Sekigahara
Sekigahara
THE SHAPING OF
DAIMYO CULTURE
1185-1868
JAPAN
THE SHAPING OF
DAIMYO CULTURE
1185-1868
edited by
YOSHIAKI SHIMIZU
Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo         Kyoto City, Kyoto                       Toyosaka Jinja, Yamaguchi Prefecture
Akana Hachimangü, Shimane Prefecture       Kyoto Furitsu Sôgô Shiryôkan            Ueda Municipal Museum, Nagano
Chishóin, Kyoto                            Kyoto National Museum, Kyoto              Prefecture
Chômoji, Aichi Prefecture                  Manshôji, Kanagawa Prefecture           Ueyama Ikuichi Collection, Nara Prefecture
Chôrakuji, Kyoto                           Masaki Art Museum, Osaka                Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
Chôreiji, Ishikawa Prefecture              Miyazaki Kazue Collection, Kanagawa     Unryüin, Kyoto
Chôshôin, Kyoto                              Prefecture                            Watanabe Kunio Collection, Tokyo
Egawa Art Museum, Hyógo Prefecture         Myôchiin, Kyoto                         Watanabe Yoshio Collection, Tokyo
Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         Myôhôin, Kyoto                          Yamada Hitoshi Collection, Tokyo
Engakuji, Kanagawa Prefecture              Myôkôji, Aichi Prefecture               Yamatane Art Museum, Tokyo
Enichiin, Shiga Prefecture                 Myôrenji, Kyoto
Fujii Akira Collection, Tokyo              Nagoji, Chiba Prefecture
Fukuoka Art Museum, Fukuoka                Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture
   Prefecture                              Nanban Bunkakan, Osaka
Fukushi Shigeo Collection, Tokyo           Nanzen'in, Kyoto
Ganjôjuin, Shizuoka Prefecture             Nanzenji, Kyoto
Goto Museum, Tokyo                         Nara National Museum, Nara Prefecture
Gunma Prefectural Museum of Modern         National Museum of Japanese History,
   Art, Gunma Prefecture                     Chiba Prefecture
Gyokuhóin, Kyoto                           Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, Tokyo
Hiroi Akihisa Collection, Tokyo            Niutsuhime Jinja, Wakayama Prefecture
Hófu Móri Hókókai, Yamaguchi               Okayama Prefectural Art Museum,
   Prefecture                                Okayama Prefecture
Hokkeji, Gifu Prefecture                   Okayama Prefectural Museum, Okayama
Honda Takayuki Collection, Tokyo             Prefecture
Honzan Jionji, Yamagata Prefecture         Osaka City, Osaka
Hôsenji, Kyoto                             Osaka Municipal Museum, Osaka
Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo             Private collections
li Naoyoshi Collection, Shiga Prefecture   Reiun'in, Kyoto
Imperial Household Collection              Rinkain, Kyoto
Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of Art         Rinnoji, Tochigi Prefecture
Jimyóin, Wakayama Prefecture               Rokuôin, Kyoto
Jingoji, Kyoto                             Saikyôji, Shiga Prefecture
Jôdoji, Hyôgo Prefecture                   Seikado Bunko, Tokyo
Jotokuji, Fukui Prefecture                 Seikeiin, Wakayama Prefecture
Jôzanji (Shisendô), Kyoto                  Sekai Kyüseikyo (MOA Art Museum),
Jufukuji, Kanagawa Prefecture                Shizuoka Prefecture
Jukóin, Kyoto                              Sekkeiji, Kôchi Prefecture
Jushôin, Kyoto                             Sen Sôsa Collection, Kyoto
Kagoshima Jingü, Kagoshima Prefecture      Sendai City Museum, Miyagi Prefecture
Kaihó Hiroshi Collection, Kyoto            Sennyúji, Kyoto
Kawabata Terutaka Collection, Kanagawa     Shingetsuji, Fukui Prefecture
   Prefecture                              Shinjuan, Kyoto
Kenchôji, Kanagawa Prefecture              Shomyoji, Kanagawa Prefecture
Kishida Eisaku Collection, Gunma           Shuon'an, Kyoto
   Prefecture                              Sôjiji (Nishiarai Daishi), Tokyo
Kitamura Bunka Zaidan, Kyoto               Sôunji, Kanagawa Prefecture
Kitano Tenmangu, Kyoto                     Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo
Kobe City Museum of Nanban Art, Hyôgo      Sword Museum, Tokyo
   Prefecture                              Taga Taisha, Shiga Prefecture
 Kôdenji, Saga Prefecture                  Takahashi Toshio Collection, Tokyo
 Kosaka Zentarô Collection, Tokyo          Takamori Shigeru Collection, Kumamoto
 Kôtokuji, Tochigi Prefecture                Prefecture
 Kozu Kobunka Kaikan, Kyoto                Tenjuan, Kyoto
 Kunozan Tóshogü, Shizuoka Prefecture      Tokiwayama Bunko, Kanagawa Prefecture
 Kushibiki Hachimangü, Aomori              Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo
   Prefecture                              Tokyo University of Arts, Tokyo
VI
       Foreword
                                                                               vn
       of the Kamakura period in 1185 to the end of the Edo period in 1868. The
       scope of the project has been greatly expanded since 1983, when we had
       explored an exhibition examining the contribution of a single daimyo
       family to the history of collecting. For agreeing to a broader exhibition
       on the art of the daimyo, and for assisting us in every phase of the
       project, we are deeply indebted to our partners in this joint venture, the
       Agency for Cultural Affairs of the Japanese government and The Japan
       Foundation, especially to Nobuyoshi Yamamoto, Akiyoshi Watanabe,
       and Yüichi Hiroi at the former, and to Sadao Ikeya, Toshihisa Tanaka,
       Yôichi Shimizu, and Hayato Ogo at the latter.
               The works of art exhibited here come from more than one hun-
       dred public and private collections, and we are immensely grateful to our
       lenders, who have allowed us to borrow works of unprecedented beauty
       and significance. Professor Yoshiaki Shimizu of Princeton University,
       curator of the exhibition and principal author and editor of the scholarly
       catalogue, deserves our deepest thanks for having worked tirelessly over
       the course of many years to help us realize this exhibition. Andrew M.
       Watsky ably assisted him over the past year, much of which they devoted
       to the catalogue, in which are published more than 330 works of art.
       Professor Martin Collcutt, also of Princeton University, contributed the
       incisive historical introduction to the catalogue and frequently served as
       advisor during the course of the project. Countless individuals at the
       Agency for Cultural Affairs, among them many of our catalogue authors,
       and at The Japan Foundation deserve our special thanks for carrying out
       myriad essential tasks, from securing loans to arranging photography.
       Their devotion to scholarship and to the cause of preserving Japan's
       cultural heritage has made possible this extraordinary achievement.
                Thanks are also due to the staff of the National Gallery of Art, in
       particular the team who worked on this project. Gaillard Ravenel and
       Mark Leithauser designed the installation, with production management
       by Gordon Anson. D. Dodge Thompson, and his staff in the department
       of exhibition programs, including Cameran Castiel, Ellen Marks, and
       Deborah Shepherd, provided organizational expertise. Mary Suzor, regis-
       trar, supervised the shipping of the works of art, and Mervin Richard,
       exhibitions conservator, coordinated the packing and the conservation
       measures necessary to safeguard the objects. Susan Arensberg and her
       colleagues in the education department have implemented a number of
       programs for the interested visitor. The elaborate funding package that
       has made this exhibition possible has been the particular concern of the
       Gallery's corporate relations officer, Elizabeth A. C. Weil. Joseph Krakora
       was particularly helpful with the coordination of the No theater and the
        film on daimyo culture, while Genevra Higginson planned and guided all
       events related to the opening of the exhibition. Ruth Kaplan ably inter-
       preted the content of the exhibition and its adjuncts to the media.
        Frances Smyth and Mary Yakush supervised the complex task of editing
        and producing the catalogue with skill and grace, with the essential
        collaboration of several people: Naomi Noble Richard, who served as an
        expert reader and editor; Virginia Wageman, who scrupulously edited a
        large portion of the manuscript; Kyoko Selden, who translated the Japa-
        nese authors' contributions; and Dana Levy, who designed the catalogue
        despite very pressing deadlines.
                Many people associated with our numerous lenders shared their
        knowledge and time, allowing us to see their treasures and discuss the
       works of art in their collections. Special thanks are due to Hosokawa
Vlll
Morisada, a descendant of one of the great daimyo families, and Okura
Ryüji, curator of the Kumamoto Prefectural Museum of Art, for their
enthusiastic support in the earliest stages of the project. Thomas Law-
ton, former director of the Freer Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, also
offered encouragement and support. We would like to thank William
Childs, former chairman of the department of Art and Archaeology at
Princeton University, for his indulgence during the course of the
preparations, and Professor Shimizu's students, both graduate and
undergraduate.
         In conjunction with this exhibition, our visitors are privileged to
learn in greater depth about two aspects of daimyo culture that were, as
this catalogue brings out, of great significance. One, the art of the tea
ceremony, is exemplified by the reconstruction of the Ennan teahouse in
its garden setting and the demonstrations of the ceremony, illustrated by
precious objects associated with it. This part of the undertaking was
supported by The Asahi Shimbun, the Yabunouchi School of Tea, The
Nomura Securities Co., Ltd., and All Nippon Airways.
         A second aspect of daimyo culture was its patronage of No
drama. The construction of a traditional No stage and performances by
the renowned Kanze troupe of No players have been supported by The
Yomiuri Shimbun.
         We would like to express our great appreciation to our American
sponsor, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, for its support. To the Japa-
nese supporters of the exhibition goes our deepest gratitude for their
generosity and leadership. We would like to thank especially The Yomiuri
Shimbun for its help with the project since its inception, and in particu-
lar Yosoji Kobayashi, president, Akihiro Nanjo, and the Yomiuri's able
staff. We are most appreciative of the support of The Nomura Securities
Co., Ltd., along with The Tokyo Marine and Fire Insurance Company,
Nippon Life Insurance Company, Matsushita Electric Industrial Corpo-
ration, The Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, Inc., and the
Federation of Bankers Associations of Japan and its members. Japan Air
Lines provided transport for the works of art. In addition, we are grateful
to The Japan-United States Friendship Commission and the Commemo-
rative Association for the Japan World Exposition for their support of this
exhibition catalogue. We thank All Nippon Airways for its assistance in
transporting many of the catalogues from Japan to Washington. The
exhibition was publicly announced in 1983 at the Tokyo Summit by
Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone and President Ronald Reagan. Since
then the project has received the support of both governments at the
highest level. We are particularly grateful to the National Gallery's
 former Trustee, Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III, for his timely
assistance. The Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities granted
an indemnity for the exhibition. Special thanks are due to Kôichi Hara-
guchi, Toshiyuki Takano, and Makoto Hinei in the Embassy of Japan in
 Washington.
         Finally to the former Ambassador Nobuo Matsunaga, as well as
 to the United States Ambassador in Japan, Mike Mansfield, go our spe-
 cial thanks for helping this complex but enormously rewarding effort in
 international understanding.
J. Carter Brown
Director
                                                                               IX
          S              INCE THE 1950S, THE AGENCY FOR CULTURAL AFFAIRS HAS
                        endeavored to further the understanding of Japanese
                        culture and history, through art exhibitions held at mu-
    seums throughout the United States. The first such exhibition, in 1951,
    was held in San Francisco; in 1953 another exhibition traveled to several
    cities, including New York and Boston. Exhibitions of Japanese art orga-
    nized by the Agency for Cultural Affairs have included painting, sculp-
    ture, applied arts, calligraphy, and archaeology.
             Japan: The Shaping ofDaimyo Culture 1185-1868, initiated at the
    1983 summit meeting between our two countries and co-organized with
    the Japan Foundation, explores through art the culture created by the
    warriors of medieval and early modern Japan. From the end of the
    twelfth century, the warrior class, newly risen holders of political author-
    ity, developed cultural traditions inherited from the court, absorbing
    influences from China, including Zen Buddhism, resulting in the cul-
    tural legacy of the Kamakura and Muromachi periods. Later, the evolu-
    tion of early modern culture in the Edo period resulted from the
    participation of both the daimyo and the merchant class.
             The works of art gathered here reflect the active role of the
    warriors in the development of an important part of Japanese cultural
    history. The Agency for Cultural Affairs has planned and coordinated
    the realization of this complex project, and negotiated the loans that
    have made the exhibition possible. Although many exhibitions of Japa-
    nese art have traveled to the United States, none parallels Japan: The
    Shaping of Daimyo Culture 1185-1868 in terms of quality and quantity,
    and in its distinctive theme.
             We hope that American visitors to the exhibition will gain a bet-
    ter understanding of the cultural traditions of Japan, and of the physical
    and spiritual qualities that distinguish Japanese art. We believe that this
    exhibition will contribute to the future growth of cultural relations be-
    tween our two countries.
             In conclusion, I would like to express my appreciation to J. Carter
    Brown, director of the National Gallery, and the entire staff of the Gal-
    lery, as well as the many other people in the United States and Japan, for
    the great efforts made in realizing the exhibition. Special thanks are due
    to many generous lenders in Japan who agreed to part with their trea-
    sures for the duration of the exhibition, as well as to the Japanese Minis-
    try for Foreign Affairs and the Japanese Embassy.
    Hiroshi Ueki
    Commissioner for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan
X
     S             INCE ITS FOUNDING IN 1972, THE JAPAN FOUNDATION HAS
                   fostered cultural exchange in diverse fields between
                  Japan and many countries throughout the world. In
recent years, art exhibitions that played a particularly important role in
our activities have included The Great Japan Exhibition in London in
1981, Japan des Avant-Gardes in Paris in 1986, and Paris in Japan, Japan in
Paris, which traveled to St. Louis, New York, and Los Angeles during
1987-1988.
        Japan: The Shaping ofDaimyo Culture 1185-18681$ an exhibition
of the art related to the warrior class, important contributors to the
cultural and political development of Japan from the medieval through
the early modern eras. The daimyo-related art exhibited here will show,
we believe, a side of Japanese culture not yet well known to the Ameri-
can public. We expect that this exhibition will be the first step in a new
phase of Japanese-American cultural exchange.
        We would like to express our gratitude to the many people who
worked so hard and so long for this exhibition, and especially to J. Carter
Brown who energetically traveled between the United States and Japan
to make the exhibition possible. We would also like to thank all of the
individuals and organizations who have kindly lent us their treasures. We
are indebted to the Japanese Ministry for Foreign Affairs for its assis-
tance since the 1983 summit meeting.
Yasue Katori
President
The Japan Foundation
                                                                              XI
       Daimyo and daimyo culture
MARTIN COLLCUTT
      D  -«^•^^___^^^
                                       AIMYO WERE FEUDAL LORDS OR BAR-
                                    _ ons who, as leaders of powerful
                                    f warrior bands, controlled the prov-
                                      inces of Japan for much of the medi-
                                   eval (chùsei), and early modern ages
(kinsei), from 1185 to 1868. The term daimyo combines the two characters
dai ("great") and myd ("name;" from myôden, "name fields," referring to
privately owned land). In the eleventh and twelfth centuries the term
was used to refer to absentee landholders such as nobles and temples
who held rights in privatized provincial estates within the public land
system administered by the central court government in the city of
Heian (Kyoto). By the fourteenth century the word daimyo was being
used to describe warrior leaders who had built up extensive military
power and landed wealth in the provinces. The daimyo thus emerged
from among warriors, known as samurai or bushi, who had come to
exercise increasing political and economic as well as military power with
the decline of the centralized imperial court government in the tenth
and eleventh centuries.
          During the seventh and eighth centuries Japan saw the establish-
ment of a centralized imperial government modeled on those of Sui and
 Tang China. For several centuries the imperial court, headed by emper-
 ors (tennô), claiming direct descent from the Sun Goddess, Amaterasu,
 held unchallenged sway. By the tenth century, however, the imperial
 court was beginning to lose control over the provinces. Private estates
 (shden) held by temples and nobles living as absentee proprietors in the
 capital proliferated, and local warrior bands sprang up as central military
 influence waned. By the eleventh century the court was becoming reli-
                                                                               1
Himeji Castle. Photograph by Mike       ant on provincial warriors to enforce its authority and protect the capital.
Yamashita. Copyright © 1988, National   The leaders of powerful warrior bands, especially the chieftains of the
Geographic Society.
                                        Taira and Minamoto clans, were drawn into court politics. A watershed
                                        in the shifting balance of political power was reached in the later twelfth
                                        century when the Taira, led by Kiyomori (1118-1181), asserted control over
                                        the court, only to be ousted and crushed by the Minamoto, led by
                                        Yoritomo (1147-1199) and his half-brother Yoshitsune (1159-1189).
                                                The establishment by Yoritomo of a separate warrior govern-
                                        ment, bakufu, in Kamakura in eastern Japan and his acceptance from the
                                        imperial court of the title of Seiitaishogun (Great General Who Quells
                                        the Barbarians) following the destruction of the Taira at the Battle of
                                        Dannoura in 1185 marked a turning point in the shifting balance of
                                        courtly and warrior power. Hitherto the title of shogun had been held by
                                        imperial princes. The conferment of the title of shogun was a recogni-
                                        tion by the imperial court that Yoritomo, as leader of the warrior order,
                                        exercised a legitimate delegated authority. Thus began a political ar-
                                        rangement that was to endure for the almost seven-hundred-year period
                                        covered by this exhibition, in which emperors heading the imperial court
                                        in Kyoto continued to embody a sacerdotal sovereignty while powerful
                                        warriors (as shoguns or military hegemons) were delegated with authority
                                        to rule. The emperors retained their legitimating function, and at times
                                        individual emperors sought to retrieve the powers granted to warriors,
                                        but until the mid-nineteenth century warriors controlled the movement
                                        of Japanese history, appropriating political, economic, and even cultural
                                        leadership. Within the warrior order those powerful feudal lords known
                                        as the daimyo were local rulers and leading contenders for power.
                                                 During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the Ashikaga sho-
                                        guns gained the support of powerful provincial warrior houses by ap-
                                        pointing them as constables, shugo, with military, administrative, and
                                        fiscal authority over one or more provinces. Historians have named them
                                        shugo daimyo. Strong shoguns like Ashikaga Yoshimitsu (1358-1408), the
2
third shogun, were able to assert shogunal authority over the shugo. Himeji Castle, interior view. Photograph
Under weaker mid-fifteenth-century shoguns like Ashikaga Yoshimasa by Mike Yamashita. Copyright © 1988,
                                                                           National Geographic Society.
(1436-1490), however, these constables, or shugo daimyo, extended their
local power at the expense of the shogunate, tightening their feudal
control over their provinces of assignment and enrolling local warriors as
their vassals.
