Competition Between Poets of Different Eras (Jidai fudō uta awase), depicting the poet Minamoto no Hitoshi – (Fujiwara No Nobuzane) prijašnji Sljedeći


Umjetnik:

Datum: 1201

Veličina: 30 x 19 cm

Tehnika: Paper

This hanging scroll illustrates part of an imaginary poetry competition among fifty poets from the past. The selection of poems from old anthologies and their arrangement into "competing" pairs is traditionally attributed to Emperor Gotoba (1180–1236), perhaps Japanese poetry"s greatest patron. The Metropolitan"s painting shows the sixty-first round, which pits Minamoto no Hitoshi (880–951) against the Lady Ichinomiya Kii (d. ca. 1113). The first of three poetry exchanges is recorded in a soft broad hand above a portrait of the male poet:Why is itthat love persistswhen deeply hidden, asa field overgrown in bamboo grassat midday?Ichinomiya Kii replies:The fields of bush clover at Manoare tangled and tossedin the autumn wind;for the dew that clings to its blossomsthere is no repose.The rest of this fictional exchange and the portrait of Ichinomiya Kii are on a separate hanging scroll now in a private collection in Japan. Several other segments from this version of the Jidaifudo utaawase exist, including one in the Tokyo National Museum. Simple ink portraits of famous poets paired with their most well known works were extremely popular in the Kamakura period. The portraits follow the conventions of their time: a person seated in a stylized three-quarter or profile view, with flattened robes emphasizing social ranking, and all individual expression reserved for the face. The playful figures in these scrolls are fanciful re-creations of cultural heroes and heroines, a unique group immortalized within the intimate lines of their poetry.

This artwork is in the public domain.

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Public domain

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