the final moment from the English text and were published only in Russian. Who ordered the omission and for what reason, I was never able to find out. In one or two cases they missed deleting my revision (see no. 510 in vol. 1, p. 367). In the Russian description the word “recut” (
peregravirovka) which I, as the academic editor, put in the title line, was moved by the in-house editors into the entry text, with the added disclaimer “in E. Steiner’s opinion this is recut.” In many cases it looks odd because immediately after that follows the text (written by me): “No originals are known” (in the case of Setsuri’s
Fish and Squid, no. 144) or “only two originals in such and such museums are known.”
My foreword as academic editor with the brief summation of the goals of the edition and my role, as well as acknowledgment of colleagues and organizations that helped me in my work, was published – but without any heading (possibly it was removed at the very last minute because, on the top of that page, six lines are left empty). My foreword is not mentioned in the Table of Contents and appears after the curator’s introduction on page 20.
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Kitagawa Utamaro II
(?–1831). Infant Komachi (Osana Komachi), from the series Little Seedlings: Seven Komachi (Futabagusa nana Komachi). C. 1803.
Color woodcut, ōban. Published in Impressions Journal, vol. 32 (2011), p. 57.
Many of the prints illustrated are in very poor condition: faded, torn, creased, wrinkled and with wormholes. Kitaev himself mentions in one of his letters that he would buy, from time to time, a work that required restoration and would give it to Japanese masters to fix. But many prints, now in poor condition, evidently had never been restored. It is difficult to imagine that Kitaev bought them in this state. My suggestion to exclude these worn prints or at least not to show them in large color illustrations was rejected. On the other hand, a number of reasonably good prints (many Utagawa Kuniyoshi [1797–1861] and Kunisada triptychs, anonymous caricatures of the Bо̄shin War, as well as surimono that can be found in the Japanese Pushikin zuroku) were, for unknown reasons, not represented. When I asked the curator, she said that she did not remember; when I delivered the news to the Museum administration that many good prints had not been included, and gave them photocopies of two or three pages from the Pushikin zuroku to compare with prints missing from the “catalogue raisonné,” they looked rather shocked and ordered a check to see if those works were physically there. A few days later I was told by the head of the Department of Works on Paper that all the objects had been found (I asked to see some of the excluded Kunisada triptychs and found that the condition was quite decent). The explanation I was given was that it was “the curator’s choice” as to what to eliminate. Before I try to come up with some rational explanation for this cavalierness, I’d like to point out one more discrepancy. In the Pushikin zuroku, there are five surimono by Harada Keigaku (act. 1850–60) (nos. 301, 302, p. 51, and nos. 975–77, p. 163). In the Pushkin Catalogue, there are only three (nos. 88–90, p. 88), but one of them (no. 88, a surimono with puppies) does not appear in Pushikin zuroku. The most reasonable surmise is that, when the Japanese team visited the museum in 1992, not all the prints could be found, but they resurfaced later. And vice versa – when it came to production of the 2008 Pushkin Catalogue, many prints were either misplaced or could not be accessed for some reason or other.
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Denkosai / Shisai (?). Xylophone (mokkin), shogi figures and a screen with the depiction of sparrows. Big surimono. 1850. Collection of Georg Gross, Zurich.
The commemorative surimono dedicated to the 13th anniversary of Utaemon III with inclusion of his poem signed by his literary alias Baigyoku.
Among the six hundred entries that I rewrote or added, some were inexplicably ignored. One instance involves a large-format surimono by Denkosai depicting a xylophone (mokkin) with shogi (a form of Japanese chess) pieces (no. 62, vol. 1, p. 38, acc. no. A. 29014). There are no inscriptions or signature, just a seal with the mysterious, never found anywhere else name Denkosai[259]. While looking through the private collection of Erich Gross in Zurich in August 2007, I made the connection that this print is actually about a quarter of a large surimono (44 × 55.9 cm) printed with several poems signed by Eishi, Karoku, Baika and others and commissioned by Nakamura Utaemon IV to commemorate the thirteenth anniversary of the death of his father, the famous kabuki actor Nakamura Utaemon III, and thus should be dated to 1850. Utaemon III used the poetry name Baigyoku. Sure enough, the left half of the surimono in the Gross collection depicts a screen with three sparrows on rice panicles. In the upper part is a poem signed Baigyoku. This separated section of the print was listed in the Pushikin zuroku as an independent entry, a surimono by