46 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Fujinobu. A man talking- to a girl. Presented by R. N. 

 Shaw, Esq. 



Hiroshige. White heron among reeds. Presented by R. N. 

 Shaw, Esq. 



Hokusai. Long surimono; Toshitsune and the princess. 

 Men dragging nets ; Hundred Poems series, No. 3. Presented by 

 R. N. Shaw, Esq. Three prints from the Hundred Poems series, 

 Nos. 5, 37 and 97. 



Jakuchiu. Set of six prints of birds and flowers on black 

 ground. 



Kiyonaga. Girls on a verandah by the sea. Girls and children 

 near a temple gateway; diptych. Presented by R. N. Shaiv, Esq. 

 Evening by the sea. 



Kiyoshige. Michizane holding plum-blossom. Presented by 

 R. N. Shaw, Esq. 



Koriiisai. Tea-house scene. 



E-iukoku. Girl with scroll. 



Shuncho. Girls and cat. 



Utamaro. Girl painting her lips. Girl tying a poem to a 

 blossoming tree. Presented by R. N. Shaw, Esq. An actor in a 

 woman's part (very early print). Two lovers under an umbrella, 



Yeisui. Three girls. Presented by R. N. Shaw, Esq. Lovers 

 eloping. 



Book of Woodcut Designs'. 



Mincho Seid5 Gwayen. Printed in colours after Shunboku, 

 2 vol., 1746. The first edition, of which no other copy appears 

 to be known, of one of the earliest examples of colour printing in 

 Japan. Presented by Arthur Morrison, Esq. 



KoREAisr. 



The God of the North; The God of the South. Two large 

 paintings in colours. 



Indian. 



Paintings and Drawings. 



The paintings and drawings, approaching 500 in number, 

 acquired by transference from the Department of Oriental Printed 

 Books and MSS., make a very important addition to the Indian 

 collections. They are mostly of the Mogul School. A few are 

 of the time of Akbar, but the finest paintings are of the time of 

 Jahangir and Shah Jahan, and include signed examples of the 

 work of Hiinhar, Chitarman, Anupchatar, Govardhan, Muham- 

 mad Nadir and other distinguished artists of the J. 7th century. 



Group of young prince and maidens; water-colour copy by 

 Mukul Dey after one of the most ancient of the Ajanta Frescoes. 



Kangra School. Lovers on a terrace. Presented by Ernest 

 Debenham, Esq. 