         A second stage of daimyo evolution was set in motion_when, in
the fierce provincial warfare following the outbreak of the Onin War
(1467-1477) the shogun-s/zugo coalition disintegrated in civil war and
many of the shugo-daimyo, who were militarily overextended or entan-
gled in politics in the capital, were toppled by their own deputies and
retainers, who emerged as the rulers of smaller but more tightly-knit
domains. These 250 or so warrior families were known as the daimyo of
the Warring Provinces, sengoku daimyo. Fiercely independent, they
sought to ensure survival in an age of privincial warfare by extending
their feudal control over all the warriors, merchants, and peasants within
their territories, and by mobilizing all the human and economic re-
sources of the domain for attack and defense. The Ashikaga shogunate
and the imperial court both survived, but shogunal power did not extend
far beyond Kyoto. The imperial court was too impoverished and politi-
cally impotent to assert any authority. This period of sengoku daimyo
development, between the mid-fifteenth and mid-sixteenth centuries,
 marked the extreme of political decentralization in Japan. This decen-
 tralization was hastened by the weakness of the shogunal leadership and
 by the rivalry of warring daimyo. Shugo- and sengoku daimyo houses rose
 and fell with bewildering rapidity. Very few of the medieval daimyo
 families survived into the late sixteenth century, the beginning of the
 early modern age, kinsei, in Japan. Among the survivors were the Shi-
 mazu family of Satsuma (Kagoshima), the Mori of Chóshü (Yamaguchi
 Prefecture), and the Hosokawa, whose fortunes were revived in the six-
 teenth century by members of a collateral line.
                                                                                                                3
             By the mid-sixteenth century the pendulum of feudal decentral-
    ization had swung about as far as it could go without total political
    fragmentation of the country. Among the contending daimyo were some
    who dreamed of crushing their rivals and conquering and reuniting the
    country. During the later sixteenth century a process of military unifica-
    tion was set in motion by the young daimyo Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582),
    carried forward by his leading general Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598),
    and brought to completion by their former ally Tokugawa leyasu (1543-
    1616), a powerful daimyo from eastern Japan, after his victory at the
    Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. All three unifiers relied on daimyo vassals to
    crush other daimyo who blocked the path to power. Thus the daimyo,
    who intrinsically represented decentralizing tendencies and frequently
    impeded unification, were used in the process of recentralization of
    power and were included in the political structure eventually hammered
    out by Toyotomi Hideyoshi and revised by Tokugawa leyasu. The daimyo
    who served Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi and were rewarded
    by them with generous fiefs are known as shokuhô daimyo (the word
    shokuhô is made up out alternative readings for the first characters of the
     names Oda and Toyotomi).
              The full maturation, and fourth stage, of daimyo evolution oc-
     curred in the Edo period (1615-1868) when the daimyo, as heads of war-
     rior houses (buke) and vassals of the Tokugawa shoguns, governed 250 or
     so provincial fiefs (han). The Edo period is also commonly referred to by
     Japanese historians as kinsei, which most western historians of Japan
     translate as "early modern." Thus these Edo-period daimyo are known as
     the "early modern" or kinsei daimyo. The political system established by
     Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616) after his assumption of the title of shogun
     was one in which the Tokugawa shogunal government (bakufu) ruled the
     heartland of central Japan and controlled the great cities and mines,
     while vassal daimyo were appointed to administer some two hundred
     and fifty domains (han). This centralized feudal system of rule in which
     shoguns heading the bakufu shared power with daimyo as the adminis-
     trators of domains has been called the baku-han system.
              Tokugawa leyasu and his shogunal successors went furthest in
     regulating and institutionalizing the role of daimyo. By definition Edo
     period daimyo governed domains yielding at least the equivalent of
      10,000 koku in rice (one koku equalled about five bushels). This was
     merely the minimum income for recognition as a daimyo. Some daimyo
     administered domains assessed at over 500,000 koku and headed bands
     (kashindan) of several hundred samurai retainers. The Tokugawa bakufu
     issued regulations for daimyo, spied on them, and interfered with mar-
      riage and succession in order to preempt the formation of threatening
      alliances. Under the Tokugawa control system, daimyo were ranked on
      the basis of the closeness of their relationship to the Tokugawa and
      required to divide their time between attendance upon the shoguns in
      Edo and the administration of their domains. The daimyo survived until
      1871 when the Meiji (1868-1912) regime abolished the feudal fiefs in
      creating a modern prefectual system and pensioned the daimyo off as
      members of a new nobility resident in Tokyo.
              The daimyo belonged not under the imperial court hierarchy but
      in the upper echelons of the hierarchy of warrior power. Tokugawa ley-
      asu was a daimyo who rose to become shogun and establish a shogunal
      dynasty. Other daimyo had similar ambitions. Most daimyo, however,
      remained shogunal vassals, allies, or rivals for power. They in turn had
      their own vassals and rear vassals to whom they awarded fiefs in land or
      stipends in rice in return for military service. Like shoguns, daimyo were
      granted nominal rank in the imperial court hierarchy. They were not,
      however, vassals of the imperial court. Indeed, shoguns sought to pre-
4
vent alliances between daimyo and the court, because through such ties
daimyo might secure the political legitimation that would allow them to
subvert or usurp the shogunal office. While many daimyo were hardly
more than petty provincial upstarts with little to spare for cultural pat-
ronage, others commanded domains covering one or more provinces,
lived luxuriously, and were contenders for power on a national scale.
           Daimyo culture, then, is the culture of the upper echelon of the
warrior order. But since daimyo were associated with shoguns, and in
some cases rose to become shoguns, daimyo culture also embraced sho-
gunal culture. At the same time, because many prominent daimyo
houses began as lowly provincial samurai, daimyo culture absorbed and
refined traditional samurai culture, and in its turn reshaped samurai
cultural style. Moreover, elite warrior culture drew heavily on the classi-
cal Japanese traditions of the imperial court and on Chinese culture,
especially through Zen Buddhist monks who derived their distinctive
religious and cultural traditions from China and became cultural advisors
for warrior chieftains. But in the final analysis daimyo culture was rooted
in the Japanese samurai tradition.
           The art and culture of the daimyo was created by and for a class
whose existence depended on military power, but whose social function
and self-image called increasingly for mastery of the arts of peace. The
interests, artifacts, and activities that embody daimyo culture thus repre-
sent a synergy of warrior traditions (bu) and civilian arts (bun). Daimyo
united in their persons military power, landholding, administrative and
judicial functions, and social prestige. This meant that while military
values were becoming prevalent and predominant in Japanese society,
civilian arts were becoming indispensable to the military men. As war-
riors acceded to the powers of the civilian government, they required the
civilian arts of governance; and as they acceded to the prestige of the
courtly nobility, they required the cultural attributes and abilities that
 distinguished those civilian aristocrats.
           Daimyo were warriors by training and vocation. War was their
 metier. To succeed they had to be ruthless, cunning, callous, and aggres-
 sive. Even when, in the early seventeenth century, conditions of peace
 and order replaced endemic warfare and the daimyo turned their atten-
 tion from fighting to governing, they continued to think of their lineages
 as military houses (buke). But few daimyo could survive and prosper
 simply as illiterate, boorish ruffians. As early as the twelfth century,
 warrior leaders like Taira Kiyomori (1118-1181) or Minamoto Yoritomo
 were finding that their newfound political power and the territories they
 had acquired called for the exercise of administration, and that the social
 distinction and political power conferred by victory in war, attainment of
 office, and possession of territory had to be legitimated—not least in
 their own eyes—by the acquisition and exercise of the arts of peace
 (bun), which included administration, scholarship, poetry, painting, and
 the study of the Chinese and Japanese classics. And what may first have
 been assumed as a convenient veneer, or borrowed cultural credential, to
 dignify naked military power, soon became a consuming interest in its
 own right—so much so that in much of Japanese warrior culture we can
 detect both complementarity and tension between the demands of bu
 and the appeal of bun.
           Among daimyo from medieval to early modern times, there is
 commonality as well as considerable diversity. Although most rose from
  rural samurai origins, a few, such as Saitô Dôsan (d. 1556), got their start
  as provision merchants for other daimyo. While many daimyo were
  hardly more than petty provincial chieftains with limited resources and
  little to spare for cultural patronage, others commanded domains cover-
  ing one or more provinces, lived luxuriously, and were contenders for
                                                                                 5
    power on a national scale. Tokugawa leyasu emerged from the ranks of
    the daimyo to establish the Tokugawa shogunal dynasty. Oda Nobunaga,
    who began life as a small-scale daimyo, and Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the son
    of a peasant, imposed their wills on other daimyo and achieved a military
    hegemony that any shogun would have envied, though they did not take
    that title. In the century or more of warfare prior to the seventeenth
    century, instability was the norm, and daimyo families rose and fell with
    almost bewildering rapidity. Very few families—the Shimazu of Kyushu
    were among the rare exceptions—survived as daimyo from the twelfth
    through the sixteenth centuries and beyond.
    Warriors and         The four main types of daimyo, then, are: the shugo
    daimyo in the        daimyo (constable daimyo) of the late fourteenth and
    early medieval       fifteenth centuries; the smaller but more effectively
    age                  organized  daimyo of the Age of Wars (Sengoku jidai);
                         the Shokuhô daimyo of the Momoyama period; and
                         the kinsei (early modern) daimyo of the Edo period.
    (Though the kinsei period encompasses both the Momoyama and Edo
    periods, only the daimyo of the Edo period are customarily referred to as
    kinsei daimyo.) The closing decades of the twelfth century and the open-
    ing years of the thirteenth mark the emergence of local warrior power in
    the early medieval period, and one of the great shifts in Japanese history:
    from a society ruled exclusively by a court aristocracy (huge) to a society
    increasingly dominated by warriors (bushi). By the eleventh century the
    hegemony of the centralized government of the imperial court that had
    been established in the eighth century was being undermined by provin-
    cial disturbances and warrior incursions. Warrior bands from the prov-
    inces were increasingly drawn into court politics in the Heian capital in
    the tenth and eleventh centuries. In the mid-twelfth century one such
    band, the Taira, led by Taira Kiyomori (1118-1181), seized control of the
    court. In the process they eliminated most of their principal warrior
    rivals, the Minamoto (also known as Genji) clan. After Kiyomori's death
    the Minamoto rallied under a young General Yoritomo (1147-1199). In
    1185 Yoritomo's half brother Yoshitsune (1159-1189) and other Minamoto
    leaders drove the Taira from the capital and crushed them at a great
    battle at Dannoura in the inland sea. Later, Yoshitsune was hounded by
    his brother Yoritomo, who was suspicious of his intentions and jealous of
    his victories. He fled to northeastern Japan, where he was captured and
    forced to take his own life.
              For his services to the court Yoritomo received the title of
    Seiitaishôgun (Great General Who Quells the Barbarians) and estab-
    lished a warrior government, known as a shogunate or bakufu, well away
    from the court at the small coastal town of Kamakura in eastern Japan.
    Although this catalogue and exhibition begin with Yoritomo's portrait, it
    is important to note that Yoritomo is never regarded as a daimyo, because
    the notion of the daimyo as feudal lord had not yet developed in the late
    twelfth century. Yoritomo was the chieftain (tôryo) of the Minamoto
    warrior band. He assumed the military title of shogun and the imperial
    court title Utaishoy Great Commander of the Right, by which he was
     remembered. Yoritomo's combination of warrior virtues (bu) and civilian
     skills (bun) established a pattern that later warrior chieftains, including
     the Ashikaga and Tokugawa shoguns, the unifiers Oda Nobunaga and
     Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and most daimyo, were to emulate.
              The rout of the Taira by the Minamoto, Yoritomo's establishment
    of a separate, warrior government in eastern Japan, his assumption of the
    title of shogun, and the crushing defeat by the Kamakura bakufu of an ill-
    planned attempt at a recovery of power by the imperial court in 1221 all
6
signaled the effective acquisition of political as well as military leadership
in Japan by warriors. The authority of the court was not completely
undermined by the formation of Yoritomo's bakufu nor by the defeat in
the ill-fated Jókyü War of 1221. While the political functions of the court
were dwindling, its cultural influence was more enduring. In fact, these
years were the critical phase of a momentous shift from a society ruled
by the imperial court and the court nobility (huge) to a society increas-
ingly dominated by warriors (bushï). The Taira had been warriors, too.
Rather than establish new organs of government, however, they had
tried to rule the court and the country much as the Fujiwara nobles had
done, through offices of the civilian government and by the manipula-
tion of the imperial office. The Kamakura bakufu was the first in a series
of warrior regimes that until the nineteenth century governed Japan
through institutions outside the structure of the ancient court bureauc-
racy. The imperial court government survived, tennd maintained their
sovereignty, and nobles maintained their cultural influence, but the
court steadily declined in wealth and political leadership as power stead-
ily shifted into warrior hands.
         Yoritomo had dreamed of establishing a Minamoto shogunal dy-
nasty, but that ambition was thwarted by the assassination of his second
son, the shogun Sanetomo, in 1219. Thereafter, until its overthrow in
1333, the Kamakura bakufu was dominated by the Hójó warrior family of
eastern Japan, who brought imperial princes and nobles from Kyoto to
serve as figurehead shoguns while they actually ruled as shogunal re-
gents. The early Hójó were effective warrior administrators and earned a
reputation for strong government. Hójó Tokimune organized the defense
of the country against the attempted Mongol invasions in 1274 and 1281.
          Although the term daimyo was in use by this time to describe
local powerholders and was taking on an increasingly martial connota-
tion, it had not yet become part of the political nomenclature of the age.
Yoritomo's vassals were called housemen (gokenin). To police the country
he established the offices of provincial constable (shugo), and estate stew-
ard (jito). Shugo were selected from among his principal vassals and
appointed as military overseers of the various provinces. Jitd were vassals
placed within the provincial estates of the nobility to ensure local order.
 Hôjô power rested heavily on the appointment and control of these
warriors. As shugo and jitô built up their local control, extended their
land holdings, and brought other warriors under their influence by oaths
 of allegiance, they can be described as the forerunners of the daimyo as
 territorial hegemons. By the early fourteenth century some of these
shugo vassals of the Kamakura bakufu were becoming disaffected. In 1333
 a coalition of forces led by Emperor Go-Daigo and the eastern warrior
 Ashikaga Takauji (1305-1358) toppled the Kamakura bakufu. After a brief
 resumption of imperial rule, known as the Kenmu Restoration, Go-
 Daigo was ousted from the capital by his former ally, who set up a rival
 emperor and established a shogunate in the Muromachi district of Kyoto
 under Ashikaga warrior control.
                                                                                 7
    was not discovered by warriors, nor was it unique to Japan. The ideal of
    the ruler who combines civilian and military arts had been established in
    ancient China and enshrined in Confucian texts, which had shaped
    Japanese thinking from as early as the sixth century. The early political
    reformer Prince Shótoku, author of the Seventeen article constitution in
    the early seventh century, might be regarded as one of its first conscious
    Japanese exemplars. An early emperor is known posthumously simply as
    "Bun and Bu," or"Monmu" termo (683-707). Imperial princes and nobles
    serving the court in the Nara and Heian periods also sought to embody
    the ideal of bu and bun, although the court nobility in Heian times
    quickly lost their martial tradition and ceased to bear arms. Daimyo
    culture thus encompasses the absorption, transformation, and applica-
    tion of an ancient civilian ideal by a newly emergent warrior elite.
             In the cultural arena, a sense of the emerging military ideal and
    the conflict between the old aristocratic order and the new military elite
    may be gleaned from the war tales of the medieval age. The Heiji mono-
    gatari (Tale of the Heiji Wars), for instance, a contemporary chronicle that
    tells of the struggles between the Taira and Minamoto warrior bands
    during Taira Kiyomori's rise to power, is one of the first war tales to
    recognize the impending conflict between the old aristocratic and the
    new military elite. It warns members of the imperial court that, in a
    troubled age, both learning (the bun of aristocratic bureaucrats) and
    military skill (the bu of warrior generals) are essential to survival:
       If we look at precedents followed in both China and Japan, we will find that when
       rewarding subjects and ministers, rulers have always assigned high priority to both
       learning and military might. Learning is helpful in various areas of administration;
       and military power enables rulers to suppress disturbances. So in his plans to pre-
       serve the empire and rule the land, a ruler seems to place learning at his left and
       military strength at his right—making them like a person's two hands. Neither can
       be dispensed with (Brown and Ishida 1979, 392).
    Unfortunately, members of the imperial court proved unable to recover
    military skills that might have restored their power, while the warrior
    leaders were increasingly able to master, or hire, the civilian arts they
    needed to rule. Warrior chieftains proved best able to command the mix
    of military and civilian skills that were essential to survival and success in
    an unstable age.
            Warriors (bushi) saw themselves as distinct from the courtiers,
    while courtiers were fascinated with the valor and martial tradition of
    bushi. The martial aspect (bu) of the emerging warrior ideal is shown very
    clearly in the many war tales of the early medieval age. The Mutsu waki
    (Tale of Mutsu) was written by a courtier in the eleventh century and
    chronicles the victories of Minamoto Yoriyoshi (999-1075) and his son
    Yoshiie (1039-1106), ancestors of Yoritomo, in the wars of pacification of
    the northern provinces. The long campaigns in the north provided many
    opportunities for the display of warrior courage. Yoriyoshi's victories
    established his reputation as a great chieftain and, through the granting
    of spoils, allowed him to forge strong vassal bonds with the eastern bushi
    who joined his armies. The Mutsu waki already contains many of the
    facets of the warrior ideal more fully developed in later war tales. Yori-
    yoshi is presented as the seasoned leader and master of the way of the bow
    and horse:
        At that juncture the court nobles met in council determined to appoint a general to
        punish [Abe] Yoritoki, and settled unanimously upon Minamoto-no-ason Yoriyoshi, a
        son of Yorinobu-no-ason, the governor of Kawachi province. Yoriyoshi was a cool,
        resourceful man, well suited to command. Numbers of eastern warriors had long ago
        joined their fortunes to his, won by his courage and enterprise as a soldier under his
        father during the Chôgen era [1028-1037], when Yorinobu-no-ason went on behalf of
        the court to subdue Taira Tadatsune and his sons—rebels who were perpetrating
8
   shocking outrages in eastern Japan. For a time Yoriyoshi had served as a third-
   ranking official in Koichijoin's household. Koichijoin was a prince who delighted in
   the hunt. Whenever one of his parties came upon a deer, fox, or hare in the field, it
   was invariably Yoriyoshi who took the game, for although he carried a weak bow by
   preference, his aim was so deadly that every arrow buried itself to the feathers in his
   prey, and even the fiercest animal perished before his bowstring (McCullough 1964-
   1965,187).
But Yoriyoshi is also the ideal type of warrior chieftain who wins the
loyalty of his followers by his generous concern for them as well as by
sheer force of arms:
   Yoriyoshi provided a filling meal for his men, saw that their weapons were put to
   rights, and personally visited the injured to care for their wounds. The warriors were
   deeply touched. 'Our bodies shall repay our debts; our lives shall count as nothing
   where honor is at stake. We are ready to die for our general now' (McCullough 1964-
   1965,197).
