Object

Tanzaku by Ono no Otsu

Keio Object Hub
Person
Date
制作年 AD17
Title
オノノオツウヒツタンザク
Collections
Depository
Institute of Oriental Classics (Shido Bunko) Campus Mita
Ref. number
AW-CEN-002312-0000
License
CC BY Images license
Creditline

慶應義塾(センチュリー赤尾コレクション)

URL
Classification
Art
AI Tagging
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Ono-no-Otsu (1568-1631?), the woman who was allegedly the writer of Joruri Monogatari (Tale of Lady Joruri) has come to be known by several different stories of her life. She was known to be extremely intelligent, excelling in poetry composition, musical instrument playing, calligraphy, and painting. She was a lady-in-waiting in service to Lady Yodo (?-1615), General Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s concubine, and Princess Sen (1597-1666), the daughter of Tokugawa Ieyasu, and was known to have contributed greatly to the education of many women in military rulers’ households. Her calligraphic style was called the Otsu Style, which found avid followers among women.This poem, written on kumogami (paper with faint cloud-like patterns), originates from Volume 1 of the New Sequel to the Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poems (Jp: Shin Shoku Kokin Wakashu). As this brushwork shows, it was customary for the calligrapher to indent the second line when quoting the poem another. This brushwork also exhibits an artistic mix of bold thick lines with delicate think lines.

Untitled: Morning after morning, spring warblers, buried in their own song, sing from the deep valley of hovering mist.

Rights

Ref. number
AW-CEN-002312-0000
License
CC BY
Creditline

慶應義塾(センチュリー赤尾コレクション)

Images
license

Depository and ID

Depository
Institute of Oriental Classics (Shido Bunko)
Campus Mita
URL
Classification
Art

Components

OPEN DATADESIGN

Details

Identifiers

Title (EN)
Tanzaku by Ono no Otsu

Physical description

Weights and quantities
Quantity 1幅

Identifiers

Title (EN)
Tanzaku by Ono no Otsu

Physical description

Weights and quantities
Quantity 1幅