kunimasa, who had introduced it about that time. Evidence of the effort put into the design can be inferred from other fine details such as touches of red on the earlobes and the colouring on the shaved part of the forehead.
It has been suggested the Ichikawa Yaozō III portrait is of a key character in the play Katakiuchi Noriyaibanashi (1794). It uses thinned ink to colour the irises, and the composition appears to bear the influence of Sharaku in its attempt at greater realism. The positioning of Enkyō's Nakayama Tomisaburō I, with the actor's hand on his collar, bears strong resemblance to Sharaku's version in the role of Miyagino from Katakiuchi Noriyaibanashi, suggesting Enkyō likely used Sharaku's print as a reference.
The other three prints appear to make a set as they depict three brothers from the same episode of the same play. The set is made up of:
This set shows a stronger Toyokuni influence, rather than Sharaku; while basically striving for realism, there is an idealizing tendency in the rendering of the facial expressions. The prints depict actors in the roles of three brothers from the "Kuruma-biki" episode of the play Sugawara Denju Tenarai Kagami (1796). The scene depicts Umeōmaru and Sakuramaru waiting in ambush for . Their brother Matsuōmaru, who is loyal to Shihei, foils their plot. He appears in the portrait with a protruding beak-like noese and his hair brushed back at the sides. He wears a hat, carries a spear, and wears a check-patterned robe with a set of h-shaped genji-mon crests on them, indicating a chapter from the Genji Monogatari. The Nakamura Noshio II has no seal, and the other two bear the seal "Kabukidō Ga" (Japanese: 歌舞伎鏡画, "drawn by Kabukidō"). The print of Nakamura Noshio II as Sakuramaru depicts the youngest of the three brothers, a romantic character whose symbol is the sakura cherry blossom. The character was sometimes performed by an onnagata, an actor specializing in female roles.
Enkyō's identity is uncertain. There is a brief mention of him in the Ukiyo-e Ruikō, the earliest collection of commentaries and biographies on ukiyo-e artists, begun by Ōta Nanpo (1749–1823). Its single line mentions him as a portraitist who lasted merely half a year, and omits the name Enkyō.
Some have seen Enkyō as a student and perhaps the sole successor of Sharaku. There are no records of ukiyo-e artists other than Sharaku and Enkyō making aiban-sized ōkubi-e yakusha-e during the Edo period. The German writer asserted Enkyō was Sharaku, who had assumed a new identity to revive his career. The American Arthur Davison Ficke called this idea "an alluring but somewhat fantastic theory, which neither the documentary nor the internal evidence ... adequately supports", and James A. Michener agreed this was a "fanciful theory ... but nothing in the artistic content of Kabukidō's prints supports this wild guess", though "some of Sharaku's later triptychs ... are occasionally as dull as known Kabukidōs".
Hiroshi Matsuki proposed attributing 11 of Sharaku's third-period works to Enkyō, using "Morellian" techniques to compare minor details of the artist's style. These works are the only aiban-sized ōkubi yakusha-e of Sharaku's third period. Amongst the details that set these works apart from Sharaku's earlier and later ones, five of these prints feature clearly visible ears, which are drawn with six lines, whereas those of Sharaku's other works are drawn with five lines. Given that Enkyō's works appeared sixteen months after Sharaku's, differences in approach such as Enkyō's thicker line and rounder eyes can be attributed to evolution of the artist's style.
Others have seen the similarities with Sharaku as superficial, and point to differences in technique and psychology of the subjects. These scholars have suggested Enkyō's approach may be closer to that of Shunkō's, Shun'ei's, Toyokuni's, or Kunimasa's.
In 1926 ukiyo-e scholar Naonari Ochiai declared Enkyō was the kyōgen playwright Nakamura Jūsuke (1749 – 4 November 1803). In that case, the work was the hobby of an amateur, and would have lacked a publisher's seal because it would have been printed as a special commission. However, there is no mention of any such connection in the writings of an acquaintance of Nakamura Jusuke's, Ota Nanpo.
. Hugo Munsterberg -- this links to the WRONG Hugo Münsterberg! -->. The Arts of Japan: An Illustrated History. 1957. Charles E. Tuttle Company. 9780804800426.