Art Institute of Chicago
The Courtesans Shizuka and Akashi of the Tamaya
Kitagawa Utamaro 喜多川 歌麿
- Date
- c. 1797
- Medium
- Color woodblock print; hashira-e
- Culture
- Japan
- Department
- Arts of Asia
- Institution
- Art Institute of Chicago
The authoritative record is held by Art Institute of Chicago. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Linked open data
Authority identifiers that link this record into the wider web of cultural data — stable references you can follow to the source.
- Object type
- AAT300041273
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.
The Courtesan Shizuka of the Shizutamaya
Art Institute of Chicago

The Courtesans Hanamurasaki and Koshikibu of the Tamaya Promenading in the Rain
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Courtesans Hanamurasaki and Koshikibu of the Tamaya Promenading in the Rain
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Courtesans Hanamurasaki and Koshikibu of the Tamaya Promenading in the Rain
Cleveland Museum of Art
Courtesans of the Tamaya, from the book "Mirror of Beautiful Women of the Pleasure Quarters (Seiro bijin awase sugata kagami)," vol. 1
Art Institute of Chicago
Akashi of the Tamaya, from the series Seven Komachis of Yoshiwara (Seiro nana Komachi) (Tamaya uchi Akashi, Uraji, Shimano)
Art Institute of Chicago
The Courtesan Hanamurasaki of the Tamaya, from the series "Courtesans of the Five Festivals (Yukun gosekku)"
Art Institute of Chicago
The Courtesan Komurasaki of the Tamaya
Art Institute of Chicago

The Courtesans Kasugano and Utahama of Tamaya, from Courtesans of the Pleasure Quarters in Double Mirrors
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Courtesan Shiratama of the Tamaya
Cleveland Museum of Art
Courtesans of the Takeya, from the book "Mirror of Beautiful Women of the Pleasure Quarters (Seiro bijin awase sugata kagami)," vol. 1
Art Institute of Chicago

Chrysanthemum Festival: The Tamaya in Shin-Yoshiwara Edomachi itchōme; the courtesan Shinmachi and her attendants Kitsune and Komatsu
Minneapolis Institute of Art