                                                                                             9
     1281. Suenaga had the scrolls painted to glorify himself and his exploits
     for posterity and to lay claim to spoils for his contribution to the salvation
     of the country. The two scrolls express Suenaga's leadership, his fearless-
     ness, and his ferociousness in hand-to-hand combat with the invaders.
     They may exaggerate his individual contribution to the rout of the Mon-
     gols but they do give a vigorous impression of the martial ideal of the
     bushi as it existed in the late thirteenth century.
             Another illustration of the life of the Kamakura warrior and his
     disdain for the ways of the courtier is provided by the Obusuma Saburo
     ekotoba ( Tale of Obusuma Sdburo, cat. 79). Painted around the year 1300,
     this scroll contrasts, we might almost say caricatures, the lives of two
     eastern warriors from Musashi Province, Obusuma Saburó and his elder
     brother Yoshimi Jiro. Yoshimi Jiro is presented as an aesthete who has
     admiration only for the ways of Kyoto and its courtiers. His residence,
     completely out of place in the frontier territory of the eastern provinces,
     is a copy of a nobleman's palace. He takes as his wife a noblewoman from
     the imperial court, who bears him a daughter. He shows no interest in
     the cultivation of martial skills but instead devotes his days and nights to
     composing poetry and playing the flute.
             Obusuma Saburó, by contrast, is a dedicated warrior who thinks
     of nothing but the cultivation of martial arts. The text of the scroll sums
     up his attitude in this way:
        Because I was born in a warrior house, [yumiya no ie], what could be more natural for
        me than to practice the skills of the warrior. What is the use of filling one's heart
        with thoughts of the moon or flowers, or composing verse, or plucking a lute? The
        ability of strum a zither or blow a flute doesn't count for much on the battlefield.
        Everybody in my household—women and children included—will learn to ride wild
        horses and train daily with the longbow.
     Saburo takes as his wife an ill-favored but stalwart woman from the
     eastern provinces. She gives him three sons and two daughters, all of
     whom are obliged by Saburó to devote their days to martial pursuits.
             One autumn the two brothers are called to Kyoto to perform
     military service as guards at the imperial palace. Saburó sets out first,
     with his retinue. On the way he encounters a band of brigands in the
     mountains but the mere reputation of his martial ability frightens them
     off. Some days later Jiro and his men encounter the same bunch of
     brigands. The bandits are less intimidated by the courtly Jiro and his
     band. They kill him and rout his retinue. When Saburó returns from the
     capital, in spite of the fact that he has sworn to take care of his elder
     brother's interests, he steals Jiró's lands, makes his wife and daughter his
     servants, breaks off a marriage arrangement between Jirô's daughter and
     the local provincial governor, and tries to interest the governor in marry-
     ing his own ugly daughter. The last section of the handscroll has been
     lost, but stories like this were generally provided with happy endings,
     often through the intervention of a compassionate Buddhist deity.
             Whatever the original intent of the scroll, it reveals a tension
     between bu and bun in thirteenth-century warrior society and an aware-
     ness that over-indulgence in courtly or literary arts could undermine the
     warrior spirit and bring disaster to warrior families. The behavior of
     Saburó, ready at every turn to advance his own, and his family's, interests
     was perhaps intended as a caricature of the martial spirit and realism of
     eastern warriors.
              Warrior leaders like Yoritomo and the Hójó regents frequently
     warned their vassals against excessive indulgence in scholarly and literary
     pursuits and preached the virtues of spartan living, battle readiness, and
     cultivation of the martial arts. Early medieval warriors, especially the
     warrior elite, those who would later be described as daimyo, also culti-
     vated the civilian arts, due to necessity and personal interest. As they
10
achieved political power they found, as many warriors rulers have found
at other times, that while they might conquer territory on horseback they
could not rule it from horseback. They needed literacy, legal training,
governing skills, and skill in calligraphy, facility in the drafting of docu-
ments, and prestige conferred by participation in the courtly traditions of
the kuge, the courtly elite they were displacing. These administrative
and literary skills (bun) were acquired by associating with nobles and
Buddhist monks, especially Zen Buddhist monks. With little of their own
to contribute in the way of political philosophy, administrative expertise,
and artistic and literary creativity, and lacking traditions of literacy and
scholarship, the warrior elite in medieval Japan, eager to embellish their
growing political power and social influence with trappings of cultural
legitimacy, had to look to the Kyoto court, Buddhist monasteries, and
Chinese culture to supply their cultural and intellectual deficiencies.
Like contemporary European clerics, Japanese Buddhist monks were
custodians of literary and high culture in a world of warriors. Zen teach-
ings in particular proved congenial to the bushi, and the Zen Buddhist
monks became favored educators, advisors, and companions to the war-
rior elite.
          In many ways the warrior's pattern of acquisition of civilian arts
was set by Yoritomo himself. In later periods daimyo, and shoguns like
leyasu, read about Yoritomo, the founder of the first bdkufu, in the pages
of the Azuma kagami (Mirror of the East), a thirteenth-century account of
the Minamoto rise to power and the Kamakura bakufu. They modeled
themselves on those aspects of Yoritomo's life they particularly admired.
Before his exile to a remote peninsula in eastern Japan, Yoritomo had
been reared in the capital. Quite apart from his administrative and mar-
tial skills, one intangible but important asset in winning the adherence of
eastern provincial warriors in his campaigns against the Taira was the
aura of courtly lineage or pedigree (kishu) that surrounded him. Yoritomo
had been brought up in Kyoto and traced his Minamoto ancestry back to
emperor Seiwa. Despite his exile in Izu, his warrior training and family
connections, his determination to base his government in eastern Japan,
and his preference for the title of shogun over high court rank as a basis
for his authority, Yoritomo was always respectful toward the court and
receptive to its culture. He made several visits to the capital, cultivated a
pro-bakufu faction within the court, and invited lower-ranking courtiers
to serve as his political advisers and bureaucrats in Kamakura.
          Yoritomo legitimated a warrior interest in poetry and the arts. He
received instruction in the rules of Japanese verse (wakd) and composi-
tion from the monk Jien, who was a member of the noble Fujiwara family
and an accomplished poet and scholar. The Shùgyokushû (Collection of
gathered jewels), compiled by Jien, contains more than thirty waka po-
ems attributed to Yoritomo. Yoritomo's poetic talents and, of course, his
political power were also accorded recognition by the inclusion of two of
his poems in the prestigious anthology Shinkokinshù, commissioned by
imperial order in 1201. Appropriately for a warrior, his verse tended to be
straightforward and descriptive, technically proficient and sometimes
witty, but not marked by deep emotion. This verse, number 975 in the
 Shinkokinshù, for example, describes his feelings on seeing Mt. Fuji
 during his first triumphal visit to the capital after the destruction of the
 Taira:
                                                                                11
     Among Yoritomo's generals at least one, Kajiwara Kagetoki (d. 1200),
     shared his interest in poetry. Yoritomo's second son, the third Minamoto
     shogun, Sanetomo (1190-1219), became so enthusiastic about the study of
     poetry and such other courtly pastimes as kickball (kemari) that he was
     criticized by warrior leaders in the bakufu, and used as an example not to
     be followed, for over-indulgence in frivolous activities. But Sanetomo
     was not alone among warriors in his interest in poetry and scholarship.
     An entry in the Azuma kagami for 1213 records that
        A gathering for the composition of Japanese verse [wdfcd] was held in the bakufu. As
        a title Tlum Blossoms, Myriad Springs' was set. The lords of Musashi, Iga, Wada and
        others were in attendance. Ladies were also present. After the waka composition
        linked verse [renga] was composed.
             It is, of course, quite possible that the stimulus for such literary
     gatherings came from Sanetomo and that the Hôjô and other powerful
     vassals merely humored his passion for poetry. The important point here,
     however, is that such gatherings were being held in the residences of
     courtier-bureaucrats and warrior chieftains in Kamakura and that all the
     participants were expected to be able to compose creditable waka or join
     in a renga sequence. It was becoming accepted that warriors, or at least
     warrior leaders, should have some command of bun as well as bu. Sane-
     tomo was criticized by Oe no Hiromoto, Jien, Hôjô Yasutoki, and lesser
     retainers not because he was interested in literary activities, kemari, and
     court titles, but because he indulged those passions to the neglect of that
     other vital legacy of Yoritomo: attention to the arts of politics and war.
             Intermittent warnings from the bakufu, urging warriors to spend
     more time on military training and less on courtly arts, seem to have
     done little to stifle warrior interest in literary and cultural activities or
     court culture. And during the thirteenth century this interest was ex-
     tended to Chinese learning and culture as direct communication with
     China increased; the Hójó and their vassals began to study Zen with
     Chinese and Japanese Zen masters and to acquire Chinese art objects
     (karamono). Through the latter part of the Kamakura period many mem-
     bers of the bakufu shared an interest in the composition of waka, the
     enjoyment of narrative tales (monogatari), diaries and histories, the study
     of Confucian ideas of good government and Chinese literary classics,
     and the discussion of Zen and other forms of Buddhism.
             Whereas in Sanetomo's day the writing of waka and devotion to
     scholarship would have seemed an effete distraction to most warriors, by
     the close of the thirteenth century it was becoming quite common for
     Kamakura warriors to write poetry, and to copy and study Buddhist
     sutras and Chinese literary texts. An analysis of the Sonpi bunmyaku, a
     comprehensive genealogy compiled early in the fourteenth century, re-
     veals that Yasutoki (1183-1242), third of the Hôjô regents, and more than
     one-third of the men of the Hôjô family are designated as "poets" (kajin)
     or recorded as contributors to the Shinsen wakashù (New collection of
     Japanese poetry) and other anthologies. The Azuma kagami and other
     documents of the period mention poetry gatherings and tea meetings
     (cha yoriai) at the residences of the Hôjô and their retainers. An entry in
     the Azuma kagami for 1263 records a poetry gathering attended by seven-
     teen bakufu officials at which one thousand verses were composed. Such
     gatherings became common and brought together a variety of cultured
     participants. One such meeting at the Nikaidô residence late in the
     Kamakura period included not only warriors but the Kyoto nobles Fuji-
     wara Tamesuke and Tamemori (members of a family of famous poets),
     and the Zen monk Musô Soseki (1275-1351). Although these warrior liter-
     ary salons were most active in Kamakura, site of the bakufu, literary
     enthusiasm was also evident in some provincial warrior families. The
12
Utsunomiya and Katsumata warrior houses, for instance, both developed
strong literary traditions and produced talented waka poets.
        Minamoto Yoritomo and other warrior leaders urged their vassals
to promote military arts and martial recreation—skill with a bow, swords-
manship, horsemanship, and hawking—and to be wary of excessive in-
dulgence in courtly accomplishments. The Kamakura warrior legal code,
the Goseibai shikimoku, and instructions by influential bakufu officials
like Hojo Shigetoki, all sought to impress on medieval warriors the need
for a distinctively spartan, rigorous lifestyle appropriate to their calling as
warriors. In a set of instructions left to guide his son, Hojo Shigetoki, the
bakufiïs representative with the court in Kyoto, warned against the
flaunting of literary and cultural abilities. At the same time, it is clear that
he was less wary of the acquisition of cultural accomplishments than of
their foolish display:
    [When asked to show your] skill in the polite arts, even if it is something you can do
    easily, it is best to say that you cannot because you lack such skill, and to comply only
    when they insist. Even then, never allow yourself to be puffed up with success, so
    that you come to angle for applause and expressions of personal popularity. You, a
    warrior, should [on the contrary] excel in the skillful handling of public affairs, in
    possessing sound judgment, and above all in specializing and excelling in the way of
    the bow and arrow. What lies beyond these fields is of secondary importance. Never
    immerse yourself unduly in the pursuit of polite accomplishments! Yet, when you
    are at a party with good friends and they are in the mood for having some relaxed
    fun together, you should not refuse too steadfastly [their pleas that you, too, contrib-
    ute to the common pleasure by performing], or they will come to dislike you as a
    stand-offish person. Remember that you must on every occasion strive to be well
    thought of by others (Steenstrup 1979,148).
         In addition to the courtly traditions, other influences that were to
shape warrior culture in general, and medieval daimyo culture in particu-
lar, were also evident by the close of the Kamakura period. These were
religious influences derived from Buddhism and Shinto. Whenever me-
dieval Japanese warrior culture, or the Way of the Warrior, is mentioned
an association is usually made with Zen Buddhism. Certainly the associa-
tion between Zen Buddhism and medieval warrior life was very close.
Rinzai and Sôtô Zen teachings were introduced to Japan in the late
twelfth and thirteenth centuries and spread rapidly and widely under the
patronage of warriors in Kamakura and the provinces. Zen monks were
not only instructors in meditation, but they were also bearers of culture
and knowledge from China; and for the warrior elite that kind of knowl-
edge was an enhancement of their power. Several of the Hôjô regents
invited Zen monks to come from China, sponsored the building of Zen
monasteries, practiced meditation, and became lay followers. Their ex-
ample was followed by warrior chieftains throughout the provinces. Zen
monasteries, especially those of the Rinzai tradition, proliferated. Zen
monks and monasteries were not simply channels for the transmission of
Zen meditation or Buddhist texts. Zen monks had associated with Chi-
nese literati and frequently were accomplished ink painters, calligra-
phers, poets, garden designers, and architects. All of these interests were
communicated to and eagerly adopted by their warrior patrons. The
drinking of tea, the designing of dry landscape gardens, the vogue for ink
painting, the study and printing of Confucian texts and Chinese poetry,
the formal shoin style of architecture, the art of flower arrangement—all
to become facets of daimyo culture—were all acquired by warriors
through contact with Zen monks.
         But Zen was not the only Buddhist spiritual practice to influence
 medieval warriors, or to help shape daimyo culture. Zen was simply one
 part of a wider religious transformation gathering force in the thirteenth
 century in which popular preachers and reformers were taking old and
                                                                                                13
     newer versions of Buddhism to the provinces and to the common peo-
     ple. Like Zen, and at about the same time, Pure Land Buddhism devel-
     oped into an independent and enormously popular school: its simple
     teaching that faith in Amida (expressed by repetition of the formula
     "Praise to Amida Buddha") appealed to warriors as well as farmers. For
     warriors, who were constantly faced with the likelihood of sudden death,
     the compassionate promise of salvation by a simple expression of devo-
     tion to Amida had a profound attraction. Many warriors retained a devo-
     tion to such Esoteric Buddhist deities as the fierce Fudó Myóó. Warriors
     could, and did, patronize Zen and Pure Land, or Zen and esoteric Bud-
     dhism together. In addition, most warrior houses had ancestral founding
     deities they worshipped as kami. They set up shrines to ancestral or
     protective kami. The syncretic Shinto-Buddhist deity Hachiman, for in-
     stance, was venerated by many warriors, especially the Minamoto, ac-
     quiring over time the role of a god of war. The most important shrine in
     Kamakura, the center of Minamoto power and site of the bakufu, was
     dedicated to Hachiman and there were many local shrines in his honor
     patronized by warrior families.
             In later centuries, the range of daimyo culture widened consider-
     ably. Even so, it is fair to suggest that by the close of the Kamakura
     period the basic paradigm had been established in terms of a tension
     between bu and bun. The ideal warrior was, by the close of the Kama-
     kura period, neither the rough, ruthless Saburô nor the courtly Jiro of the
     Obusuma Saburô scroll. He was, rather, a composite of these and more.
     The ideal type would perhaps be closer to Minamoto Yorimasa as de-
     picted in the Tale of the Heike, where Yorimasa urges Prince Mochihito
     to raise a revolt against the Taira in 1180. When the revolt is crushed he
     takes his own life with all the unflinching bravery expected of a warrior,
     after composing a verse that would have done credit to a courtier:
        Yorimasa summoned Watanabe Chojitsu Tonau and ordered: Strike off my head.
        Tonau could not bring himself to do this while his master was still alive. He wept
        bitterly. How can I do that, my lord? he replied. I can do so only after you have
        committed suicide. I understand, said Yorimasa. He turned to the West, joined his
        palms, and chanted Hail Amida Buddha ten times in a loud voice. Then he com-
        posed this poem:
                 Like a fossil tree
                 Which has borne not one blossom
                 Sad has been my life
                 Sadder still to end my days
                 Leaving no fruit behind me.
        Having spoken these lines, he thrust the point of his sword into his belly, bowed his
        face to the ground as the blade pierced him through, and died. No ordinary man
        could compose a poem at such a moment. For Yorimasa, however, the writing of
        poems had been a constant pleasure since his youth. And so, even at the moment of
        death, he did not forget. Tonau took up his master's head and, weeping, fastened it
        to a stone. Then evading the enemy, he made his way to the river and sank it in a
        deep place (Kitagawa and Tsuchida 1975, vol. i, 271).
14
Ashikaga            In 1333 the Kamakura bakufu was toppled by a coali-
shoguns and         tion of imperial princes, warriors, and monk-soldiers
shugo daimyo        kd by emperor Go-Daigo. Go-Daigo's attempts to re-
                    store direct imperial rule quickly alienated Ashikaga
                    Takauji, his leading warrior supporter, who in 1336
forced Go-Daigo from Kyoto. The emperor with his supporters took
refuge in the Yoshino Hills, south of Kyoto, where they set up the South-
ern Court and maintained the emperor's claim to the throne. Ashikaga
Takauji installed a rival "Northern" emperor in Kyoto, took the title of
shogun, and established a bakufu (shogunate) in the Muromachi district
of Kyoto. Culturally, the return of the bakufu to Kyoto was significant,
for it brought the Ashikaga shoguns, and later the daimyo on whose
support they depended, back into close contact with members of the
imperial court, the great Kyoto temples, and the burgeoning merchant
and artistic communities of the capital.
         The early decades of Ashikaga rule were marked by civil war. But
even in the midst of war some daimyo, like Imagawa Ryóshun, found
time for literary pursuits as well as conquest. Ryóshun, born into the
Imagawa daimyo family in about 1326, served the Ashikaga bakufu and in
1371 was appointed governor general of Kyushu, charged with establish-
ing the authority of the bakufu in western Japan. Ryóshun loved waka
and renga and his skill was widely acclaimed. His writings were used as
literary copy books by later generations of young warriors. One of these
copy books begins with the line, "He who does not know the way of bun
can never ultimately gain victory in the way of bu" (Dore 1965,16).
