Descriptive Summary
Access
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Acquisition Information
Scope and Content of Collection
Indexing Terms
Descriptive Summary
Title: UCSF Japanese Woodblock Print collection
Dates: 1600-1900
Collection number: Consult repository
Collector:
Minami, Atsumi
Collector:
de C. Saunders, John B.
Collection Size:
400 items
366 online items
Repository:
University of California, San Francisco. Library.
Archives and Special Collections.
San Francisco, California 94143-0840
Abstract: A collection of Japanese woodblock prints on the subject of health and medicine. Included are Ukiyo-e prints depicting diseases,
health practices, public health messages, and drug advertisements, as well as maps of Nagasaki and textual drug advertisements.
The website for the
UCSF Japanese Woodblock Print Collection includes an introduction to the collection, as well as essays on prominent themes, and allows users to view the prints by
theme and search the collection.
Physical location: East Asian Collection
Languages:
Languages represented in the collection:
English,
Japanese
Access
Collection open for research.
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to the Library & Center for Knowledge Management. All requests for permission to publish or
quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Archives & Special Collections. Permission for publication
is given on behalf of the Library & Center for Knowledge Management as the owner of the physical items and is not intended
to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the reader.
Preferred Citation
UCSF Japanese Woodblock Print collection. Consult repository, Archives & Special Collections, UCSF Library & CKM.
Acquisition Information
The prints in the collection were purchased over a 30-year period. In 1963, UCSF Provost and University Librarian (later
Chancellor) John B. de C. Saunders began the collection, which was developed over the next thirty years by Librarian/Curator
Atsumi Minami. The prints were purchased from various collections in Japan: Asakuraya, Kuichi Seisho, Mori, Nakamura, and
Nakayama.
Scope and Content of Collection
The collection consists of 400 Japanese woodblock prints on various topics relating to health and medicine. Even within that
collecting focus, the subject matter ranges widely. Most of the prints are examples of Ukiyo-e, a Japanese art form that flourished
from the late 17th to mid-19th centuries.
The prints focus on health-related themes: diseases such as measles and cholera, traditional Asian medicine, aspects of obstetrics
and women's health, herbal medicine, nutrition, drug advertisements, and images of prominent physicians.
The interplay of health and religion is a recurring theme throughout the collection. Buddhist and Shinto deities are shown
conquering diseases such as measles and smallpox, and diseases are often personified as demons. Buddhist and Confucian philosophy
underlies the imagery in the prints, especially in prints depicting pregnancy or childbirth.
A large portion of the collection consists of advertisements for drugs. Many of the advertisements are Ukiyo-e scenes depicting
kabuki actors, courtesans, aristocrats, deities, demons, or animals. Approximately 60 of the drug advertisements are text-only.
The opening of Japan to the West is a major theme throughout the collection; several of the prints depict Dutch traders or
physicians. There are several detailed maps showing the island near Nagasaki where European visitors were segregated. Several
of the drug advertisements are for "new" Dutch remedies.
The website for the
UCSF Japanese Woodblock Print Collection includes an introduction to the collection, as well as essays on prominent themes, and allows users to view the prints by
theme and search the collection.
Indexing Terms
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in
the library's online public access catalog.
Health attitudes Japan
Drugs Japan
Dutch in Japan
Buddhism Japan History Pictorial works
Measles History
Women's Health
Woodblock prints
Ukiyo-e
Advertisements
Maps
Japan
Nagasaki-shi (Japan)