Artist: Mochizuki Gyokusen
Date: 701
Size: 31.4cm x 337.5cm
Technique: Paper
A parade of demons—comprised of household utensils, tools, and personal accessories like folding fans, coils of incense, and musical instruments come to life— makes its way from right to left in this horizontal composition. The monstrous but humorous-looking creatures appear in all shapes and sizes, some taking on rather grotesque human features while others resemble animals, birds, or demonic creatures from Buddhist hell paintings. Passages of ink wash suggest the nighttime setting. At the conclusion of the handscroll, the demons turn and flee from the fiery light of the rising sun. The image is based on ancient legends about demons and goblins who parade by night through the streets and even the mansions of the old capital city (Kyoto), until the dawn causes them to return to their otherworldly realm. These beliefs combined with folktales claiming that worn out household utensils could be transformed into demons to plague mankind at night. Mochizuki Gyokusen, the Kyoto-based artist of the Cowles handscroll, came from a samurai family and studied with at least two different teachers—one a Tosa-school painter, the other a Kano-affiliated artist. He allegedly created this work as a copy of a sixteenth-century handscroll version of the theme in the collection of the Shinjuan temple of the Daitokuji temple complex in Kyoto.
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This image (or other media file) is in the public domain because its copyright has expired. However - you may not use this image for commercial purposes and you may not alter the image or remove the watermark. This applies to the United States, Canada, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.
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