Isoda Koryà «sai (, 1735âÂÂ1790) was a Japanese ukiyo-e print designer and painter active from 1769 to 1790.
Koryà «sai was born in 1735 and worked as a samurai in the service of the Tsuchiya clan. He became a masterless rà Ânin after the death of the head of the clan and moved to Edo (modern Tokyo) where he settled near Ryà Âgoku Bridge in the Yagenbori area. He became a print designer there under the art name Haruhiro in 1769, at first making samurai-themed designs. The ukiyo-e print master Harunobu died in 1770, and about that time Koryà «sai began making prints in a similar style of life in the pleasure districts.
Koryà «sai was a prolific designer of individual prints and print series, most of which appeared between 1769 and 1881.
In 1782, Koryà «sai applied for and received the Buddhist honour hokkyà  ("Bridge of the Law") from the imperial court and thereafter used the title as part of his signature. His output slowed from this time, though he continued to design prints until his death in 1790.
Koryà «sai created a total of 2,500 known designs, or an average of four a week. According to art historian Allen Hockley, "Koryà «sai may ... have been the most productive artist of the eighteenth century".
The series Models for Fashion: New Designs as Fresh Young Leaves (Hinagata wakana no hatsumoyà Â, 1776âÂÂ1781) ran for 140 prints, the longest known ukiyo-e print series of beauties. He designed at least 350 hashira-e pillar prints, numerous kachà Â-e bird-and-flower prints, a great number of shunga erotic prints, and others. Ninety of his nikuhitsu-ga paintings are known, making him one of the most productive painters of the period.
Despite Koryà «sai's productivity and popularityâÂÂboth in his time and amongst later collectorsâÂÂhis work has attracted little scholarship. The first ukiyo-e histories written in the West in the 19th century elevated certain artists as exemplars; Koryà «sai's work came to be seen as too indebted to Harunobu, who died in 1770, and inferior to that of Kiyonaga, whose peak period came in the 1880s. An example is Woldemar von Seidlitz's ' ("History of Japanese colour prints", 1897), the most popular of the early ukiyo-e histories, which paints Koryà «sai as a successor to Harunobu and a rival of Kiyonaga in the 1770s who slipped into mediocrity and imitation of his rival by the end of the decade. Interest lay mainly in the details of Koryà «sai's lifeâÂÂa samurai who received court honours was unusual in the proletarian world of ukiyo-e. In 2021, contemporary woodblock printmaker David Bull created a series of 12 prints depicting nature scenes adapted from Koryà «sai's designs.
His work is held in the permanent collections of several museums worldwide, including the British Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Princeton University Art Museum, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Hermitage Museum, the Suntory Museum of Art, the Israel Museum, the Krannert Art Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Museum of New Zealand, the Brooklyn Museum, the Ashmolean Museum, the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, the Freer Gallery of Art, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the Chazen Museum of Art, the Portland Art Museum, and the Kimbell Art Museum.