This engraving is from Tsuki hyakushi (One Hundred Views of the Moon), a collection of 100 nishiki-e (multi-color) woodcuts in ōban format (approx. 25 x 38 cm) by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839–1892). The engravings were published in batches by Akiyama Buemon between 1885 and 1892. They depict the moon accompanying illustrations of Japanese and Chinese anecdotes, historical events and mythology, and scenes from kabuki and nō theater, and even contemporary Tokyo. All woodcuts from the series have in common the presence of the moon in each of the engravings. The author masterfully created the mood using the moon and its poetic and expressive possibilities. Tsukioka Yoshitoshi was an ukiyo-e artist from the school of Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797–1861), active from Bakumatsu (the last years of the shogunate) to the Meiji period. He created a wide range of works, including bijing-ga (paintings of beautiful women), fuzoku-ga (moral paintings), and paintings of historical and literary figures. Completed in the year of his death, this series is highly regarded as the masterpiece of the last years of his life. This was the most successful and to this day the most famous of Yoshitoshi's printed series. Customers were reportedly lining up before dawn to buy each new woodcut in the series. Wu Gang (Japanese: Gobetsu), a character from Chinese legends, studied Taoist magical practices to achieve immortality. As punishment, he was sent to the Moon, where he had to constantly cut the cassia pod in the moonlight. Once cut, the tree's branches grew back quickly. On the left, at the bottom, the author's signature: Yoshitoshi, below it a square vermilion seal: Taiso.
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