אטלס תולדות הקעקוע פתח בגלובוס

Horiuno I (Kamei Unosuke)

Edo and Meiji era Japanese horimono, hand-poked tebori in the Tokyo full body tradition

Kanda, Tokyo (Edo), Japan

The major Tokyo tebori master Kamei Unosuke, Horiuno I, who founded the Horiuno line and whose Kanda clients formed the society that became the Edo Choyukai.

Horiuno I (Kamei Unosuke) · Key facts
FieldDetail
SubjectHoriuno I (Kamei Unosuke)
סוגאדם
תקופהEarly Modern
מיקוםKanda, Tokyo (Edo), Japan
תאריך1843 CE
Style / TechniqueEdo and Meiji era Japanese horimono, hand-poked tebori in the Tokyo full body tradition
מחובר אלTebori Technique, יפני אירוזומי, שודאי הוריושי (יושיטסוגו מורמטסו)

הערת ארכיון

Horiuno I, born Kamei Unosuke, was a Tokyo tebori master of the late Edo, Meiji, and Taisho periods, conventionally dated 1843 to 1927. Born in the Kanda district of Edo, he began tattooing around the age of twenty, worked in cities including Osaka, Kyoto, and Shizuoka, and settled into full-time practice in Tokyo from around forty, continuing into his seventies. He is remembered chiefly as the founder of the Horiuno line and as the tattooer whose Kanda clientele, drawn largely from the construction and manufacturing trades, formed the friendship and pilgrimage society that became the Edo Choyukai, one of the oldest documented associations of tattooed people in Japan. His work passed to Horiuno II and Horiuno III, and the society he indirectly founded still makes an annual pilgrimage to the Oyama Afuri shrine in Kanagawa. His tattoos are recorded in the Akimitsu Takagi photographic archive of the Tokyo scene of the 1950s and 1960s and in the documentary Horimono: Japan's Tattoo Pilgrimage.

שושלת