Depicting sumo before Hideyoshi, seated in the upper left of the panel, and Kato Kiyemasa, a famous general, is seated in the middle of the right panel. Measurement attached sheets 72x35,5 cm. Measurement with passepartout 100x70 cm. Not framed.
Wear to edges, discoloration. Soft handling creases. Colors possibly slightly faded.
From the Collection of Göran Flyxe.
Exhibited at the Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art, Haifa, Spring 1997, Far Eastern Museum, Stockholm. “Sumo, Ritual and Art” - Japanese woodblock prints from the Göran Flyxes Collection; 29/10 2016-29/1 2017, Krognoshuset, Lund 14-30/1 1974, Norrköping Museum, Norrköping 9/6-28/7 1974, Kalmar Museum, Kalmar nov 1974, Sweden Center Bldg, Tokyo 31/5-1/6 1975, Röhsska Museet, Göteborg 9/12-23/1 1978, Galleri Asthley, Skinnskatteberg 5/6-18/7 1993, Östasiatiska Museet, Stockholm 24/12 1993-14/3 1994.
Depicted in 'SUMO, from Rite to Sport', by P.L. Culyer, p.51.
See a similar one sold at the very famous old bookstore Ohya Shobō in Tokyo, see http://www.ohya-shobo.com/catalog_list_scope.php?print_id=10114
Japanese Sumo Wrestling is one of the oldest martial arts in Japan. Sumo wrestlers were a favorite subject on Japanese woodblock prints.
Sumo has its roots in the shinto religion. The matches were dedicated to the gods in prayers for a good harvest. The oldest written records date back to the 8th century. But it is probably more than 1500 years old.
Sumo prints from the 18th and 19th century prove the popularity of the sport in the past.