         Compared with the earlier Kamakura bakufu, the Muromachi
bakufu did not have a strong political reach. The Ashikaga shoguns ruled
as heads of an unstable warrior coalition of shogun and shugo, or provin-
cial constables. The shugo included some of the earlier Kamakura-period
shugo, members of Ashikaga cadet families or shogunal vassals. The
shoguns treated shugo as vassals and gave them military and administra-
tive responsibility for one or more provinces. The shugo took advantage
of their administrative authority from the bakufu to build up their per-
sonal territorial control and to enfeoff local warriors (kokujin). They en-
joyed the right to collect taxes on cultivated land (tansen) and to levy
taxes on public and private lands to raise troops (hanzei). They were
charged with keeping the peace, apprehending criminals, and settling
local disputes. They also sequestered the private holdings of absentee
proprietors, and divided spoils after war. As they added to their spheres
of influence, increased their fief lands, and added local warriors to their
vassal bands, they became territorial magnates on a grand scale; they
have been given the name shugo daimyo, or constable daimyo, by mod-
ern historians. Some, like the Yamana and Hosokawa, came to exert
nominal authority over half a dozen provinces. At the same time that the
shugo controlled the provinces, they also held offices in the shogunal
government. This simultaneously increased their influence, divided their
attention, and brought them out of the provinces to live in Kyoto. Three
influential shugo daimyo, the Shiba, Hatakeyama, and Hosokawa, held
the powerful bakufu office of Kanrei, or shogunal deputy.
         Strong shoguns like Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, the third shogun, and
 Yoshinori, the autocratic sixth shogun, were able to impose their author-
 ity on the shogun -shugo coalition by mobilizing alliances to crush unruly
 members, taking hostages, requiring shugo to live in Kyoto, and com-
 manding expensive gifts and favors. The assassination of Yoshinori by a
 resentful shugo in 1441 and the protracted civil war (Onin War) of 1467-
 1477 seriously weakened shogunal finances and military power. The sho-
 gunate was reduced to bare control over Kyoto and the few nearby
 provinces. In the Onin War shugo daimyo banded together in rival mili-
                                                                              15
     tary confederations led by Yamana Sozen and Hosokawa Katsumoto.
     They laid waste to much of Kyoto and carried sporadic warfare into the
     provinces. Many shugo daimyo now found themselves in a very vulnera-
     ble position. Their large domains often exceeded the extent of their
     enforceable authority, and from the beginning of the Onin War their
     control was further diminished by frequent absences to fight in the field
     or play politics in Kyoto. Their deputies and other local warriors carved
     up the great shugo daimyo territories, building smaller but more tightly
     knit domains. In what has been called a process of "inferiors toppling
     superiors," gekokujd, these smaller warrior chieftains overthrew many
     shugo and claimed territorial control and daimyo status for themselves.
     These "upstarts" are known as the daimyo of the Age of Wars, the
     sengoku daimyo.
16
with the governor of Kyushu) for Imagawa Ryôshun, the tandai of
Kyushu and a noted poet himself. In 1383 Yoshimoto presented another
treatise on renga, Jùmon saihi shó (Ten questions: A most secret selection)
to the daimyo poet Ouchi Yoshihiro. Yoshimoto's famous anthology of
renga, the Tsukubashù (1356) contained sequences by shoguns and dai-
myo as well as courtiers. Among the daimyo represented was Sasaki
Dôyo (1306-1373), a high-ranking military adviser to the Ashikaga shogun-
ate, and an enthusiastic amateur poet. Renga was the preferred poetry of
the Muromachi period, intricate in its form, intensely social in its setting.
To compose renga a gathering of poets was necessary, each contributing
verses in sequence, each carefully maintaining the overall mood of the
sequence at the same time that he responded to the subtle nuance of the
immediately preceding verse. It was an activity that required social as
well as poetic finesse. The daimyo's passion for renga indicates the value
that these ruthless warriors set in both kinds of skill.
         Although the Onin War was destructive, and many daimyo and
their warriors were killed, some provincial daimyo benefitted culturally
as monks and nobles fled the burning capital and took refuge in the
provinces. The court noble Ichijô Norifusa quit the capital and moved to
his landholdings in Tosa where he lived as a daimyo. Renga poets were in
demand in the provinces. The renga poet lio Sôgi (1421-1502), a_sometime
Zen priest who had studied at Shôkokuji in Kyoto, spent the Onin years
wandering from village to village and castle to castle composing linked
verse sequences. During his lifetime Sôgi made many long journeys. He
traveled seven times to the province of Echigo as a guest of the daimyo
Uesugi Funasada. He went twice to Yamaguchi and compiled a major
anthology of renga, the Shinsen Tsukubashù, under the sponsorship of
Ouchi Masahiro. This collection had many contributions by daimyo and
commoners. Sôchô (1448-1532), a Shingon Buddhist priest and renga
poet, traveled the provinces during the Onin War, perhaps as an intelli-
gence agent and certainly as a negotiator for his patrons Imagawa Yoshi-
tada and his son Ujichika. Socho's diaries contain many references to
military fortifications and strategy. In 1517 he helped Ujichika negotiate
 for peace when his fortress was surrounded. He participated in renga
 sequences with Sôgi and Shóhaku, as well as with numerous daimyo.
The Zen monk and poet Shôtetsu (1381-1459) is said to have maintained
literary contacts with more than a score of daimyo between 1394 and
 1455. All of these renga masters lived well, frequently on the generous
 stipends and gifts they received from provincial warrior lords.
         Provincial military lords were also acquiring a taste for the devel-
 oping dramatic art of No and Kyôgen. Kan'ami (1333-1384), and his son
 Zeami (c. 1364-^ 1143), synthesized, standardized, and elevated a number
 of ancient dancing and mimetic forms such as sarugaku and dengaku to
 create the masked dance dramas that we know as No. Zeami and his
 successors who headed the Kanze school of No were patronized by the
 Ashikaga shoguns. Kyôgen, literally "wild words," developed alongside
 No as an earthier, more active, humorous dramatic form, rooted not in
 some spiritual otherworld but firmly in the present. In sometimes farcical
 or ironical terms Kyôgen mocked contemporary conventions, including
 the authority of daimyo who appeared in some Kyôgen pieces. Both No
 and Kyôgen were further developed and formalized in later centuries.
 Their association with daimyo culture, however, was firmly established
 in the medieval period. From the shogunal court the enthusiasm for No
 spread into warrior society. Daimyo, too, became eager spectators and
 patrons of the numerous No troupes. Moreover, the Ashikaga shoguns
  frequently visited daimyo, either in their residences in Kyoto or in their
  domains. When they did so they demanded to be entertained by actors
  and poets in the proper setting and with the right costumes. This im-
                                                                                17
     posed upon daimyo a virtual obligation to provide the best possible renga
     parties and No and Kyógen performances if they were to stay in favor—
     culture was very much an instrument of politics.
             Many daimyo patronized Zen monks, practiced meditation, im-
     ported Chinese objects (karamono) and cultivated the arts associated
     with Zen. Back in their castle towns they built Zen temples, designed
     gardens, invited Zen monks and men of culture from the capital, and
     practiced the monastic, courtly, and literary arts to which they had been
     introduced in Kyoto. These years saw a proliferation of Rinzai and Sotó
     Zen monasteries throughout the provinces. The monks Muso Soseki
     (1275-1351), Gidó Shüshin (1325-1388), and the eccentric Ikkyü Sôjun
     (1394-1481) were particularly influential in fourteenth- and fifteenth-
     century warrior society. Zen monks were constantly moving through the
     provinces. The Zen monk Keian Genju (1427-1508), for instance, who
     had studied in Ming China between 1467 and 1473, traveled westward
     from patron to patron, teaching Zen meditation and Confucianism to
     the Kikuchi, Shimazu, and other daimyo families in Kyushu. Genju
     revered Confucius and urged the Kikuchi to build a Confucian hall and
     revive the Confucian ceremony known as sekiten in the sage's honor. As
     a result of such activity by Zen monks Confucian moral and ethical
     teachings became increasingly prominent in the house codes of
     sixteenth-century daimyo. In the seventeen-article injunction of the dai-
     myo Asakura Toshikage (1428-1481), we find the influence of the Confu-
     cian Analects blended with that of Buddhism in the training of warriors:
         A famous monk once said that a master of men must be like the two Buddhist deities
         Fudó and Aizen. Although Fudô carries a sword, and Aizen carries a bow and
         arrows, these weapons are not intended for slashing and shooting, but for the
         purpose of subjugating devils. In their hearts they are compassionate and circum-
         spect. Like them, a master of samurai must first rectify his own way, and then
         reward his loyal subjects and soldiers and eliminate those who are disloyal and
         treacherous. If you can discern between reason and unreason and between good and
         evil and act accordingly, your system of rewards and punishments can be considered
         as compassionately administered. On the other hand, if your heart is prejudiced, no
         matter how much you know the words of the sages and study the texts they all come
         to naught. You may observe that the Analects [1.8] contains a passage saying that a
         gentleman who lacks steadfastness cannot command respect. Do not consider that
         the term steadfastness represents only heavy-handedness. It is essential that you
         conduct yourself in such a way that both heavy-handedness and leniency can be
         applied flexibly as the occasion demands (Lu 1974, vol. i, 173).
             One interest the medieval daimyo acquired from Zen monks was
     the custom of drinking tea. Like the practice of Zen meditation, the use
     of tea had been introduced to Japan in the eighth or ninth century.
     Neither had taken deep hold, however. From the late twelfth century tea
     drinking was reintroduced as one facet of Zen monastic life. Tea was
     used in monasteries as a medicament and stimulant to help keep monks
     awake during long sessions of meditation. It was also served ceremoni-
     ously to important visitors to the monastery. In this new tea style boiling
     water was poured over powdered green tea (matcha) in an open bowl, and
     a bamboo whisk used to whip the mixture.
             Courtiers and warriors were quickly introduced to the custom
     through their contacts with Zen monks. Among the first daimyo to
     devote himself to tea was Sasaki Dôyo. Dôyo helped Ashikaga Takauji in
     establishing the Muromachi bakufu and served as an advisor to the sec-
     ond shogun Yoshiakira. A poet and patron of No, he loved tea competi-
     tions, or tocha, and displayed the finest Chinese utensils and the taste for
     lavish gatherings that was known in the early Muromachi period as ba-
     sara, or flamboyance. Tea-drinking gatherings quickly became social oc-
     casions at which shoguns, monks, and warriors mingled to recite poetry,
18
compete in the identification of rare incense or tea, appreciate fine
imported Chinese utensils and paintings, and enjoy refreshments and
conversation. Tea gatherings were gradually taken out of the monastic
setting and held in specially built large chambers (kaisho) of shogunal and
daimyo residences. In order to display prized imported Chinese objects
in a properly reverent manner, these kaisho gradually assumed features
that we now think of as characteristic of traditional Japanese domestic
architecture: staggered shelves (chigai-dana), the single alcove (io-
konoma), and fitted desk (tsukeshoin), all probably derived from the Zen
monastic style of shoin architecture. Thus the drinking of tea began to
give rise to a kind of aesthetic revolution that was to reshape almost
every area of Japanese cultural life and to transform daimyo taste, as well
as that of shoguns, courtiers, townsmen, and villagers.
                                                                              19
             The medieval Hosokawa reached their peak of political power
     under Hosokawa Masamoto (1466-1507) who as Kanrei treated the elev-
     enth Ashikaga shogun as a nonentity and virtually ruled the country on
     his own. Like their rivals the Ouchi, the Hosokawa were active in trade
     with China and Korea and sponsored merchants from the port of Sakai.
     Like many other shugo daimyo the Hosokawa were also patrons and
     practitioners of the arts. Yoriharu and Yoriyuki were both regarded as
     fine poets and had their verses included in a number of court antholo-
     gies. Yoriyuki studied Zen with one of the most influential Rinzai monks
     of the fourteenth century, Muso _Soseki. Hosokawa Katsumoto, who led
     one of the warrior leagues in the Onin War, frequently held renga and tea
     gatherings. He too was an enthusiastic patron of Zen and established the
     Ryôanji, a Zen temple in Kyoto, with its magnificent dry landscape
     garden. Hosokawa Shigeyuki, shugo of Awa, had multifaceted cultural
     interests. In addition to renga and waka he was proficient in painting and
     kickball (kemari), and a patron of No. Divided by a bitter succession
     dispute after Katsumoto's death, the main branch of the medieval Hoso-
     kawa daimyo family declined after the Onin War. The family fortunes
     were revived in the sixteenth century by Hosokawa Yüsai (Fujitaka, 1534-
     1610) and Sansai (Tadaoki, 1563-1646), members of a branch family. Yüsai
     and Sansai were among the survivors in the cut and thrust of the military
     campaigns of the sixteenth century. They were also among the most
     cultured of the daimyo who showed an interest in the way of bun. We
     will look at them in a little more detail when we come to consider some
     of their peers as daimyo in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
     centuries. Other daimyo who practiced the twofold path of literary and
     martial arts in this period were the Hatakeyama, Asakura, Takeda,
     Uesugi, and Hôjô. Hôjô Ujiyasu, for instance, was a vigorous patron of
     scholarship who supported the Ashikaga school for samurai, the nearest
     medieval Japan came to having a university. According to Francisco
     Xavier it was the largest school in Japan in the sixteenth century, with
     more than three thousand students.
20
forged. Over a century or so, from 1550 to 1650, the daimyo of the Age of
Wars, sengoku daimyo, became the daimyo of the age of unification
under Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi (Shokuhô daimyo) and
then the daimyo of the early modern era (kinsei daimyo). Before turning
to consider daimyo culture from the sixteenth century, let us look briefly
at some of the political and institutional changes that were taking place
in the character of the daimyo as Japan was brought back under central-
ized feudal control.
         In the early sixteenth century more than 250 sengoku daimyo
domains existed in Japan, several to a single province. The political map
was constantly changing as these feudal lords enlarged their territories or
were swallowed up by their neighbors. Most of these sengoku daimyo
domains were created when one or more local warrior bands overthrew
the regional shugo. Their domains were not only smaller than those of
the shugo, but more tightly consolidated and rigidly controlled. Territory
had been acquired in battle and the area of territorial control generally
coincided with the daimyo's claim of political authority. The gap be-
tween legal and actual control was being reduced and it was becoming
impossible to lay claim to local authority unsupported by military power.
In the process the feudal lines of authority downward from the daimyo to
his vassals and the peasantry were tightened. Sengoku daimyo were inde-
pendent of central authority and had little respect for the Muromachi
shogunate and little contact with Kyoto. They thought of their territories
as "states" (kokka) and of themselves as the public authority (kôgï). Many
of them issued codes of regulations for their domains. Some, borrowing
an imperial prerogative, used their own private era names. Their princi-
pal justification for rule was that they brought law and order to their
domains. They rejected external sources of authority and absentee pro-
prietary rights in land, further impoverishing the bakufu as well as the
imperial court and the nobles.
         The sengoku daimyo devoted himself to the total mobilization of
the domain for attack and defense. For most daimyo this meant fortify-
ing garrisons and castles, strengthening armies by forcing local warrior
families to accept vassalage and provide military service, moving vassals
from place to place to weaken local ties that might conflict with the
obedience of vassal to overlord, and taking hostages. To draw on the full
agrarian and commercial resources of the domain, daimyo dammed riv-
ers, built irrigation channels, surveyed land, established uniform weights
and measures, licensed merchants, set village quotas for taxes and mili-
 tary services, and made villages responsible for self-administration. Land
 was held either as direct domain or granted as fiefs to vassals in return for
 service. Sengoku daimyo built castles and castle towns from which to
 control their vassals and the villages that made up their landed base.
         For these sengoku daimyo martial concerns were uppermost.
 Many of them issued house codes or domain laws to remind themselves
 and their successors of how to survive in an age of war. These codes
 stressed constant readiness, the cultivation of a martial spirit, and atten-
 tion to arms. Asakura Takakage (1428-1481) became shugo of Echizen in
 1471. Like many other sengoku daimyo he devoted considerable attention
 to the government of his domain and drafted a code of injunctions for
 his son Ujikage to observe. In the seventeen articles of the code he
 stressed centralized control by the daimyo, constant preparedness for
 war, promotion of warriors on the basis of merit, frugality, impartial
 enforcement of laws, an emphasis on rationality, and the encouragement
 of indigenous domain culture:
                                                                                   21
        Do not excessively covet swords and daggers made by famous masters. Even if you
        own a sword or dagger worth 10,000 pieces [hiki] it can be overcome by 100 spears
        each worth one hundred pieces. Therefore use the 10,000 pieces to procure 100
        spears, and arm 100 men with them. You can in this manner defend yourself in time
        of war....
        Refrain from frequently bringing from Kyoto actors of the four schools of No for
        performances. Instead use the money needed for that purpose to select talented
        local actors of sarugaku, and train them in the basic elements of No for the perpetual
        enjoyment of this province . . . (Lu 1974, vol. i, 172).
     These careful injunctions helped preserve the Asakura family for nearly
     a century. However, in 1573 they threw their weight against Oda No-
     bunaga, were defeated, and destroyed. Yoshikage, the last of the Asakura
     daimyo, committed suicide.
              By the mid-sixteenth century political decentralization and war-
     fare had reached an extreme. Among the sengoku daimyo were some
     who dreamed of marching on Kyoto and reuniting the country. The
     daimyo who actually started the process of reunification was Oda No-
     bunaga, a young daimyo from a small domain on the Pacific coast of
     Japan. In 1560 Nobunaga overcame the vastly superior forces of Imagawa
     Yoshimoto, the shugo of the three provinces of Suruga, Tótómi, and
     Mikawa, at the Battle of Okehazama and captured Yoshimoto. On the
     pretext of restoring the Ashikaga Yoshiaki to the shogunate, Nobunaga
     moved on Kyoto in 1568. By 1573 he had discarded Yoshiaki and claimed
     for himself control over the realm, the tenka, literally "all under heaven."
     To confirm his authority to rule the realm Nobunaga made alliances with
     some daimyo and crushed others who stood in his way. At the Battle of
     Nagashino in 1575, Nobunaga, in alliance with Tokugawa leyasu, another
     powerful daimyo from eastern Japan, defeated the forces of Takeda Ka-
     tsuyori. Nobunaga's victory owed much to his readiness to adapt new
     technology to warfare. The major reason for his victory at Nagashino was
     his skillful use of the recently-imported muskets (teppd). Nobunaga orga-
     nized his three thousand musketeers in three ranks, with one rank firing
     while the others reloaded. This allowed him to deliver a volley every ten
     seconds, devastating the mounted warriors of the Takeda. While he was
     bringing daimyo of central Japan to heel, Nobunaga also engaged in
     bitter campaigns against militant Buddhist groups, especially the monas-
      tic armies of Enryakuji on Mount Hiei, which he razed in 1571, and the
      supporters of the True Pure Land school of Buddhism organized around
      the Honganji who controlled the provinces of Echizen and Kaga and
      were as powerful as many daimyo.
