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(7) Torii Kiyohiro [Shichinosuke]
( fl Edo [now Tokyo], 175163; d Edo, ?1786). Woodblock print designer, painter and book illustrator. Listed among the members of the Torii studio in 1763, Kiyohiro probably studied under Kiyonobu II ( fl 172560), (4) Kiyomasu II or (6) Kiyomitsu I. However, the main influences on his work were (2) Kiyomasu I and ISHIKAWA TOYONOBU. Although a member of the Torii studio, Kiyohiros extant prints include more bijinga (pictures of beautiful women) than yakushae (pictures of actors). His single-sheet prints were usually large-format benizurie (pink-printed pictures; two-colour prints). Kiyohiros bijinga are better than those of Kiyomasu I, and he was a master of abunae (dangerous pictures; erotic prints). He produced the illustrations for kurohon (black books) and aohon (blue books; books for chidren and the semi-literate), including Ise sangu gorisho (The divine grace of Ise Shrine, 1755; untraced) and Meigetsuhime koiuta monogatari (The love-poem tale of Princess Full Moon, 1758; Tokyo, Orient. Lib.). He also painted nikuhistuga (original paintings; polychrome paintings; see JAPAN, §VI, 4(iv)(a)) in the style of SUZUKI HARUNOBU.
Part of the Torii family
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