Three Beauties of the Present Day is considered one of Utamaro's representative early works. It depicts the profiles of three celebrity beauties of 1790s
Edo (modern Tokyo). Utamaro's subjects were not courtesans, as was expected in ukiyo-e, but young women known around Edo for their beauty. These three were frequent subjects of Utamaro's art, and often appeared together. Each is identified with an associated
family crest. In the centre poses Tomimoto Toyohina, a famed geisha of the Tamamuraya house in the
Yoshiwara pleasure district. She was dubbed "Tomimoto" having made her name playing
Tomimoto-bushi music on the
shamisen. Like the other two models, she has her hair up in the fashionable
Shimada style that was popular at the time. Contrasted with the homelier teahouse-girl garments of the other two models, she is dressed in the showier geisha style. The Tomimoto crest's
Japanese primrose design adorns the sleeve of her kimono. Toyohina's birthdate is unknown. To the right Naniwaya Kita, also known as "O-Kita", well-known daughter of the owner of a
teahouse in
Asakusa near the temple
Sensō-ji. She is said to have been fifteen in the portrait, in which she wears a patterned black kimono and holds an ''''
hand fan printed with her family emblem, a
paulownia crest. At left is Takashima Hisa, also called "O-Hisa", from in
Ryōgoku. She was the eldest daughter of Takashima Chōbei, the owner of a rice cake shop, in which Hisa worked attracting customers. Tradition places her age at sixteen when the portrait was made, and there is a subtly discernible difference in maturity in the faces of the two teahouse girls. Hisa holds a hand towel over her left shoulder and an identifying three-leaved
daimyo oak crest decorates her kimono. Utamaro - Three Beauties - Takashima O-Hisa - Daimyo oak crest.jpg|alt=Close-up of a three-leaved crest in a circle|Hisa's three-leaved
oak crest Utamaro - Three Beauties - Tomimoto Toyohisa - Japanese primrose crest.jpg|alt=Close-up of a crest of several small flowers at the end of long stems|Toyohina's Japanese primrose crest Utamaro - Three Beauties - Naniwa O-Kita - Paulownia crest.jpg|alt=Close-up of a leafy crest on a hand fan|Kita's paulownia crest Rather than attempting to capture a realistic portrayal of the three, Utamaro idealizes their likenesses. To many viewers, the faces in this and other portraits of the time seem little individuated, or perhaps not at all. Others emphasize the subtle differences that distinguish the three in the shapes of the mouths, noses, and eyes: Kita has plump cheeks and an innocent expression; her eyes are almond-shaped, and the bridge of her nose high; Hisa has a stiffer, proud expression, and the bridge of Hisa's nose is lower and her eyes rounder than Kita's; Toyohina's features fall in between, as her eyes are oval and a possesses a stern expression, and she has an air of being older and more intellectual. The print is a vertical
ōban of , and is a '
—a full-colour ukiyo-e print made from multiple woodblocks, one for each colour; the inked blocks are pressed on Japanese handmade paper. To produce a glittering effect the background is dusted with muscovite, a variety of mica. The image falls under the genres of ' ("portraits of beauties") and '''' ("big-headed pictures"), the latter a genre Utamaro pioneered and was strongly associated with. The composition of the three figures is triangular, a traditional arrangement Tadashi Kobayashi compares to
The Three Vinegar Tasters, in which
Confucius,
Gautama Buddha, and
Laozi symbolize the unity of
Confucianism,
Buddhism, and
Taoism; similarly, Kobayashi says, Utamaro demonstrates the unity of the three competing celebrity beauties in the print. Utamaro (1792–93) Takashima O-Hisa.jpg|alt=Illustration of a young Japanese woman in a kimono carrying a hand fan, looking behind herself|
Takashima Hisa, Utamaro (1792–96) Tomimoto Toyohisa reading a letter (Rijksmuseum, cropped).jpg|alt=Illustration of a young Japanese woman in a kimono reading a letter|
Tomimoto Toyohina, Utamaro (1793) Naniwaya O-Kita.jpg|alt=Illustration of a young Japanese woman in a kimono carrying a cup and saucer|
Naniwaya Kita, == Publication and legacy ==