Dōjōji ato shite from the series One Hundred Prints of Noh

Terms of Use
Usage Conditions ApplyAt A Glance
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Period
ca. 1922-1925 -
Geography
Japan -
Material
Ink and color on paper -
Dimension
H x W (sheet and image): 37.8 x 25.7 cm (14 7/8 x 10 1/8 in) -
Accession Number
FSC-GR-346 -
EDAN ID
edanmdm:fsg_FSC-GR-346
Object Details
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Artist
Tsukioka Kogyo 月岡耕漁 (1869-1927) -
Publisher
Matsuki Heikichi 松木平吉 -
Label
In the second part of the play Dōjōji, the dancer secretly slips underneath the temple bell before it drops over her. Frightened by the sound, the monks recount the tale of a woman who fell madly in love with a mountain priest but was abandoned by him. The priest hid underneath the bell as the woman turned into a fire-breathing demon and fried him by melting the bell. In the middle of the monks’ story, the dancer suddenly reemerges from underneath the bell in the form of a snake—the image illustrated here in Kōgyo’s print. At the end of the play, the jealous spirit is quelled by prayer and burns herself with her own flames. -
Provenance
To ?David Wallace, Washington, DC [1]To 1971Embassy of Japan, Washington DC, gift of David Wallace, Washington, DC [2]From 1971Freer Gallery of Art, gift of the Embassy of Japan, Washington, DC [3]Notes:[1] The Embassy of Japan received a gift from David Wallace of Washington, DC at an unknown date. In 1971, the Embassy of Japan gave print to the Study Collection of the Freer Gallery of Art. See letter dated February 11, 1971 from the Freer Gallery to Mr. David Wallace, copy in object file, Collections Management Office.[2] See note 1.[3] See note 1. -
Collection
Freer Study Collection -
Exhibition History
Staging the Supernatural: Ghosts and the Theater in Japanese Prints (March 23 to October 6, 2024) -
Previous custodian or owner
David WallaceEmbassy of Japan -
Origin
Japan -
Credit Line
Gift of the Embassy of Japan, Washington, D.C. -
Type
Print -
Restrictions and Rights
Usage Conditions Apply
There are restrictions for re-using this media. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page.
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