              Perhaps to spite Buddhist clerics, Nobunaga showed favor to the
      Christian missionaries who were beginning to make converts among the
      daimyo and commoners of western Japan. Luis Frois, a Jesuit missionary,
      was frequently entertained by Nobunaga and has left this vivid portrait
      of the ruthless daimyo who rose to be master of the realm of Japan. Frois,
      like other European visitors to Japan in the sixteenth century, referred to
      the various daimyo as kings or princes:
         This king of Owari would be about thirty-seven years old, tall, thin, sparsely bearded,
         extremely warlike and much given to military exercises, inclined to works of justice
         and mercy, sensitive about his honor, reticent about his plans, an expert in military
         strategy, unwilling to receive advice from subordinates, highly esteemed and vener-
         ated by everyone, does not drink wine and rarely offers it to others, brusque in his
         manner, despises all the other Japanese kings and princes and speaks to them over
         his shoulder in a loud voice as if they were lowly servants, obeyed by all as the
         absolute lord, has good understanding and good judgment. He despises the kami and
         hotoke [Buddhas] and all other pagan superstitions. Nominally belonging to the
         Hokke [Lotus] sect, he openly denies the existence of a creator of the universe, the
         immortality of the soul, and life after death. He is upright and prudent in all his
         dealings and intensely dislikes any delays or long speeches. Not even a prince may
         appear before him with a sword. He is always accompanied by at least two thousand
22
   men on horseback, yet converses quite familiarly with the lowest and most miserable
   servant. His father was merely the lord of Owari, but by his immense energy over
   the past four years Nobunaga has seized control of seventeen to eighteen provinces,
   including the eight principal provinces of Gokinai [the region around the capital]
   and its neighbor fiefs, overcoming them in a very short time (Cooper 1965, 93).
                                                                                         23
     standardized measures, so that the ruler, as well as the daimyo, would
     know the resources of the domains and the country. Land was assessed
     for tax purposes on the basis of its estimated annual yield measured in
     koku. This practice provided a basic module for grasping the worth of
     land, amounts due in taxation or levies, military obligations, and the
     stipends of daimyo and their samurai. Daimyo would in future be ranked
     in terms of the total anticipated yield (kokudakd) of the territory they
     held. Assignments of domain were made not in terms of specific villages
     or pieces of territory but in units of 10,000 koku, drawn from however
     many villages in the locality it took to provide that income. This made it
     easy for Hideyoshi to regulate daimyo income or move daimyo and pro-
     vide them with an appropriate koku income elsewhere. After Hideyoshi's
     land surveys it was calculated that the total kokudakd for the country was
     approximately 18,000,000 koku. Hideyoshi and some 200 daimyo drew
     upon this tax base, with a small share going to the imperial court and
     Buddhist temples. Of this total kokudaka, Hideyoshi claimed 2,000,000
     koku, 36 daimyo held domains assessed at 100,000 koku or more, and 68
     daimyo were assessed at the minimum for a daimyo of 10,000 koku. The
     largest assessments among Hideyoshi's vassal daimyo included Tokugawa
     leyasu at 2,400,000 koku, Mori Terumoto 1,205,000, Uesugi Kagekatsu
     1,200,000, Maeda Toshiie 835,000, Date Masamune 589,000, and Ukita
     Hideie 574,000 koku. Hideyoshi also transformed society by disarming
     villagers and forcing samurai, who until then had lived in the villages, to
     choose between staying in the villages as farmers or keeping their swords
     and their hereditary profession of arms but moving into garrison towns
     as stipended vassals. Daimyo were ordered to collect swords, bows,
     spears, muskets, and other weapons from farmers and deliver them to
     Hideyoshi. The enforcement of this policy went a long way toward the
     implementation of the four-part status hierarchy of samurai, farmers,
     artisans, and merchants that was to characterize Japanese society in the
      seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
               Even before the last of his daimyo and their armies had returned
      from Korea to Japan, Hideyoshi was dying. In a final desperate attempt
      to establish a warrior dynasty he set up a council of five powerful daimyo
      to serve as regents for his five-year-old son Hideyori. In spite of their
      oaths of loyalty to Hideyoshi, they, and other daimyo throughout the
      country, immediately began to intrigue and vie for supremacy. Daimyo
      were again forced into fateful choices. While one faction continued to
      support the Toyotomi cause, others clustered around the patient and
      powerful eastern daimyo Tokugawa leyasu. The issue was decided on the
      Plain of Sekigahara in 1600 when supporters of the Toyotomi were
      routed in a great battle involving 160,000 samurai. Three years later
      Tokugawa leyasu received the title of Seiitaishôgun and consolidated his
      bakufu, and in 1614-1615 destroyed the remnant of the Toyotomi faction
      after the siege of Osaka Castle. After centuries of instability, war, and
      conquest, Japan settled into two centuries of peace, the Pax Tokugawa,
      under the carefully balanced system of shogunal and daimyo rule known
      as the baku-han system.
               The century of transition from civil war through conquest and
      national reunification to peace wrought significant institutional changes
      in the character of the Japanese daimyo. This unification did not in any
      sense involve the eradication of the daimyo. Although individual daimyo
      houses were eliminated, the daimyo as a whole survived the process of
      political reunification and were entrenched by it. It was the daimyo Oda
      Nobunaga and Tokugawa leyasu who started and finished the sixteenth-
      century unification. All three unifiers relied on daimyo allies to marshall
       military forces, lead campaigns, and rule the provinces. Each of the
       unifiers, to one degree or another, shared power with daimyo in what-
24
ever political settlement they achieved. In this sense, the process of
national unification in the sixteenth century ultimately remained incom-
plete. Two and a half centuries later, in the upheaval of the Meiji trans-
formation, the daimyo were more harshly treated. They, too, were swept
aside along with the shogunate they had sustained.
        During the sixteenth century, while many older daimyo families
were crushed, other daimyo were successful in building large and power-
ful domains as the scale of warfare and the opportunities for receipt of
huge spoils and generous patronage increased. Responding to military
necessity and the examples of Nobunaga and Hideyoshi, they consoli-
dated their domains by centralizing their military organizations, control-
ling satellite castles, converting their samurai from landed vassals living
on their own small fiefs to stipended officials attached to the lord's
garrison, surveying land, disarming of the peasantry, and maximizing tax
yield. Many daimyo maintained grandiose castles and mobilized thou-
sands of samurai.
        At the same time the independence of the daimyo was being
steadily circumscribed as decentralized political authority was recentra-
lized under three increasingly powerful hegemons. While daimyo were
asserting their authority over their own domains they now had to seek
their legitimacy from higher authority. They could only feel secure if
they had been confirmed in their territories by Nobunaga or Hideyoshi.
Moreover, heirs in their turn had to secure confirmation to the headship
of the domain. Nobunaga and Hideyoshi exerted increasingly tighter
control over daimyo, crushing some, and by such shows of power intimi-
dating others into vassalage or alliances. After 1590 all the daimyo of
Japan acknowledged Hideyoshi as their overlord. Vassal daimyo who re-
sisted stood to lose all or part of their domains. The hegemons sought to
regulate adoptions, marriage ties, and other alliances among daimyo.
    Item [i]: In marriage relationships, the daimyo should obtain the approval of the
    ruler [Hideyoshi] before settling the matter
    Item [2]: Greater and lesser lords [daimyo and shdmyo] are strictly prohibited from
    entering deliberately into contracts [with each other] and from signing oaths and the
    like
    (Berry 1982,144).
The hegemons moved daimyo from one domain to another, either as
punishment or to prevent the formation of local daimyo alliances and the
tendency for lands held in grant to become hereditary property. And
they constantly drew on them for military service, castle building, guard
duty, and for gifts, hostages, concubines, wives, and entertainment.
Daimyo             During the wars of the late fifteenth and early six-
culture in the     teenth centuries, as we have seen, men of culture had
sixteenth          abandoned the devastated capital region for refuge in
century: the       the provinces and the focus of daimyo culture had
                   been the residences of those provincial daimyo whose
castle in war
                   cultural enthusiasm made them hospitable to such
and peace          refugees. From the mid-sixteenth century, as No-
                   bunaga and Hideyoshi secured control over the coun-
try, the Kyoto region (Kyoto, Sakai, and Osaka) again became the center
of cultural leadership. This epoch is frequently known as the Azuchi-
Momoyama era after Nobunaga's great castle at Azuchi and Hideyoshi's
citadel at Momoyama. These towering castles were symbols of the power
and ambition not only of the unifiers but of the daimyo who followed
them in warfare and cultural style. Daimyo took their cue from No-
bunaga and Hideyoshi who reveled in ostentatious self-glorification to
exalt and legitimize their newly won political and military supremacy.
                                                                                            25
     Moreover, the unifiers exploited the gold and silver mines of Japan and
     drew on the profits of foreign trade as well as the spoils of military
     conquest. Thus a second characteristic of Momoyama-period daimyo
     cultural style was its lavish and gilded grandiosity. The massive walls, vast
     audience chambers, and soaring donjons of great castles became one of
     the central cultural symbols of the age. Third, as Nobunaga, Hideyoshi,
     and the daimyo contributed, through their patronage of tea masters like
     Sen no Rikyü, to the articulation of an aesthetic of cultivated restraint,
     quasi-rusticity, and assumed poverty, wabi, the small, rustic-style tea
     room became another powerful cultural symbol. Fourth, daimyo culture
     in the late sixteenth century was open to the influence of Europe as
     many daimyo accepted Christianity or tolerated its acceptance by their
     vassals and villagers. At the same time, the sixteenth-century daimyo
     were the inheritors and promoters of medieval culture in that they con-
     tinued to patronize No and Kyôgen, and to study waka and renga. In all
     of these aspects daimyo, like the unifiers, treated culture not merely as a
     personal vocation but as an expression and legitimation of their political
     and military power. Daimyo recognized that the complete ruler's cultural
     superiority was as important as military or political hegemony; that it was
     in fact an expression of that hegemony.
              In 1576, a year after his victories over the Takeda in the Battle of
     Nagashino and the ikkô followers in Echizen and Kaga, Nobunaga set in
     motion the building of a magnificent new seven-story castle at Azuchi,
     overlooking Lake Biwa. Unlike most previous Japanese castles, which
     were spartan military fortifications, Azuchi Castle was designed to be at
     once a vast fortress resistant to gunfire, a princely residence, and an
     impressive stage for the public display of political power. In this Azuchi
     was among the predecessors of the many castles built for political pur-
     poses in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Befitting the resi-
     dence of the lord of the realm, Azuchi was the physical symbol of
     Nobunaga's control over the realm, his tenka. Here he could hold lavish
     ceremonies and entertainments—the castle contained a No stage, tea
     ceremony rooms, and a Buddhist chapel—and display his power and
     majesty to courtiers, daimyo, Buddhist monks, and Christian mission-
     aries who filled its audience chambers. Nobunaga commissioned Kano
     Eitoku to decorate walls, sliding partitions with large-scale paintings and
     folding screens. Some were in ink monochrome but many involved lavish
     use of gold pigment, gold leaf, lacquer, and vermilion, and other vivid
     colors. The huge scale of the paintings and their themes of giant pines,
     vast landscapes, birds and flowers, sages and immortals, were intended to
     overwhelm the viewer and to assert Nobunaga's political authority and
      domination of the tenka. Paintings on Confucian, Daoist, and Buddhist
      themes were related to the public or private functions of the rooms. A
      private study on the seventh floor, at the very pinnacle of the castle, was
      painted in gold pigment and vivid colors with Chinese founding emper-
      ors and Confucian sages symbolizing Nobunaga's claim to legitimate
      authority over the tenka (Wheelwright 19813).
              Hideyoshi, too, used his castles as political and cultural state-
      ments of power; as fortresses and princely residences. In Hideyoshi's
      great castle-residences of Jurakutei in Kyoto, Osaka Castle, and Momo-
      yama in Fushimi, just south of Kyoto, he too had Kano Eitoku and other
      painters produce great screens and strongly colored wall paintings. The
      Jurakutei in particular was the nerve center for his patronage and control
      of emperors, courtiers, and daimyo. In 1588 Hideyoshi entertained Em-
      peror Go-Yozei, ex-Emperor Ogimachi, and their courtiers for five days
      at the Jurakutei. There they mingled with Hideyoshi and his vassals,
      were given precious gifts, and joined with daimyo in lively, and some-
      times drunken, renga sessions. Hideyoshi also used the Jurakutei to enter-
26
tain his vassals at tea ceremonies and No performances and granted land
around the palace to favored vassals as sites for their own elaborate
mansions.
         Nobunaga and Hideyoshi were not the only builders of great
castles. During the 15805 and 15905 there was a spate of castle destruction
and reconstruction as daimyo fell and others rose to power and favor. In
1581 Toyotomi Hideyoshi, still a retainer of Nobunaga, was granted a
castle at Himeji, which he fashioned into one of the most perfect exam-
ples of Japanese castle architecture. In 1600 Himeji Castle passed to the
Ikeda daimyo family for their services to Tokugawa leyasu. The Hôjô
castle at Odawara, until then the greatest in the Kanto, fell to Hideyoshi
after a seven-month siege in 1590, but in the same year Tokugawa leyasu,
still a daimyo, began the expansion of a castle at Edo that was to become
the core of the most populous city in Japan. Katô Kiyomasa, one of
Hideyoshi's leading daimyo, built the great castles of Nagoya and Kuma-
moto. Fine surviving castles were built at Matsumoto in 1597, and by the
li family in Hikone in 1606. Each of these castles was at once a fortress,
center of local rule, palatial residence, and node of cultural activity.
         Hideyoshi and Nobunaga were both inveterate patrons of the arts
and skillful exploiters of art as an assertion of power. With many daimyo,
and a growing number of Sakai merchants, they shared a passion for the
tea ceremony (chanoyu). Nobunaga studied tea with Sakai tea masters
including Imai Sókyü (1520-1593), Tsuda Sogyu (d. 1591), and Sen no
Rikyü. He gave tea utensils as rewards for meritorious service in battle
and granted to certain few daimyo, as a mark of outstanding favor, the
right to give formal tea ceremonies. Hideyoshi, a hard-bitten individual,
professed himself moved to tears at the favor. Nobunaga also obliged his
daimyo to surrender to him famous tea bowls or other utensils that he
particularly liked. Not renowned for his literary accomplishments, No-
bunaga exchanged congratulatory verses with Satomura Joha (1524-1602),
one of the leading renga poets of the age, when he marched into Kyoto in
1568.
          Hideyoshi took chanoyu to unparalleled limits. He lavishly
patronized Sen no Rikyü, and no doubt appreciated Rikyü's aesthetic of
the small tea room, humble utensils, and spirit of cultivated poverty
(wabi,) which Rikyü brought to the appreciation of tea. But Hideyoshi
also provided himself with a golden tearoom and the most flamboyant
utensils. And when Rikyü displeased him, he ordered his suicide. To his
Grand Kitano Tea Ceremony of 1587 Hideyoshi invited the whole popu-
lation of Kyoto to stroll in the glades, admire his finest tea vessels, and be
served tea by himself and the leading tea masters of the day. Inaugurated
as a ten-day festival of tea, Hideyoshi himself served tea to more than
eight hundred people on the first day, then called the festivities off,
feeling, perhaps, that his magnificence had been sufficiently demon-
strated.
          Although crude in some respects, Hideyoshi seems to have had
more time and taste for cultural pursuits than Nobunaga. He realized
that among the accoutrements of the ruler, especially a ruler who chose
to assume the old court office of Imperial Regent (Kanpaku) to buttress
his authority, should be the patronage of such courtly arts as tea, waka,
 renga, and No. As early as 1578 he joined with Jôha in a hundred-link
 renga sequence to pray for victory over the Mori family—renga being
 credited with the capacity to move the gods.
          The No had declined in Kyoto during the Age of Wars but had
 been kept alive in the residences of those provincial daimyo who saw
 themselves as patrons of culture. After Nobunaga's entry into Kyoto and
 the city's recovery, No again began to thrive. Hideyoshi became a pas-
 sionate enthusiast. He patronized the four traditional schools of Yamato
                                                                                 27
     Nô (Kanze, Hôshô, Konparu, and Kongo), sponsored plays, and gave gifts
     to actors. While the Korean campaigns were in progress he actually
     began to study and perform No, taking the lead in a dozen plays in the
     imperial palace. Obviously believing that practice of the dances, chants,
     and movements of No provided a valuable cultural discipline, he obliged
     his leading daimyo, including Tokugawa leyasu and Maeda Toshiie, to
     perform alongside the actors. Hideyoshi himself liked to play leading
     roles in plays especially written to record his conquests and other activi-
     ties. In 1594, f°r example, Hideyoshi and a retinue that included Sato-
     mura Jôha journeyed to Yoshino to view cherry blossoms. The outing
     later was commemorated in a new No play.
             Vassal daimyo learned from Nobunaga and Hideyoshi that the
     scale of their castle walls and chambers, the luxury of interior decoration,
     and the patronage of artists could contribute to a valuable ambience of
     power and prestige. They found it expedient and enjoyable to patronize
     the same men of culture, like Jôha, Kano Eitoku, and Sen no Rikyü, who
     were patronized by the hegemons. They also shared the hegemons' pas-
     sion for the culture of tea. Among the great daimyo patrons of tea,
     known as suki daimyo, in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries,
     were Furuta Oribe (1544-1615), Oda Uraku, Nobunaga's younger brother,
     and Hosokawa Sansai. Oribe was a daimyo with an income of 35,000
     koku who studied tea with Rikyü and after Rikyü's death came to be
     regarded as a tea master in his own right. Oribe helped shape a distinc-
     tive daimyo style of tea by commissioning large, irregular bowls to suit
     his own taste and by building tea pavilions—like the famous Ennan tea
     room—to accommodate daimyo and their attendants. Suspected by To-
     kugawa leyasu of plotting against him at the time of the siege of Osaka
     Castle, Oribe disemboweled himself. Oda Uraku served Hideyoshi at a
     stipend of 2,000 koku. At the Battle of Sekigahara he shifted his alle-
     giance to Tokugawa leyasu and was awarded daimyo status and a domain
     of 30,000 koku. He had studied tea with Rikyü and after the Osaka
     campaign withdrew to Kyoto and devoted himself to tea. Hosokawa
      Sansai was the eldest son of Hosokawa Yüsai, a daimyo and one of the
      major literary figures of the age. With his father, Sansai served No-
     bunaga. He took as his wife the daughter of Akechi Mitsuhide, a young
      woman who was baptized and took the name Gracia. When Mitsuhide
      pressed Sansai to join him in assassinating Nobunaga, Sansai refused and
      instead gave his allegiance to Hideyoshi, temporarily repudiating his
      wife. He was rewarded with the headship of Miyatsu Castle. After Hide-
     yoshi's death, Sansai went over to the Tokugawa at the Battle of Sekiga-
      hara and was granted Kokura Castle in Kyushu, reestablishing the
      fortunes of the Hosokawa family. Like his father Yüsai, he was a waka
      poet and painter and a devotee of chanoyu. He studied with Rikyü, built
      tearooms, and collected many famous utensils. Gracia's fate was less
      happy. Taken hostage by Ishida Mitsunari prior to the Battle of Sekiga-
      hara, she took her own life.
              The composition of renga remained a fashion among sixteenth-
     century daimyo. Akechi Mitsuhide enjoyed a reputation as a tea man,
     poet, and man of culture. A few days before he assassinated Nobunaga,
     Mitsuhide is said to have participated in a renga session with Jôha in
      which he opened the sequence with a daring verse that could be read as
      an expression of his intention to seize the realm for himself:
              toki was ima             Now is the time
              ame ga shita shiru       To rule all under heaven—
              satsuki ka na            It's the fifth month! (Keene 1981,126).
