Beauty Looking Back, ink and colour painting on silk created in 1690 by Japanese printmaker Hishikawa Moronobu, the first great master of ukiyo-e, a style of Japanese print and painting developed during the Tokugawa period. Ukiyo-e was a popular pictorial expression of the world of the Kabuki theatre, the Yoshiwara pleasure district, and other scenes of urban life, often peopled with actors and courtesans, and Beauty Looking Back is perhaps the most famous of Hishikawa’s artworks.
The word ukiyo was originally used in the religious context of Buddhism, referring to the ephemeral nature of human life, but in the Tokugawa period it acquired a new connotation as it became associated with the fleeting nature of fashionable urban society. Hishikawa was born into a family of textile embroiderers near Tokyo, and his first artistic experience was making underdrawings on fabrics. After moving to Edo (present day Tokyo), he produced book illustrations using woodblock prints. By making sets of single-sheet illustrations independently from their accompanying text, he established a new ukiyo-e idiom. His prints were usually monochrome and often hand-painted.
Beauty Looking Back is an example of a genre which portrayed beautiful women from the Kanbun era. Hand-painted ukiyo-e pictures like this one were not the original pictures used for woodblock print reproductions, but rather singular pieces that were made to be viewed in their own right. The woman is shown quickly glancing over her shoulder as she moves forward. By showing the back of a woman against a neutral background, Hishikawa effectively displays the fashions of the day as seen both in the hairstyle and and in the kimono pattern of cherry blossoms and chrysanthemum. Ukiyo-e prints led to a Western aesthetic fashion called Japanism and were a source of inspiration for Art Nouveau and many Impressionist painters in 19th-century Europe.