ID: (140) Illustration from Genji monogatori emaki - onna-e (women's painting) emakimono (horizontal illustrated narrative scroll)
MEDIUM: Ink and Color on paper; 8 5/8 x 18 7/8 in; Tokugawa Art Museum, Nagoya
HOW WAS IT MADE:
-Little is known about the production of the scrolls
-Scholars suggest that five teams worked on the project
-each team had:
-an aristocrat for the calligraphy and cultural sophistication
-group of painters
-principal artist, sumigaki
-drew the outlines in black ink
-made comments on what colors he wanted the others to use
-specialists who added pigment
PERIOD: 1140 C.E. - Late Heian or Insei period
WHAT MAKES IT STYLISTICALLY INTERESTING:
- onna-e (women's painting)
-soft colors and less action -use of tsukuri-e style
-"made up" or "constructed"
-this painting style was used considerably for illustrating romance tales during the Heian and Kamakura periods
-mono no aware
-"the pathos of things"
-the items in the room and the location of Genji in this scene adds meaning to the story
-use of fukinuki yatai (blown-off roof)
-could see the odd angles of sliding doors and folding screens
-metaphors abound!
-the awkwardness of the ritual with a child that is not Genji's is multiplied by placing him at the top of a a room that seems off-kilter
-space feels constricted by the diagonals
-lack of emotion and individualism
-most people have the same face, and women were really only decipherable by the color of their kimono
SYMBOLIC/ICONOGRAPHIC SIGNIFICANCE:
The Genji Monagatari Emaki represents the court life experience by men and women during the Heian period. The illustrations show societal roles and is particularly important in understanding the lives of women during this time. The clothing, architecture, and places of interaction in the illustrations can tell one much about Heian aristocratic lifestyles.
CONTEXT IN HISTORICAL FRAMEWORK:
The scroll was most likely made for these women who were bored in their homes, not allowed to do much of anything. The stories of Genji represent an escape and were a key form of entertainment for the stay-at-home mom.
THEORIES OF WHO MADE IT & WHY:
Lady Murasaki wrote the story, but the reason for this particular scroll's existence is questionable. It was made somewhere around 100 years after the novel was written, so it was just a way of adding pictorial representation to a well known story (much like we do with modern film adaptations of old novels).
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