           But the most admired literary daimyo of the age was undoubtedly
     Hosokawa Yüsai. After early service to the last of the Ashikaga shoguns
28
he served as advisor first to Nobunaga, then Hideyoshi, and finally Toku-
gawa leyasu, who made him lord of Tanabe Castle. He practiced the tea
ceremony and calligraphy but was best known for his poetry and criti-
cism. He inherited and passed on a body of aesthetic lore concerning the
poetry of the Kokinshù, the tenth-century anthology of waka poetry,
compiled his own collection of waka, and wrote a travel diary and several
poetic commentaries. Devoted to poetry, he participated in renga ses-
sions with Jóha and others. Yüsai was unusual in being a warrior whom
courtiers, as well as other warriors, could admire for his literary abilities
and excellence in the ways of bun.
         No discussion of daimyo culture in the sixteenth century would
be complete without at least some reference to Christianity. Between
1549 and 1551 Francisco Xavier was received favorably by the Shi-
mazu, Ouchi, and Otomo. Other early missionaries found equal favor
among the western daimyo. The Jesuits' policy was to win over the rulers
and assume that the ruled would follow. For their part many daimyo
responded favorably in the hope that the Portuguese merchant ships
that brought guns and other precious commodities from the West would
visit their ports. Whatever their reasons, some daimyo were converted,
and others at least allowed proselytization in their domains. When dai-
myo were sympathetic their wives, family members, samurai, and even
the farmers in the domain quickly followed suit, as the Jesuits had antici-
pated. Nobunaga set an example by entertaining Christian missionaries
and allowing the building of a seminary at Azuchi. Christian daimyo
sponsored the building of churches, colleges, and seminaries. They en-
tertained missionaries and imported books, paintings, and religious ob-
jects from Europe. They commissioned screens and paintings showing
scenes of the "southern barbarians." By mid-century there was a fad for
things Portuguese, including the costumes of the padres. Daimyo and
young blades, most of whom had made no spiritual commitment to
Christianity, decked themselves out in Portuguese styles and sported
rosaries and crucifixes as fashionable accessories. But if some daimyo
accepted Christianity easily, most abjured it quickly when Hideyoshi and
leyasu proscribed it and ordered the eradication of the alien teaching. An
exception was Takayama Ukon (1553-1614), who was exiled for refusing to
relinquish his faith.
                                                                                29
     who became leyasu's vassals. leyasu, a daimyo himself, was therefore not
     in a position to eliminate the daimyo, even had that notion ever entered
     his head. His problem was to bend them to Tokugawa authority and
     integrate them into a "centralized feudal system" of rule. He immedi-
     ately set about enlarging his great fortress garrison town at Edo, articulat-
     ing enduring institutions of warrior government, and reordering the
     structure of feudal society. In 1603 he had himself appointed Seiitai-
     shogun by the court, thus formalizing the establishment of a new bakufu.
     Although leyasu could not know it, his victory and the hegemony he
     established was to endure. The Tokugawa shogunate would survive
     through fifteen generations until 1868 and provide Japan with two and a
     half centuries of stability. There were intermittent disturbances by mas-
     terless samurai (rdnin), sporadic peasant uprisings, and urban riots, but
     on the whole Japan under Tokugawa rule enjoyed what has been called
     Great peace throughout the realm (Tenka taihei).
               The enduring stability was not fortuitous. In large part it derived
     from policies deliberately adopted by leyasu and his immediate succes-
     sors in the Tokugawa bakufu toward the daimyo and other sectors of
     society. Some of these policies, such as the taking of hostages or the
     separation of status groups, had been initiated by Nobunaga or Hide-
     yoshi but were extended and systematized by the Tokugawa. Other poli-
     cies, including the drastic reduction of external contacts and the require-
     ment of periodic residence by all daimyo in the shogunal capital, were, if
     not entirely new, at least adopted as new by the Tokugawa. Behind all of
     the major policies enforced by the early Tokugawa shoguns we can
     clearly see a paramount interest in stability and order, and a concern with
      the control of volatile factors that might upset a carefully structured
     political system and contribute to its downfall.
               The long period of peace was to bring other benefits. Although in
      the interests of security and domestic stability trade with the outside
      world was virtually restricted to Dutch and Chinese trade through Naga-
      saki, Korean trade via Tsushima, and Satsuma's trade with the Ryukyu
      Islands, domestic trade and commerce flourished. The rebuilding of Edo,
      Osaka, and Kyoto and the construction of the several hundred daimyo
      castle towns created a national demand for materials and financial serv-
      ices. Population increased and urban centers flourished. The population
      of Edo reached one million by the eighteenth century, while Osaka, the
      great commodity market, and Kyoto, a city of palaces, temples, and
      townspeople, each had populations of nearly half a million. In the Toku-
      gawa social hierarchy, artisans and merchants ranked beneath the samu-
      rai rulers and the peasants whose labor fed the country, but the
      merchant's role as broker, provisioner, banker, and moneylender became
      increasingly central and a wealthy merchant class developed. Although
      looked down upon, the merchant was indispensable to shogun and dai-
      myo alike.
               The long Pax Tokugawa had another important consequence. As
      the prospect of warfare faded from the political consciousness, shoguns,
      daimyo, and samurai were imperceptibly but steadily transformed from
      warriors into civil officials and patrons of learning and the arts. The
       separation of samurai from their village roots and the legal limitations of
       mobility among the four classes reinforced the conversion of the warrior
       class into civilian administrators based in castle towns. These salaried or
       stipended samurai became more dependent on their superiors for their
       livelihood than their ancestors had been, and therefore their freedom of
       action was more circumscribed. The Tokugawa regime, fully aware of the
       dangers posed by unemployed warriors in peacetime, redirected samurai
       ideals and energies toward loyal administrative service and the arts of
       peace. The right to bear arms remained the defining characteristic of the
30
buke, but the administration of the state became their function.
         In dealing with the daimyo, Tokugawa leyasu extended Hide-
yoshi's policy of indirect rule through a daimyo system. The daimyo were
more or less autonomous in the internal administration of their own
domains and served also as appointed senior advisors and administrators
in the central government. However, where Hideyoshi had been content
to operate as the head of a small confederation of daimyo advisors,
leyasu imposed a tighter vassalage hierarchy and a more systematic bu-
reaucratic structure on the daimyo. The Tokugawa shoguns regulated
castle repair and construction, controlled intermarriage among daimyo
houses, and made use of spies and inspectors. Thus, it was in the Edo
period that the role of the daimyo was most fully institutionalized.
         The Edo-period definition of a daimyo comprised several vital
elements. First, a daimyo was generally the lord of a domain (han), re-
sponsible for effective rule over the lands and people in that domain. As
a symbol of this responsibility a daimyo took an oath of loyalty to the
shogun on appointment and was entrusted with the registers of lands
and people in the domain. Second, a daimyo in the Edo period, by
definition, had to have a nominal stipend of at least 10,000 koku, derived
from the domain. From the sixteenth century the koku became the basic
module for measuring income from land, feudal stipends, and the rela-
tive standing of samurai, daimyo, temples, and shrines. Third, a daimyo
was a direct vassal of the shogun. But not all shogunal vassals with
incomes over 10,000 koku were daimyo. Some shogunal retainers known
as bannermen (hatamoto) had incomes of more than 10,000 koku but
were not ranked as daimyo because they did not head a domain. More-
over, senior retainers of some powerful daimyo such as the Mori and
Maeda had stipends of more than 10,000 koku but were not regarded as
daimyo. In the Edo scheme of things, sheer military prowess no longer
made a warlord a daimyo, and in fact was almost irrelevant to daimyo
status. The daimyo houses may have come to power through warfare and
military service, but they were increasingly defined in administrative and
institutional terms.
         Although headship of a domain, direct vassalage ties with the
Tokugawa, and a minimum fief of 10,000 koku were common features to
all Edo-period daimyo, there were considerable differences among the
250 or so daimyo. Ranks and gradations sprang from relative closeness to
the ruling Tokugawa house or from the type or scale of the domain.
Depending on closeness to the Tokugawa family, daimyo were catego-
 rized as collateral or blood-related houses (shinpan daimyo) who had
 become Tokugawa vassals before the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, vassal
 daimyo (fudai daimyo), and outside daimyo (tozama daimyo) who had not
 sworn allegiance to the Tokugawa until Sekigahara or after. Depending
 on the scale and coherence of the domain, daimyo were also categorized
 as holders of whole provinces, parts of provinces, or castles. Most types
 of Edo-period daimyo are represented in the exhibition.
          Closest by blood to the Tokugawa were the collateral daimyo,
 known as kamon or shinpan. All of these claimed some blood connection
 with the main house of the Tokugawa. There were some twenty in this
 category but the most prominent members of this group were the so-
 called "three houses" of Kii (555,000 koku), Owari (619,000 koku), and
 Mito (350,000 koku), all of which had been established by younger sons of
 Tokugawa leyasu. These families provided heirs, if necessary, for the
 shogunal house. They were powerful and respected and provided advi-
 sors to the Tokugawa shoguns. Their large domains were strategically
 placed to guard the approaches to Edo and Kyoto. At the same time,
  they were held at a distance as potential rivals and not employed in the
  exercise of bakufu rule.
                                                                             31
              For officials to staff their huge bureaucracy the Tokugawa sho-
     guns relied on a group of trusted hereditary vassal daimyo known as
     fudai. These were generally relatively small in scale, ranging from 10,000
     koku to 150,000 koku. Informally they were ranked according to the
     length of their service to the Tokugawa family. At leyasu's death there
     were go fudai daimyo. There were some 130 by the end of the Tokugawa
     period. The core of the fudai were families like the Sakai, Okubo, and
     Honda who had served the Tokugawa from its early days in Mikawa
     Province in the late fifteenth or early sixteenth century. Other fudai,
     including the Ogasawara and li, had sworn allegiance to the Tokugawa
     during leyasu's lifetime. Fudai daimyo and the non-daimyo retainers of
     the bakufu known as bannermen ran the bakufu on a day-to-day basis.
     The senior fudai were appointed to the bakufu s senior council of elders
     (roju) while lesser fudai served on the junior council that concerned itself
     with matters affecting the Tokugawa house. Throughout Japan fudai
     domains were interspersed among those of the less trusted tozama dai-
     myo with the duty of reporting to the bakufu anything untoward in the
     actions of the tozama daimyo. The larger fudai were placed on the perim-
     eters of the Tokugawa domains while smaller fudai were generally lo-
     cated closer to Edo.
               One very prominent fudai family represented in this exhibition
     was the li family of Hikone. Through their history we can see something
     of the rise of a fudai daimyo. They traced their ancestry to a branch of
     the Fujiwara noble family that was paramount during the late Heian
     period. Through the medieval period they were local magnates in the
     village of linoya, from which they took the name li, in Tôtômi near the
      Pacific coast. They were vassals of the Imagawa in the sixteenth century.
     With the defeat of the Imagawa, li Naomasa gave his allegiance to Toku-
      gawa leyasu in 1575. When leyasu entered the Kanto (eastern Japan) in
      1590 Naomasa was rewarded with the largest fief, 120,000 koku, in the
      Kanto. After Sekigahara, where li Naomasa was a leader of the Tokugawa
      forces, the li were appointed castellans of Sawayama Castle (180,000
      koku). li Naotaka served in the siege of Osaka Castle. For their services
      they were raised to 300,000 koku and appointed to a new castle at Hi-
      kone, which was built by forced contributions on a site selected by
      Tokugawa leyasu overlooking Lake Biwa and close to the imperial court
      in Kyoto. The li were placed to serve as a bulwark of bakufu influence in
      western and central Japan. Throughout the Edo period the family was
      always active in bakufu councils; five li daimyo served the bakufu in the
      office of Great Councillor. The last of them, li Naosuke, was assassinated
      in 1860 by antiforeign daimyo for trying to reach an accommodation with
      the encroaching western powers. During the Meiji Restoration the li fief
      was reduced to 100,000 koku before the abolition of the feudal domains
      in 1871.
               The daimyo with the weakest ties to the Tokugawa shoguns were
      known as outside daimyo, or tozama daimyo. The tozama had not been
      vassals of the Tokugawa prior to Sekigahara. They were independent
      lords, large and small, who had sometimes allied with the Tokugawa, and
      sometimes opposed them. Some fought with leyasu at Sekigahara, oth-
      ers remained aloof or fought against him. Many were loyal to the Toyo-
      tomi until that cause was crushed. While those tozama, like the Hoso-
      kawa, that joined leyasu at Sekigahara or gave their allegiance were well
      rewarded in the Tokugawa political scheme, others like the Shimazu and
      Mori who had fought against the Tokugawa were regarded with suspi-
       cion. They were treated with deference, but excluded from political
       decision-making and assigned reduced domains on the periphery of the
       country. Nevertheless, the more than one hundred tozama domains in-
       cluded some of the largest and most populous fiefs in Japan. Those like
32
Satsuma of the Shimazu family and Choshü of the Mori family that had
been defeated in battle and had been stripped of some of their earlier
holdings had relatively large numbers of samurai in their populations.
The mid-nineteenth-century challenge to Tokugawa rule that led to the
collapse of the bakufu and the Meiji Restoration was mounted by samu-
rai from these powerful tozama domains that had been excluded from
power by the Tokugawa.
         Of the great tozama, the Maeda (Kaga domain, Honshu), Shi-
mazu (Satsuma domain, Kyushu), Hosokawa (Higo domain, Kyushu),
and Date (Sendai domain, Honshu) are all represented by objects in the
exhibition. The Maeda were second only to the Tokugawa in scale of fief
(102,000,000 koku). Their castle town of Kanazawa was renowned for
Kutani pottery, fine lacquer, and the painted silk fabrics known as kaga
yüzen. Their great wealth enabled them to be major patrons of the arts,
especially the tea ceremony and No, and it is said that they sponsored
craft workshops within Kanazawa Castle itself. The Shimazu were a
long-established warrior family from Satsuma in southern Kyushu. While
many domain economies languished under heavy debts in the Edo pe-
riod, Satsuma enjoyed profitable control of the Ryukyu Islands, which
gave it a monopoly of the precious commodity sugar. Satsuma was fa-
mous for its ceramics, a tradition developed by Korean craftsmen cap-
tured during Hideyoshi's invasions. Several Shimazu daimyo were noted
administrators, scholars, and patrons of the arts. Shimazu Shigehide
(1745-1833) was interested in Dutch studies and botany. Nariakira (1809-
1858) developed this interest in Western learning into naval and industrial
innovations.
         The Hosokawa also flourished during the Edo period. For his
services on the Tokugawa side at Sekigahara, Hosokawa Sansai was
awarded the ^7ooo-koku fief of Kokura. In 1632 his son was appointed
castellan daimyo of Higo (Kumamoto) Castle, a larger fief with an as-
sessed yield of 540,000 koku. Placed in a position to block any threat from
 Satsuma to the south, the Hosokawa, although tozama, enjoyed the trust
of the Tokugawa. Hosokawa Shigekata (1720-1785) was an administrator
and scholar who reformed domain finances, instituted land surveys, en-
couraged local craft industries, and established a domain school for the
education of samurai. Date Masamune (1567-1636), known as the "one-
 eyed dragon," also fought with the Tokugawa at Sekigahara, where he
 defeated Uesugi Kagekatsu, and in the Osaka campaign. The Date had
 built up their power in northeastern Japan, and during the sixteenth
 century Masamune was awarded a fief of 605,000 koku by leyasu and
 from 1603 began building a new castle in Sendai. The northeast pro-
 duced some of the finest horses and swords in Japan. Masamune was a
 flamboyant figure, famous for his military prowess and elaborately
 worked armor. Sendai quickly became a northern outpost of cultural
 style derived from Kyoto and Edo. In 1868 the Date led an alliance of
 northern daimyo in support of the Tokugawa against the anti-bakufu
 forces led by samurai from Satsuma and Choshü. Like the Tokugawa, the
 northern alliance was crushed and the Sendai han reduced to 280,000
 koku before its abolition in 1871.
         Having won a clear-cut victory on a national scale, leyasu was in a
 position to reward or punish every daimyo in the realm. In the interests
 of Tokugawa hegemony and long-term political stability he and his imme-
 diate successors completely transformed the political map of Japan. The
 Tokugawa held as their direct domain (tenryô), a huge block of territory
 (with one quarter of the assessed yield of the whole country) centering on
  Edo and the Kanto region. They also directly controlled the great cities
  of Kyoto, Osaka, and Nagasaki and held the major gold and silver mines.
  Other parts of the country were allocated to daimyo in a carefully gradu-
                                                                               33
     ated and elaborated system. In assigning domains care was taken to
     reward the Tokugawa vassals and allies, and to ensure the docility and
     loyalty of the tozama lords. Tozama daimyo like the Shimazu and Mori
     who had fought against the Tokugawa at Sekigahara and Osaka were
     physically separated from potential allies by loyal fudai. The bakufu re-
     tained the power of confiscating domains, expropriating daimyo, or reas-
     signing them. It used this power of attainder fiercely in the first fifty
     years of the seventeenth century, in the process promoting Tokugawa
     vassals within the system and displacing daimyo whose loyalty or admin-
     istrative ability was questionable. The daimyo were bound by precedent
     and regulation and surveillance over them was maintained through a
     system of inspectors (metsuke). Daimyo families were forbidden to con-
     sort with the imperial court or to arrange marriages with other daimyo
     without approval of the bakufu. Major tozama daimyo houses were en-
     couraged to take wives from the Tokugawa family or its loyal vassals.
     From 1634 a system of leaving family members as hostages in Edo was
     established and this was quickly expanded into a system of compulsory
     alternate-year residence in Edo (sankin kótai).
               The sankin kdtai system was one of the most characteristic fea-
     tures of the joint bakufu-daimyo system. It had profound economic,
     social, and cultural implications for the daimyo, their families, and their
     domains. All daimyo were required to spend alternate years in Edo in
     attendance upon the shogun. Even when they returned to their domains
     they had to leave wives and other family members as hostages in Edo.
     On a complicated schedule daimyo processions slowly wended their way
     to and from Edo along the major roads of Japan. They were a frequent
      sight, especially along the Tôkaidô, and provided the subjects of many
      Edo-period prints, such as those depicting the Fifty-three stages of the
      Tdkaido by Ando Hiroshige. Guards on the lookout for any sign of rebel-
     liousness at the checkpoints along the routes were warned to watch for
      "guns heading for Edo and women leaving." Bakufu regulations laid
      down precisely, on the basis of the koku yield of each domain, how many
      samurai and what kinds of accoutrements were to accompany each
      daimyo procession.
