Kuchi-e

A kuchi-e lithograph by Kitani Chigusa. Note the creases where the print was folded into a magazine.

Kuchi-e (口絵) (lit.'mouth pictures')[1] are frontispieces of books, especially woodblock printed frontispieces for Japanese romance novels and literary magazines published from the 1890s to the 1910s.[2]

They usually portrayed women and were bound to the book's spine or inserted into literary magazines to give readers a sense of what type of stories were to unfold. Most kuchi-e were woodblock prints in romance novels intended for a female audience. Some were lithographs, and some were inserted into other types of literature. The first mass-produced publication to regularly feature kuchi-e designs popular literary magazine Bungei Kurabu, with over 230 individual inserted from 1895 to 1914. Most measured either 22 cm × 30 cm (8.7 in × 11.8 in) or 14 cm × 20 cm (5.5 in × 7.9 in), the former being folded in thirds, and the latter being folded in half.[3]

The general standard of kuchi-e prints is remarkably high. Made at a time of well developed woodblock printing techniques, it is thought the addition of these prints contributed to almost half the cost of production. Still, the genre is under-appreciated as an artfrom by the majority of print collectors. The standard text on the subject is Merritt and Yamada's Woodblock Kuchi-e Prints—Reflections of Meiji Culture (2000).

  1. ^ Merritt, Helen; Yamada, Nanako (2000). Woodblock Kuchi-e Prints: Reflections of Meiji Culture. University of Hawaii Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-8248-2073-2.
  2. ^ Newland, p. 463
  3. ^ Artlino