Seiu Ito

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onibaba and her victims. Inspired by Yoshitoshi
.

Seiu Ito (伊藤晴雨, Itō Seiu), also

Showa Era trilogy".[2]

Biography

Ito was born Hajime Ito (伊藤一, Itō Hajime) in

Sino-Japanese reading of kanji for words 'clear' and 'rain') at age 13.[3] Around 1907, he began working for newspapers.[4]

Ito hired a young art school model named Kise Sahara in 1919. Kise became Ito's second wife after she got pregnant and posed willingly for her husband.[3]

Ito became the target of censors in 1930, which led to draining of his fortunes and he lost his works at the Great Tokyo Air Raid.[4] In 1960, he was awarded by the Japan Artists Association (日本美術家連盟, Nihon Bijutsuka Renmei).[4]

Style

As an artist, Ito was very interested in kabuki and other ways of the Edo period[1] and his book An History of Edo and Tokyo Manners (江戸と東京風俗野史, Edo to Tōkyō Fūzoku Yashi) was published after the Kanto earthquake.[4] His technique for depiction of Edo period tortures was to bind his model in various ways, have the photographs taken, and use them as inspiration for his paintings.[1] A notorious exploit of such kind was binding his pregnant wife Kise and having her suspended upside down for a drawing imitating the ukiyo-e The Lonely House on Adachi Moor in Michinoku Province by Yoshitoshi.[1][5]

References

  1. ^ a b c d The Father of Modern Kinbaku Archived 2009-08-18 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Allmovie
    . Retrieved 2010-05-16.
  3. ^ a b Ito Seiu
  4. ^ a b c d 伊藤晴雨
  5. ^ "History & Style: East vs. West". Archived from the original on 2021-01-28. Retrieved 2010-04-16.