               The implications of this elaborate, ceremonial hostage system
      were profound. In addition to their castles and administrative headquar-
      ters in their han, each daimyo had to build, maintain, and staff several
      residences (yashiki) in Edo. Since the daimyo's function in Edo was to
      attend upon the shogun, or serve in the shogunal government, rigid
      standards of dress and protocol had to be met, and domains, however
      poor, had to keep up appearances or risk official displeasure. The enor-
      mous costs of this system, with residences in the domain and in Edo and
      the expense of a large entourage traveling ceremoniously between the
      two—it took nearly two months for the Shimazu retinue to reach Edo—
      all fell on the domains, and most heavily on the peasantry whose job it
      was to produce the tax rice that supported the whole baku-han power
      structure. In order to meet the huge ceremonial expenses of sankin kdtai,
      domain administrations heavily taxed their peasants and even pared
      down the stipends of their samurai. In many cases they went heavily into
      debt with Osaka merchants, pledging future crops against loans to pay
      for the expenses of sankin kôtai. Intentionally, or by design, the Toku-
      gawa had developed an elaborate hostage system that also added dignity
      to shogunal rule, drained many domains of resources that might other-
      wise have been turned against the Tokugawa, and—by bringing daimyo
      households into close proximity with one another in Edo—fostered so-
      cial competition among daimyo that kept their attention away from
      thoughts of war.
                Sankin kdtai also contributed to the massive growth and to the
34
centrality of Edo in the Tokugawa political and cultural world. With more
than 250 daimyo retinues coming and going and with hundreds of dai-
myo yashiki carefully arranged around the shogun's castle, Edo became a
hub of economic and cultural as well as political life. The vast castle-city
demanded a huge service population to meet its needs: temples and
shrines were built, and the finest artists and craftsmen throughout the
land were commissioned to work in Edo Castle or the residences of the
daimyo. The city drew hungrily on the whole Kanto region for produce
to feed its population and depended on the two great cities of Osaka and
Kyoto to keep it supplied with rice, and other commodities and financial
services. And whereas the most vital cultural centers in the seventeenth
and early eighteenth centuries were Kyoto and Osaka, by the mid-
eighteenth century Edo, with its Kabuki theaters, print shops, booksel-
lers, and entertainment quarters, was setting the cultural pace. While
sankin kôtai and the focus on Edo contributed to centralization, the
continued existence of the han, which numbered some 290 at the begin-
ning of the Edo period and gradually sank to 240 or so, meant a continu-
ance of local diversity. This contributed to cultural vitality. But the han
were closely linked with Edo by the daimyo and his retinue constantly
coming and going. Local culture was carried along the highways to Edo,
while metropolitan culture was diffused throughout the domains.
         As the sankin kôtai system took hold, daimyo heirs were born
and brought up with their mothers in Edo. In some cases they might not
visit the domain until they were young men and had inherited the title of
daimyo. They thus grew up sharing the common experience and cultural
values of the daimyo residences and the shogunal court in Edo. The
domain, which in any case could be rescinded by the Tokugawa, ceased
to be home for them and became instead a place of periodic administra-
tive responsibility. Daimyo quickly began to vie culturally in the decora-
tion of their Edo yashiki, in bringing local products and craftsmen to
Edo, and in employing artists and craftsmen from Kyoto or Edo in their
home castles. The frugality and toughness that had been the mark of
warrior leaders in the sixteenth century soon began to give way to refine-
ment and ostentation. They also came to share certain Confucian intel-
lectual and cultural values, long maintained by the nobility and Buddhist
priesthood but newly relevant to a nation at peace and requiring princi-
ples of social conduct and civil administration. The hereditary descen-
dants of the warrior leaders who had fought on the battlefields of
Nagashino, Nagashima, Korea, and Sekigahara were thus transformed
into an urbanized feudal aristocracy who ruled not by force of arms or
demonstrated personal ability but at the pleasure of the shoguns and by
an institutionalized, inherited authority. Domains tended to undergo a
process of pacification and bureaucratization. Daimyo, as well as their
 samurai, were transformed from warlords into rulers and administrators,
men of culture and local patrons of the arts. Local domain loyalty was
 shown less to the daimyo for his unique personal qualities of military
leadership than to the institutionalized office of daimyo as head of the
 fief (hanshu).
         As long as they pleased the bakufu, daimyo were entrusted to rule
 the territories assigned to them. With the approval of the bakufu, their
 heirs might inherit and, after the first fifty years or so, daimyo status
 tended to become hereditary. In their domains, they maintained govern-
 ments that were smaller versions of the Tokugawa bakufu. The daimyo,
 as head of the domain (hanshu), used his senior samurai officials to
 govern the domain from a central castle town. Daimyo governance was
 directed at maintaining peace and drawing tax (nengu) from the farmers.
 Daimyo generally left villages and urban wards to govern themselves
 under the periodic supervision of samurai retainers. Historians generally
                                                                               35
     describe this joint system ofbakufu and han rule as the baku-han system,
     pointing at once to its centralized and decentralized aspects. While the
     bakufu represented the centralized power of the Tokugawa the han rep-
     resented the local feudal and bureaucratic authority of daimyo. Although
     subject to oversight and occasional interference from the bakufu, the
     han tended to become semi-autonomous local units. Although daimyo
     were forced to bear the burdens of attendance and residence in Edo and
     were subject to levies, at the pleasure of the shogun, for the building and
     repair of castles, roads, and bridges, the bakufu lived off the taxes from its
     own domain and did not tax the fiefs. In return it was relieved of the
     burdens of local government outside its own direct domain (tenryo).
     Within the han, daimyo and han governments were relatively free to rule
     as they thought fit. A few large han had natural resources or were able to
     develop monopolies that kept them out of debt. Most were financially
     hard-pressed by a rising population and standard of living and by an
     increasingly monetized economy, and found it difficult to provide ade-
     quate stipends for their samurai. Some han governments were lax and
     quickly ran into debt, some were harsh and provoked peasant uprisings
     and insurrections. Some daimyo were indolent and given only to leisure.
     Others, however, acquired reputations as diligent, concerned administra-
     tors of their domains (meikun).
              Among these model daimyo were Ikeda Mitsumasa (1609-1682) of
     Okayama, Tokugawa Mitsukuni (1628-1700) of Mito, Hosokawa Shige-
     kata of Kumamoto, Uesugi Harunori (1751-1822) of Yonezawa (150,000
     koku), Matsudaira Sadanobu (1758-1829) of Shirakawa (100,000 koku) in
     northeastern Japan, and Shimazu Nariakira (1809-1858) of Satsuma.
     Common to all of them was devotion to scholarship and Confucian
     moral standards of rule, to the building of schools and the encourage-
     ment of education for samurai, and to efforts to restore han finances,
     bring new lands under cultivation, promote local craft industries, and
     alleviate some of the suffering created by natural disasters. Matsudaira
     Sadanobu, for instance, gained a reputation for solicitous government
     when it was said that nobody in his domain died of starvation during the
     bitter Tenmei famine that struck northeastern Japan between 1781-1787.
     As a result, he was called upon by the bakufu to serve as councillor of
      State (rdju) and led a reform of bakufu finances and administration.
     These men could be harsh in their judgments and bear down heavily on
     the peasantry but they also represented the Edo-period tradition of ethi-
     cal Confucian-inspired feudal rule at its best.
36
in many ways fitting symbols for the Edo-period daimyo, ferried between
Edo and his domain, whose twin raisons d'être were attendance upon the
shogun and management of his Edo yashiki, and administering his local
domain. Many daimyo gradually became detached from the social and
political realities about them, from the problems of their poorer samurai
living on meager stipends, as well as from the hardships faced by the
peasantry of their domains. With daimyo periodically in attendance in
Edo, actual administration was left in many domains to samurai officials.
In a society based on hereditary privilege, daimyo and higher-ranking
samurai in the domains were worlds apart from lesser samurai and fre-
quently lorded it over them. They had more in common with shoguns
and courtiers and their fellow daimyo than with the mass of samurai or
commoners in their domains. A feudal elite, they intermarried with other
daimyo families or branches of the shogunal family, whose cultural val-
ues they shared, rather than with merchants or lower samurai.
          Daimyo culture in the Edo period naturally reflected the political
position of the daimyo themselves under the umbrella of Tokugawa
power. The manifestations of culture were frequently resplendent and
powerful, refined and cultivated. They were also conservative in charac-
 ter, traditional and somehow wanting in the energy and creativity that
had been so evident in the Muromachi and Momoyama periods. Al-
 though powerfully expressive of the Edo age, daimyo culture was not the
 most vibrant aspect of Edo-period culture. That accolade belongs to the
 popular culture of the merchants, craftsmen, entertainers, and ordinary
 townspeople of the great cities. Daimyo were certainly aware of the
 vitality of popular culture around them and drawn to the world of the
 Kabuki theatre, popular literature, and woodblock prints. They were not
 active contributors to the popular realm, however. Their principal cul-
 tural role was that of inheritors and patrons of a traditional and classical
 Chinese and Japanese aesthetic.
          We might suggest that just as the imperial court clung to the
 cultural style of its halcyon days in the Heian period, so the daimyo
 tended to idealize aesthetic modes of the Muromachi era. The cultural
 tone for Edo-period daimyo was set by the Tokugawa shoguns in their
 edicts and directions to the warrior order. We can distinguish a creative
 tension. One vital requirement was to preserve that military tradition on
 which the whole edifice of Tokugawa power rested, to reiterate con-
 stantly the samurai traditions of valor, honor, loyalty, and military pre-
 paredness. Another requirement was to modulate the military tradition,
  to tame it, to turn the daimyo and their samurai from the ways of war to
  those of peace. The path of bu was never relinquished in the Tokugawa
  period but under the Pax Tokugawa the inclination to promote the ways
  of bun tended to gain the upper hand.
                                                                                            37
     to live up to this ideal. As leaders of the warrior class, they were still
     required to train in military arts. leyasu and his successors could not
     advocate the complete abandonment of military skills by warriors. There
     was no knowing when these skills might be needed in support of the
     Tokugawa or in defense of the nation, the primary responsibility of the
     bakufu. Daimyo and their samurai were encouraged to maintain the
     samurai tradition of spartan outdoor living, with training in the military
     skills of archery, musketry, horsemanship, swordsmanship, falconry, and
     hunting. They were required to keep their castles in repair, and their
     weapons ready.
              The cult of Bushidô, the Way of the warrior, emphasizing loyalty
     and honor, was strengthened by the injection of Confucian notions of
     proper reverence for superiors and single-minded dedication to the serv-
     ice of one's lord. One of the clearest statements of the Edo period
     samurai ideal was made by Yamaga Sokô (1682-1685), a teacher of Confu-
     cianism and military science, in his moral exhortation for samurai, Shidô,
     in 1665:
        The business of the samurai consists in reflecting on his own station in life, in
        discharging loyal service to his master if he has one, in deepening his fidelity in
        association with friends, and, with due consideration to his own position, in devoting
        himself to duty above all. However, in one's own life one becomes unavoidably
        involved in obligations between father and child, older and younger brother, and
        husband and wife. Though these are also the fundamental moral obligations of
        everyone in the land, the farmers, artisans, and merchants have no leisure from their
        occupations, and so they cannot constantly act in accordance with them and fully
        exemplify the Way. The samurai dispenses with the business of the farmer, artisan,
        and merchant and confines himself to practicing the Way; should there be someone
        in the three classes of the common people who transgresses against these moral
        principles, the samurai summarily punishes him and thus upholds proper moral
        principles in the land. It would not do for the samurai to know the martial [bu] and
        civil [bun] without manifesting them. Since this is the case, outwardly he stands in
        physical readiness for any call to service and inwardly he strives to fulfill the Way of
        the lord and subject, friend and friend, father and son, older and younger brother,
        and husband and wife. Within his heart he keeps to the ways of peace, but without
        he keeps his weapons ready for use. The three classes of the common people make
        him their teacher and respect him. By following his teachings, they were enabled to
        understand what is fundamental and what is secondary.
                  Herein lies the Way of the samurai, the means by which he earns his
        clothing, food, and shelter; and by which his heart is put at ease, and he is enabled to
        pay back at length his obligations to his lord and the kindness of his parents
        (Tsunoda, de Bary, and Keene 1964, vol. i, 390).
               For some, though not all, samurai advocates of Confucianism, a
     true samurai, if faced with the excrutiating choice between demonstrat-
     ing filial piety toward a father and loyalty to a lord, would give primacy to
     loyalty over filial piety. And that classic of Edo-period Bushidd, the Haga-
     kure, compiled by a samurai from the Nabeshima domain in Hizen in
     1716, states repeatedly that the true samurai should think only of dying in
     service to his lord, and live constantly with the thought of death:
         Wherever we may be, deep in mountain recesses or buried under the ground, any
         time or anywhere, our duty is to guard the interest of our Lord. This is the duty of
         every Nabeshima man. This is the backbone of our faith, unchanging and eternally
         true.
                  Every morning make up thy mind how to die. Every evening freshen thy
         mind in the thought of death . . .
                  Bushido, the way of the warrior, means death' (Bellah 1970, 91-92).
     Bushidô thus became a cult of loyalty, a one-way ethic of loyalty based on
     an enhanced sense of moral obligation to one's lord. That obligation
     could be fulfilled on the battlefield or, in the peaceful world of
     eighteenth-century Japan, by self-denying service and devotion to the
     most petty details of administration or ceremonial performance.
38
        Although largely untested for two centuries, the samurai martial
tradition survived and resurfaced in the mid-nineteenth century when
young samurai from tozama fiefs, angered at the bakufu's inability to
expel the Western intruders, took up their swords and turned them
against their enemies, whether supporters of the bakufu, foreign resi-
dents in Japan, or punitive expeditions sent by the Western powers.
    And he naturally had no time to read and study. He took the empire on horseback,
    but his natural brilliance and his superhuman character were such that he early
    recognized that the empire could not be ruled on horseback. He always had great
    respect for the Way of the Sages and knew that it alone could teach how to rule the
    kingdom and fulfill the highest duties of man. Consequently, from the beginning of
    his reign he gave great encouragement to learning (Dore 1965,16).
                                                                                          39
     had to be promoted as appropriate to the samurai. leyasu and the Toku-
     gawa had no desire to encourage their vassals in frivolity—daimyo and
     samurai were officially discouraged, not always successfully, from fre-
     quenting popular entertainments and from consorting with actors, enter-
     tainers, and courtiers—but they did wish them to devote time to serious
     scholarly pursuits. leyasu himself became late in life an assiduous
     scholar, or patron of scholarship, who collected books, gathered scholars
     to lecture to the shogunal court, studied the biography of Yoritomo, and
     had the Azuma kagami reprinted. Just as Yoritomo had gathered scholars
     from the Kyoto court, leyasu employed the Zen monk Ishin Suden and
     the Tendai monk Tenkai and the Confucian scholar Hayashi Razan
     (1583-1657) as his advisors.
              As the clamor of battle receded it was natural that samurai should
     devote themselves not only to the military arts, but also to learning and
     the fine arts. The shogun and daimyo assimilated and embodied several
     cultural traditions. From the point of view of heightening the authority
     of the shogunate it was essential to adopt elements of the aristocratic
     culture of the Kyoto court, Chinese scholarship, and the teachings of
     Confucianism as well as traditional Japanese samurai culture. leyasu
     recognized that a new system of values, order, and morality was neces-
     sary for the consolidation of the nation under the shogunate. For this, he
     and his successors encouraged the promotion of scholarship and educa-
     tion for samurai and the cultivation of men of talent. They turned espe-
     cially to Neo-Confucian teachings, which posited a moral order above
     the shogun that at the same time legitimated the shogun's position as the
     just ruler carrying out the will of heaven; it sanctified the Tokugawa
     hierarchy of classes as being "according to nature," and it offered a code
     of conduct appropriate to each class. Most daimyo followed suit and
     patronized Neo-Confucianism, while maintaining a personal interest in
     Buddhism in the family temple, or in Shinto and National Learning, an
     intellectual movement developing in the eighteenth century that revived
     interest in the Japanese classics as the purest expression of Japanese
     identity. In keeping with leyasu's admonition to excel in literary as well
     as martial arts, the shoguns and daimyo studied painting and calligraphy,
     as well as the Confucian classics and ancient Japanese literature and
     history. leyasu studied the calligraphic style of the Heian court noble
     Fujiwara Teika (1162-1241)and painting styles under Kano masters. A few
     daimyo showed some talent as painters and calligraphers, though most
     were content to remain patrons and collectors, rather than practitioners
     of the arts. One of the important contributions of Edo-period daimyo
     was the cultivation and categorization of a cultural legacy that had been
     developing in Japan since the medieval period. Enthusiastic daimyo
     sponsorship of chanoyu, No, Confucian studies, poetry, and calligraphy,
     led to the refining of traditions or art and scholarship, and the stabiliza-
     tion of a shared cultural vocabulary.
               Peace and relative prosperity in some domains, combined with
      this encouragement of bun by the bakufu and daimyo, and stimulated by
      the coming and going of sankin kotai and the influence of merchant
      prosperity and urban culture, encouraged many different manifestations
      of daimyo culture in the Edo period. Nor did daimyo confine their
      cultural interests simply to Confucian scholarship. Aside from Confu-
      cian studies, other fields of study included Chinese and classical Japa-
      nese literature including the Kokinshù, and the Tale of Genji. Daimyo
      were still expected to be able to compose poetry and to quote with
      authority from the Chinese and Japanese literary classics.
               The daimyo's pattern of life in the Edo period contributed to the
      patronage of and participation in a variety of traditional arts and cultural
      activities. Within the castle precincts, the residence of the daimyo was
40
built in the shoin domestic style of residential architecture. Here the
daimyo held council with his retainers, gave banquets, and entertained
guests. Castles and yashiki required large numbers of paintings on fold-
ing screens and sliding partitions, metalwork, furniture, lacquer and ce-
ramic utensils, and accoutrements. Artists of the Kano, Tosa, and other
schools of Japanese painting were kept busy with daimyo commissions.
Some daimyo had a particular fondness for expansive screens depicting
battles, or such martial accomplishments as falconry, riding, or eques-
trian dog-shooting. Others collected prized Chinese art objects (kara-
mono), especially those that had belonged to the Ashikaga shogunal
collection, including celadons, lacquer, incense utensils, books, ink-
stones, water droppers, brushes, and calligraphy. Others were particu-
larly attached to Muromachi-style suibokuga or illustrated handscrolls in
the revived yamato-e tradition. Genre paintings and scenes of everyday
life in and around Kyoto were much in demand in provincial castle
towns. Zen painting and calligraphy were still prized, but in general
traditional Buddhist iconographie painting and sculpture languished in
the Edo period when compared with the medieval period. Daimyo
tastes, like those of the country at large, were shifting in more secular
directions.
          Although daimyo had no opportunities to appear on the battle-
field, they still needed swords, armor, muskets, and other military equip-
ment for drills, ceremonial occasions, and as symbols of personal status.
In the Edo period only samurai were permitted to bear arms, and the
sword, in particular, remained the symbol of the samurai. Daimyo com-
missioned swords and armor from the finest makers to reflect their rank,
status, and artistic taste.
