Fashionable Brocade Pictures of the Tales of Ise: wo, Catalpa Bow

Detail of a pattern
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At A Glance

  • Period

    ca. 1772-73
  • Geography

    Japan
  • Material

    Ink and color on paper
  • Dimension

    H x W (image): 22.7 x 15.7 cm (8 15/16 x 6 3/16 in)
  • Accession Number

    S2004.3.36
  • EDAN ID

    edanmdm:fsg_S2004.3.36

Object Details

  • Artist

    Katsukawa Shunsho 勝川春章 (1726-1792)
  • Label

    This print illustrates a tragic episode from the eleventh-century poetic narrative, "Tales of Ise (Ise monogatari) in which a young wife whose husband has been away for three years promises herself to another man, only to have her husband return on the night when she has promised to join her suitor. When her husband leaves her, following an exchange of poems in which she expresses her love for the other man, she has a change of heart. She pursues her husband in vain, falling down beside a stream, where just before she dies she writes a poem on a stone using blood from her finger:
    Unable to detain
    the man who has left,
    rejecting my love,
    I feel that soon
    I will perish.
    This print comes from a series of forty-eight images illustrating episodes from Tales of Ise. Shunsho's designs for the series reflect the elegant style of the Tosa school, whose members were official painters for the imperial court.
    Translation of poem by Helen Craig McCullough (Tales of Ise: Lyrical Episodes from Tenth-Century Japan [Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1968])
  • Collection

    National Museum of Asian Art Collection
  • Exhibition History

    Masterful Illusions: Japanese Prints from the Anne van Biema Collection (September 15, 2002 to January 9, 2003)
  • Origin

    Japan
  • Credit Line

    The Anne van Biema Collection
  • Type

    Print
  • Restrictions and Rights

    Usage Conditions Apply

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