Inkstone Box with Fishnets in Makie
- Date
-
制作年 AD18
- Title
- アボシマキエスズリバコ
- Materials, techniques and shape
- Lacquered wood with maki-e
- Collections
- Century Akao Collection
- Depository
- Keio Museum Commons Campus Mita
- Ref. number
- AW-CEN-002063-0000
- 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
- Rectangle Font Gas Metal Fashion accessory
Indispensable in fishing, nets were a part of life in ancient Japan, and scenes of fishnets being dried under the sun frequently appeared in poems. Later during the Edo Period, the fishnet was stylized into a decorative motif. A model example of this motif, now preserved by the Imperial Household, appears in “Drying Fishnets”, a painting rendered by Kaiho Yusho (1533-1615) on a byobu (a folding screen used as a room partition). Dating back to the Momoyama Period, the painting is said to be the originator of fishnet motifs that later became popular for other arts and crafts, as well as byobu.
Overview
Rights
Depository and ID
Components
OPEN DATADESIGN
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Details
Identifiers
- Title (EN)
- Inkstone Box with Fishnets in Makie
Physical description
- Weights and quantities
-
Quantity 1合
- Materials, techniques and shape
-
Materials 蒔絵、漆塗
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