A pair of ducks by a lotus pond, 1879
Kobayashi Kiyochika
Jurojin, from the series "The Seven Gods of Good Fortune (Adesugata Shichifukujin)", c. 1770/76
Ishikawa Toyonobu
The Actors Ichikawa Monnosuke II as Miyukinosuke, Segawa Kikunojo III as Hatsune-hime, and Ichikawa Danjuro V as Ninnaji no Saibei, in the joruri "Shitenno Oe no Yamairi," performed at the Kiri Theater in the eleventh month, 1785, 1785
Torii Kiyonaga
Nakayama Tomisaburo, c. 1800
Enkyo
Iwai Kumesaburo in the Role of Lady Tomoe, 1797
Utagawa Kunimasa
Chrysanthemum Boy leaning on a rock, from the series "Five Prints on Longevity (Kotobuki goban no uchi), mid–1820s
Yanagawa Shigenobu I
Teika riding through the snow, about 1720s
Shigenago
Girl as Daruma, about 1740s
Okumura Masanobu
Autumn Moon at Atago Hill (Atago shugetsu), from the series "Eight Views of Edo (Edo hakkei)", c. 1804/18
Utagawa Toyohiro
Odawara: The Sakawa River (Odawara, Sakawagawa), from the series "Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido Road (Tokaido gojusan tsugi no uchi)," also known as the Hoeido Tokaido, c. 1833/34
Utagawa Hiroshige
Clearing Breeze from a Fan (Ogi no seiran), from the series "Eight Views of the Parlor (Zashiki hakkei)", c. 1766
Suzuki Harunobu
Benten Shrine and Inokashira Pond (Inokashira no ike Benten no yashiro), from the series "One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (Meisho Edo hyakkei)", 1856
Utagawa Hiroshige
Spring: Soaking Rice Grains (Haru: tanehitashi no zu), No. 1 from the series "The Four Seasons of Farmers (Shiki no hyakusho)", c. 1730s
Torii Kiyomasu II
Pheasant and pine tree, c. 1847/52
Utagawa Hiroshige
Winter: Storing Rice (Fuyu: kome osame no zu), No. 4 from the series "The Four Seasons of Farmers (Shiki no hyakusho)", c. 1730s
Torii Kiyomasu II
Autumn: Harvesting Rice (Aki: inekari no zu), No. 3 from the series "The Four Seasons of Farmers (Shiki no hyakusho)", c. 1730s
Torii Kiyomasu II
Belt buckle, Tang dynasty (618-907CE)
Belt buckle, Tang dynasty (618-907CE)
Suruga Province: The Pine Grove at Miho (Suruga, Miho no matsubara), from the series "Famous Places in the Sixty-odd Provinces (Rokujuyoshu meisho zue)", 1853
Utagawa Hiroshige
Village of Tamagawa (Tamagawa no sato), from an untitled series of famous views of the Edo suburbs, c. 1839/40
Utagawa Hiroshige