Art Institute of Chicago
Snow: Onoe Kikugoro III, from "A Set of Three (Sanbantsuzuki)"
Utagawa Kuniyoshi
- Date
- c. 1829
- 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.
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.
Flowers: Onoe Kikugoro III, from an untitled series of actors representing snow, moon, and flowers
Art Institute of Chicago

Three Beauties in Snow
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Snow Scene in Osaka South of the River
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Nakamura Utaemon I as Karashi Baba and Yoshizawa Sakinosuke III as Shirotae
Art Institute of Chicago
The Actor Segawa Kikunojo III in Private Life, Standing in a Snow-Covered Garden
Art Institute of Chicago

Snow View with Three Women in Fukagawa
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Actor Onoe Kikugoro V as the Priest Sogen (Yuki: Iwakura Sogen Onoe Baiko), from the series "Snow, Moon, and Flowers (Setsugekka no uchi)"
Art Institute of Chicago
The actor Onoe Kikugoro III as Nagoya Sanza in the play "Sato no Haru Meibutsu Amigasa," performed at the Kawarazaki Theater in the first month, 1827
Art Institute of Chicago

Actors among the Garden Oaks
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Actors Onoe Kikugoro III (right) as Shirokiya Okoma and Matsumoto Koshiro V (left) as her lover Saiza
Art Institute of Chicago

Evening Snow at Shinobazu, Autumn Moon at Takanawa, Night Rain over Sumida River, Sunrise at Suzaki
Minneapolis Institute of Art
The actors Onoe Kikugoro III (R) as Nagoya Sanza and Iwai Kumesaburo II (L) as the courtesan Katsuragi in the play "Oichiza Soga no Shimadai," performed at the Kawarazaki Theater in the first month, 1827
Art Institute of Chicago