“Ukiyo-e” pictures, pictures of the “floating world.” are famous among everyone interested in art history. Everyone knows Hokusai’s “The Great Wave of Kanagawa”. “Ukiyo-e” became also very popular among artists from the second half of the 19th century. With their colors, clear line and composition they influenced artists such as Edouard Manet, Toulouse-Lautrec Vincent van Gogh and Impressionists.

But there is one type of “ukiyo-e” that isn’t presented so often as “36 Views of Mount Fuji“. It’s the type that Western visitors to Japan of the late nineteenth century were very surprised when they’ve discovered it. The type that was characterized by seemingly relaxed attitude to nakedness and sexuality.

It’s “Shun-ga”, which in Japanese means “spring pictures”. Until March 5th at MAK Vienna you can visit an exhibition “Shunga – Erotic Art from Japan“. On the exhibition you can see erotic color woodblock prints which are loans from the Leopold Private Collection, supplemented by prints from the MAK collection and a further Viennese private collection.

And they will blow your mind.

“Shun-ga” have been very popular in East Asia. Almost all great ukiyo-e artists produced erotic pictures. Although forbidden by the government, they were sold unsigned under the counter and estimated to form up to fifty percent of ukiyo-e production.

Japanese approach to sexuality was very different from the European one, where sexuality has been cloaked in heroic and religious connotations. European art was mostly limited to female naked body (although male nudes rarely happened too, and we were trying to spot them in this article). In Japanese culture playful approach to sex is in central focus. Religion, philosophy, and medicine are often employed in them as metaphor. What always seems important is the consensus of the participants and the lack of violence, which is only rarely a subject of the genre. Also a frequent touch of humour, supported by entertaining dialogue is added to them. Shunga offered sexuality a shameless visual platform, where sexual pleasure, female sexuality, and homosexuality were not only acknowledged but encouraged.

As the scenes may not be easy to understand in some cases, note the titles 🙂

The majority of shunga depict the sexual relations of the ordinary people. Occasionally there also appear Dutch or Portuguese foreigners. Courtesans also form the subject of many shunga.

In almost all shunga the characters are fully clothed. Nudity was not inherently erotic in Japan – people were used to seeing the opposite sex naked in communal baths. The clothing also helped the reader identify courtesans and foreigners, the prints often contained symbolic meaning, and it drew attention to the parts of the body that were revealed, i.e., the genitalia.

Regarding the genitalia – shunga couples are often shown in nonrealistic positions with exaggerated genitalia. There is an interesting explanation for this include increased visibility of the sexually explicit content. The genitalia is interpreted as a ‘second face,’ expressing the primal passions that the everyday face is obligated by woman to conceal, and is therefore the same size as the head and placed unnaturally close to it by the awkward position.

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