Art Institute of Chicago
Osaka: Courtesan of the Shinmachi, from an untitled series of the three capitals
Yashima Gakutei
- Date
- c. 1820s/30s
- Medium
- Color woodblock print; shikishiban, surimono
- 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.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Art Institute of Chicago and other institutions.
Kyoto: Courtesan of the Shimabara, from an untitled series of the three capitals
Art Institute of Chicago
Courtesans Drawn in Osaka Style (Osaka kakiwake), from "Courtesans of the Three Capitals - A Set of Three (Sanga no tsu keisei sanpukutsui)"
Art Institute of Chicago
Courtesan of Osaka and Her Attendant, left sheet of a triptych of beauties of the three capitals (Sanpukutsui Osaka hidari)
Art Institute of Chicago
Courtesans Drawn in Osaka style (right), Kyoto style (center), and Edo style (left), from "Courtesans of the Three Capitals: A Set of Three (Sanga no tsu keisei sanpukutsui)"
Art Institute of Chicago
The Courtesan Yugiri of Ibarakiya, Osaka, from a triptych of beauties of the three capitals
Art Institute of Chicago
Beauties of the Three Capitals: Shimabara in Kyoto (right), Yoshiwara in Edo (center), and Shinmachi in Osaka (left)
Art Institute of Chicago

Courtesan of Osaka, Left Sheet
Minneapolis Institute of Art
High-Ranking Courtesans of the Three Capitals - A Set of Three (Santo tayu sanpukutsui)
Art Institute of Chicago
Beauties of the Three Capitals: Edo (right), Kyoto (center), and Osaka (left)
Art Institute of Chicago
Courtesan with Flower Cart, from the series "Famous Flowers in Three Capitals (Santo meisho no hana)"
Art Institute of Chicago
Foreign Goods in Osaka (Osaka hikita karamono), from the series "Three Cities (Santo no uchi)"
Art Institute of Chicago
The Courtesan Hanamurasaki of the Tamaya, from the series "Courtesans of the Five Festivals (Yukun gosekku)"
Art Institute of Chicago