Eastern Art Online, Yousef Jameel Centre for Islamic and Asian Art

Ashmolean − Eastern Art Online, Yousef Jameel Centre for Islamic and Asian Art

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Act Nine

Glossary (4)

mitate, mitate-e, nishiki-e, vegetable pigments

  • mitate

    Mitate, or riddle, is a form of visual and literary parody on a classical theme. It required prior knowledge in order to decipher it.

  • mitate-e

    Mitate-e, or riddle, is a form of visual and literary parody on a classical theme. It required prior knowledge in order to decipher it.

  • nishiki-e

    Nishiki-e literally means 'brocade pictures' and refers to multi-coloured woodblock prints.

  • vegetable pigments

    Vegetable pigments were used to create coloured dyes for Japanese prints, paintings, and textiles. These pigments often faded over time due to the chemical reactions they underwent.

Location

    • currently in research collection

Objects are sometimes moved to a different location. Our object location data is usually updated on a monthly basis. Contact the Jameel Study Centre if you are planning to visit the museum to see a particular object on display, or would like to arrange an appointment to see an object in our reserve collections.

 

Publications online

  • Beauties of the Four Seasons by Mitsuko Watanabe

    Beauties of the Four Seasons

    This print is a mitate from Chūshingura ('The Storehouse of Loyal Retainers’), an epic story of a samurai vendetta based on an historical event. Led by the senior retainer Oishi Kuranosuke (1659-1703), the group of 47 men carefully bode their time, allaying enemy suspicions with frivolous behaviour, eventually avenging their lord by slaying the Daimyō Kira Yoshinaka (1641-1702) in Edo on the 14th December 1703. This became the subject of countless bunraku (puppet) and kabuki plays, and was frequently illustrated by ukiyo-e artists.

    Kōmyō Bijin Mitate Chūshingura consists of celebrated beauties in twelve scenes from Chūshingura. This print shows the moment when a senior retainer, Kakogawa Honzō disguised as a komusō (a strolling priest) with a straw hat, arrives home to find his wife and daughter about to commit ritual suicide because he has determined to do so. This refers to act 9 of Chūshingura. This series was issued during the same period and by the same publisher, Konoeya, as Gonin-bijin Aikyō-kisoi (Competition of Five Lovely Women) [see EAX.4721]. Interestingly, the same women seem to appear in both series; on the left Itsutomi of the Tomimoto as a komusō, Hiranoya of the Yatsuyama in the centre and Kisegawa of the Matsuba-ya on the right. There is a plum bonsai in a ceramic flowerpot probably implying ume-mi-zuki (plum viewing in February).

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