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Chokaro-Sixteen Charming Figures of Female Hermits
Kuniyoshi, 1847, Wood cut
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Chokaro-Sixteen Charming Figures of Female Hermits
Chokaro-Sixteen Charming Figures of Female Hermits
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Item no
322
Title
Sennin Chokaro from the series 'Sixteen Charming Figures of Female Hermits and Devotees' (Enshi juroku josen)
Description
A woman in a black and blue striped kimono pours sake into a bottle. Behind her a fan decorated with a horse design rests against a candle stand. The inset depicts Sennin Chokaro, one of eight Taoist Immortals, who was believed to have carried a magic horse in a gourd. When Chokaro needed to travel he would release this horse from the gourd and command it to run for days on end. This smaller image is framed with auspicious lingzhi fungus.
Artist / maker
Kuniyoshi
Date
1847
Size
37 x 25.5 cm.
Type
Wood cut
Location
Art and Design Library
The following information appears on the print:
Signature: Ichiyusai Kuniyoshi ga
Censor's Seals: Yoshimura and Muramatsu (1847 - 1848)
From a series of 16 prints titled 'Sixteen Charming Figures of Female Hermits and Devotees' ('Enshi Juroku Josen')
This print is a parody or 'mitate' of a classical story. Whereas Chokaro contained a horse in a gourd, the courtesan's bottle contains sake. Sake is being equated with the elixir of immortality.
This is one of a set of 50 prints donated to Edinburgh City Libraries by Marie Ferguson Dyer in honour of her father Henry Dyer. Dyer was a Scottish engineer who became the first Principal of the Imperial College of Engineering in Tokyo in 1872.
Exhibitions with this item
Dai Nippon (Great Japan)
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