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(4) Torii Kiyomasu II [Heizaburo]
(b Edo [now Tokyo], 1706; d Edo, 1763). Woodblock print designer and book illustrator, probably the son-in-law of (1) Kiyonobu I. He was the second-generation head of the Torii school. Once incorrectly identified as Kiyonobu II ( fl c. 172560), he probably married the eldest daughter of the founder of the school, (1) Kiyonobu I, in 1724. While Kiyomasus work is inferior to Kiyonobu Is, he was a prolific designer and had many students. His extant works include tane (red lead pictures; hand-coloured prints), benie (red pictures), urushie (lacquer pictures) and benizurie (pink-printed pictures; two-colour prints) of actors ( yakusha) and beautiful women (bijin). Between 1745 and 1760 he produced many illustrations for kurohon (black books) and aohon (blue books; books intended for children and the semi-literate). His representative works are Furyu urozoku taiji (Crusade of the fashionable sightseers; 1745) and Yakusha meibutsu yatsushi sugata (Abbreviated figures of famous actors; 1757). His students included (7) Kiyohiro, Kiyohide ( fl c. 176075), Kiyotsune ( fl c. 176080) and his second son, (6) Kiyomitsu I, who became the third-generation head of the Torii school.
Part of the Torii family
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