          Daimyo were participants in an elite cultural world in which No
and the tea ceremony were the highest expressions of political as well as
 cultural preeminence. In this respect they continued to cloak themselves
 in the cultural trappings that had earlier added prestige to the Ashikaga
 shoguns. Culture and politics mingled in the tearooms and the No per-
 formances held in Edo Castle or the daimyo residences, or in the provin-
 cial castle towns. Although the Kabuki and the puppet theaters were
 flourishing among the townspeople of Edo and Osaka and were attrac-
 tive to many samurai, No and its comic counterpart Kyôgen remained
 the official dramatic form patronized by shoguns and daimyo. leyasu
 adopted it, carrying on the enthusiastic patronage of Hideyoshi, No-
 bunaga, and the Ashikaga shoguns. Just as bugaku had served for centu-
 ries as the formal music of the imperial court, No filled this role for
 shogun and daimyo. Daimyo were expected to be able to chant No.
 leyasu and Tsunayoshi (the fifth shogun), for instance, performed No
 dances and urged the daimyo to do the same. Annual competitions of
 chanting and dancing (utai-hajime) were held. Every daimyo household
 was required to maintain a full set of robes, masks, and musical instru-
 ments for the performance of No. The Hosokawa family had a particu-
 larly fine collection, from which many robes and accessories have been
 lent to the exhibition. Frequent ceremonial performances of No were
 held in Edo and the provincial castle towns. Daimyo vied in sponsoring
 No actors, building stages, and acquiring robes and masks.
          During the Edo period the passion for tea (chanoyu) spread
 through all sectors of society. Descendants and students of Sen no Rikyü
 established the major schools of tea, including the Ura Senke, Omote
  Senke, and Mushanokôji Senke that are still popular today. Professional
 tea masters made their livings instructing shoguns, daimyo, samurai,
  townspeople, and even wealthy farmers in the intricacies of tea and the
  subtleties of the tea aesthetic. For everybody, the enjoyment of tea was a
  participatory aesthetic in which some of the more rigid social barriers
                                                                               41
     were temporarily set aside in the small world of the tearoom and all the
     guests could share in the appreciation of a welcoming tearoom or the
     host's thoughtfulness in choosing utensils.
              For shoguns and daimyo, tea had added associations. Because of
     its enthusiastic patronage by the Ashikaga shoguns, Nobunaga, and
     Hideyoshi, chanoyu had also become an expression of wealth and power,
     a vehicle of elite interaction, and one of the central social rituals of
     warrior society. While shoguns and daimyo in the Edo period patronized
     tea masters of the various lineages descended from Sen no Rikyü, they
     also maintained their own traditions of tea, appropriate for the imposing
     chambers of castles and yashiki. leyasu himself was a passionate enthusi-
     ast of tea and collector of fine utensils. He received instruction from the
     tea master and man of culture Kobori Enshü, who also instructed Hide-
     yoshi as well as the second and third Tokugawa shoguns. Formal and
     informal tea gatherings were held in Edo Castle,in the Edo residences of
     the daimyo, and in their provincial castles. No daimyo could afford to be
     ignorant of the niceties of correct etiquette or be unable to entertain his
     fellow daimyo in his own tearoom. Shoguns and daimyo competed in the
     elegant simplicity of their tearooms and gardens, in their collection of
     precious utensils, and in calligraphy, to display the tokonoma of the
     tearoom. Most prized were those that had belonged to the Ashikaga
     shoguns, or to the sixteenth-century tea masters Takeno Joo (1502-1555),
     Murata Shukô (1421-1502), and Sen no Rikyü. The daimyo passion for tea
     also provided a vigorous stimulus for the artists and craftsmen of their
     own day. The work of the finest carpenters, garden designers, potters,
     metalworkers, bamboo craftsmen, and papermakers was all in high
     demand.
              The traditions of daimyo tea were established by daimyo like
     Furuta Oribe (1544-1615), Kanamori Sówa (1584-1656), and Katagiri Se-
     kishü (1605-1673). The daimyo tea master Furuta Oribe, a 30,000 koku
     daimyo and disciple of Rikyü, is said to have instructed Tokugawa Hide-
     tada, the second shogun, in the art of tea. He was suspected of treason by
     leyasu at the siege of Osaka Castle and forced to take his own life. His
     students in the art of tea included Kobori Enshü, Hon'ami Kôetsu (1558-
     1637), and many daimyo. Oribe had innovative tastes in ceramics, garden,
     and teahouse design, which he transmitted to the daimyo who studied
     within him. Kanamori Sôwa, the daimyo of Takayama Castle in Hida,was
     a connoisseur of tea utensils who studied tea and Zen at Daitokuji in
     Kyoto. In the capital he became familiar with court nobles as well as Zen
     monks. His tastes in tea aesthetics combined Zen simplicity with courtly
     elegance and refinement. Katagiri Sekishü, daimyo of the Koizumi do-
     main in Yamato Province, served as tea master to the fourth Tokugawa
     shogun, letsuna. He practiced the more studied, plain, and rustic Rikyü
     tradition of wabicha but was on close terms with Sówa, Enshü, and other
     daimyo tea devotees. Sekishü had many daimyo as his students and was
     particularly influential in shaping daimyo taste.
              Some later daimyo devoted such interest to chanoyu that they
      came to be known as sukiya daimyo, or literati daimyo. Among these
      were Matsudaira Fumai (1751-1818) of the Matsue domain, Sakai Sôga
     (1755-1790), of the Himeji domain, as well as Matsudaira Sadanobu and li
      Naosuke, already mentioned. The enthusiasm for tea was particularly
      strong in certain daimyo houses such as the Owari branch of the Toku-
      gawa family, the Maeda of Kaga, the Hosokawa of Kumamoto, the Ma-
     tsudaira of Takamatsu,and the Date of Sendai. As in other fields, daimyo
      patronage of tea encouraged the refinement and categorization of cul-
      tural traditions related to tea. These daimyo patrons were serious stu-
      dents who recorded their tea gatherings, utensils, and aesthetic ideals in
      tea diaries (o cha kaiki). This was part of a much larger phenomenon of
42
daimyo contribution to the elaboration of the cultural vocabulary of the
Edo period.
         Chanoyu was a major stimulus for the development of daimyo-
sponsored kilns as well as for interior design and the codification of
flower arrangements for tearooms and for formal arrangements on cer-
emonial occasions. While Chinese- and Korean-inspired high-fired,
glazed porcelain and stoneware remained highly prized throughout the
Edo period, the tastes of Sen no Rikyü and other tea masters ran to
rougher, humbler Japanese or Korean ware. Rikyü patronized the potter
Chôjirô, who made hand-formed, thick-walled bowls. Many daimyo took
pride in the kilns and potters within their domains and, in an effort to
develop local products, introduced their work to Edo and Osaka. The
Ikeda family of Okayama, for instance, took an active interest in the
Bizen kilns within their domain. Among the daimyo of western Japan the
Shimazu, Kuroda, Nabeshima, Goto, Matsuura, and Mori all controlled
kilns headed by Korean potters brought back forcibly during Hideyoshi's
invasions of Korea. The Nabeshima family of Hizen province in Kyushu,
for instance, was engaged in foreign trade, with their own licensed ships
plying between Japan and southeast Asia. Nabeshima Naoshige (1538-
1618) and his son Katsushige (1580-1657) both participated in the Korean
invasions and brought back Korean artisans. Establishing their kilns
around Arita, they produced blue and white underglaze and brilliantly
colored overglaze wares that won fame throughout Japan and were car-
ried to Europe by Dutch traders. The technological skills of these groups
of Korean potters contributed to the great variety and fine aesthetic
quality of Edo-period ceramics.
         The tradition of flower arrangement was an ancient one in Japan
and China but it was given new impetus under Rikyü's instruction that
"flowers should be as they are in nature." In the early seventeenth cen-
tury, Ikenobó Senkô revived the fortunes of the Ikenobô school and
other schools quickly developed as the Way of flowers appealed to towns-
people, samurai, and daimyo alike. Many of the schools and family tradi-
tions in the contemporary arts of tea, flowers, music, and traditional
dance owe much to daimyo patronage in the Edo period.
         Throughout the exhibition are reminders that a daimyo's life had
its private, family side as well as its public and ceremonial aspects. The
wives and children of samurai and daimyo did not have easy lives in a
feudal society. In the medieval centuries, a samurai woman learned not
only to keep house but to use a halberd and exercise a horse. A woman
would also be taught how to take her life, if necessary, by stabbing herself
in the jugular vein. Women were subject to all the hazards of an unstable
age of war. Married in childhood to a youth she might never have met
before her betrothal, a wife became the charge of her husband's family
and was expected to produce strong sons to carry on the house. In the
best of circumstances she might be a partner to her husband in the face
of shared dangers. More commonly she would be abused, widowed early,
cast adrift, or treated with scant respect by her in-laws. The property
rights and political influence enjoyed by noblewomen and the women of
influential warrior families in the Heian and Kamakura periods were
whittled away under the pressures of war and the spreading of feudal
values.
         The Pax Tokugawa did not bring substantial improvements to the
 status of women. If anything, their situation worsened. Like the samurai
bound more tightly in a Confucianized ethic of single-minded loyalty to
 a lord, women of all classes were bound by Confucian admonitions of
 threefold submission: to her husband's parents, to her husband, and to
 her adult male offspring. This ideal of a Bushidd for women found its
 most vigorous assertion in the Onna daigaku (Great learning for women)
                                                                               43
     written by Kaibara Ekken (1630-1714), or by some accounts by his wife:
        However many servants she may have in her employ it is a woman's duty not to shirk
        the trouble of attending to everything herself. She must sew her father-in-law's and
        mother-in-law's garments and make ready their food. Ever attentive to the require-
        ments of her husband, she must fold his clothes and dust his rug, rear his children,
        wash what is dirty, be constantly in the midst of her household, and never go abroad
        but of necessity... (Chamberlain 1905, 506).
44
society, as in Japanese society at large, gift-giving was always an impor-
tant cultural and political ritual. Daimyo were expected to shower lavish
gifts on the shoguns and were rewarded with precious items in return.
Elaborate gifts were given at marriage and on accession to power. For
these gifts daimyo frequently exploited the special skills and products of
artisans in their domains.
                                                                                45
     later commuted into cash. Those daimyo that had enjoyed the largest
     incomes in the Tokugawa structure, therefore, tended to fare best under
     the new Meiji dispensation. Mori of Choshü and Maeda of Kaga re-
     ceived bonds worth over a million yen, which at five percent interest
     annually would have given them annual incomes of more than 50,000
     yen, a very large income in Meiji Japan. Most daimyo fared much less
     well, perhaps enjoying incomes from their bond of between 2,000 and
     5,000 yen a year. These were still substantial incomes in the i88os and
     18905, especially now that they were freed from the responsibility of
     providing for their retainers as well as their families. As peers the former
     daimyo had capital and were free to invest in land, railroads, or other
     enterprises. Some did so very astutely and became among the wealthiest
     members of late Meiji society; others were less successful. On the whole,
     however, the former daimyo were very much more favorably treated
     than the mass of former samurai who were classed as commoners and
     granted meager financial settlements, most of which were quickly de-
     pleted. Politically, the former daimyo made less of an impact. A few
     entered provincial or national politics. For the most part, however, politi-
     cal leadership was taken by lower-ranking figures, many of whom had
     connections with Satsuma and Choshü. By the close of the nineteenth
     century the early Meiji elite, of which the daimyo were part, was being
     bypassed by a new leadership that emerged from former samurai or
     commoner backgrounds.
              What of daimyo culture in the post-Restoration era? In the full
      flush of enthusiasm for things Western in the i86os and 18705, the cul-
      tural interests of the Tokugawa elite were largely disregarded or discred-
      ited. Like all samurai, daimyo gave up their swords, formal robes, and
      palanquins and took to walking sticks, Western dress, and the railway.
      Obligatory sankin kôtai and attendance upon the shogun had been re-
      placed by freedom of travel and freer social intercourse. In the abolition
      of the domains they lost their castles and many of their Tokyo residences.
      In many cases they sold off family treasures. Lesser mortals no longer
      bowed at their passage and they lost the power to command service from
      farmers and craftsmen. Where once the classical learning of Japan and
      China had provided their intellectual framework, they now had to come
      to terms with new ideas and notions from the West. Prized tea utensils,
      Buddhist statues, and other works of art were temporarily devalued as
      attention turned to the assimilation of artistic models from the West.
              But not everything had been destroyed and with time came a
      reassessment of cultural values. Many works of art were acquired cheaply
      by Western collectors and museums but others were bought by Japanese
      who were finding new value in their own cultural tradition. Some dai-
      myo retained substantial collections and added to them during the late
      nineteenth and twentieth centuries. After the fever for things Western
      subsided somewhat in the mid-Meiji period, Japanese and Westerners
      alike began to rediscover the qualities of artistic and cultural attainment
      that had been enjoyed and prized by the former daimyo. No and chanoyu
      began to regain attention, ceramics found export outlets, and painters
      began to revive traditional styles. Many of the elements associated with
      that elite feudal society that seemed at risk of being completely lost or
      discredited in early Meiji have since been recognized as among the finest
       examples of Japanese cultural attainment.
46
       Daimyo and art
YOSHIAKI SHIMIZU
                                                                             47
     emperor Go-Shirakawa (1127-1192) and freed from a twenty-year banish-
     ment in Izu, amassed an army of more than twenty thousand men, were
     the Heike routed. The Genji troops, led by Yoritomo's impetuous half
     brother Yoshitsune (1159-1189), repulsed the Heike at the decisive Battle
     of Dannoura in the spring of 1185.
              Yet, even before the Heike had been driven from power, and
     within a month after the burning of Tôdaiji and Kôfukuji, the court of
     Kyoto had ordered the reconstruction process to begin under the leader-
     ship of a monk of Tôdaiji, Shunjôbô Chôgen (1121-1206). Chógen ener-
     getically pursued the task, raising much-needed funds and traveling to
     China to engage an expert Chinese bronze caster. He also found timbers
     in Suó and brought them to Nara. A replica of the bronze colossus was
     dedicated in the eighth month of 1184, in the presence of both the
     cloistered emperor Go-Shirakawa and Yoritomo, who traveled from Ka-
     makura to attend the ceremony. Ten years later, the reconstruction of the
     Great Buddha Hall also was completed. It was the first major public
     project accomplished by a new coalition that included the court, the
     Genji warriors, and the clerics, and a symbol of the new era of steward-
     ship of the affairs of the state by the warriors.
              When the Genji warrior clan established its government at the
     end of the twelfth century, many Japanese artistic traditions already had
     been in place for more than two centuries. Buddhist temples and Shinto
     shrines had their own workshops of painters called edokoro, the name
     based on the earlier and more official body within the imperial palace.
     Sculptural traditions had been firmly based in Nara as well as in Kyoto.
     Out of the new creative impetus generated by the reconstruction
     projects at Tôdaiji and Kôfukuji emerged the Kei school and its new
     style. Its stylistic influence extended to the east, centered around Kama-
     kura, the seat of the warrior government. The sculptor Unkei (d. 1223),
     who along with his father, Kôkei, led the campaign to restore the Bud-
     dhist icons at Nara, propagated a style that took root under the patronage
     of Hôjô Tokimasa (1138-1215), the warrior chieftain in the east.
              Meanwhile, new Buddhist monasteries were being built in Kama-
     kura. Zen temples with new architectural features based on Chinese
     models were founded during the period of renewed, sustained contact
     with mainland China encouraged by the Hôjô regents in Kamakura. In
     the fourteenth century, especially, hundreds of Japanese Zen pilgrims
     went to China, many for sojourns often to fifteen years. Chinese monks
     also visited Japan at the invitation of the patrons of Zen monasteries, the
     Hôjô family members (cats. 47, 54, 55). The Chinese emigré monks were
     great teachers of sinology as well as religion. The cultural fringe benefits
     that Chinese Chan (Zen) Buddhism brought to Japan were enthusiasti-
     cally received by the new warrior elite, who as patrons had found some-
     thing new, something that had not been handed down to them by the old
     régime.
              Renewed contacts between Japan and China led to the adoption
     of two Chinese painting traditions: the Song Dynasty portrait tradition,
     and an ink painting tradition that incorporated new subject matter and
     techniques. Chinese paintings at Butsunichian, a sub-temple Engakuji
     and the mortuary chapel of Regent Hôjô Tokimune (1251-1284) included,
     according to an inventory made around 1365, two new categories of
     painting: portraits of Chinese Chan (Zen) masters, and ink paintings of
     Daoist and Buddhist saints, landscapes, and flowers and birds.
              When Yoritomo accepted the title Seiitdshdgun in 1192 he proba-
     bly was uncomfortable with the idea that he had also inherited the
      stewardship of the arts and culture, which had always been the province
     of the aristocrats. His painted portrait, perhaps the single most important
      painting in this exhibition, presents him in courtly attire (cat. i). The
     painting is part of a set of three portraits at Jingoji that survive from an
      original set of five: Go-Shirakawa at the center; a courtier; two Taira clan
48
members, one of them Shigemori (1138-1179); and Yoritomo. Yoritomo
appears aristocratic, despite evidence that he was in fact anything but
that. His occasional complacency toward the arts is demonstrated by his
refusal, during the ceremony to dedicate the reconstructed Great Bud-
dha at Nara, to view paintings from Go-Shirakawa's extraordinary per-
sonal collection. Without seeing even a single work, Yoritomo returned
the paintings to Go-Shirakawa.
         Yoritomo's response to art contrasts strongly with Kiyomori's atti-
tude toward it. In 1170 Kiyomori and Go-Shirakawa together visited the
Shôsôin collection in Nara to view the art treasures amassed since the
time of the emperor Shômu. The history of the warrior-rulers' relation to
art collecting from the time Yoritomo became shogun to about 1615,
when the Tokugawa shogunate was formed in Edo, in fact reveals a
pattern of emulation by each ruler of earlier precedents. Each daimyo
referred to examples set by his antecedents and superiors, always con-
scious that mastery of both bun and bu were expected of a warrior.
Through the thirteenth century, the shogun did not make official visits
to the Shôsôin, but in the late fourteenth century and throughout the
fifteenth century, when the Ashikaga shoguns established their govern-
ment in Kyoto, the official visit once again became an important event.
Ashikaga Yoshimitsu (1358-1408) and the courtier Regent Nijô Yoshimoto
(1320-1388) viewed the Shôsôin treasures that were especially selected for
a display at a Nara temple in 1385, and it was Yoshimitsu, followed by his
successors, who amassed the Ashikaga shogunal collection of Chinese
paintings and other art objects. Both Ashikaga Yoshinori (1394-1441) and
Yoshimasa, whose portraits are included in this exhibition (cats. 5, 6),
payed homage to the Shôsôin and viewed its treasures in 1429 and 1465
respectively. Later, in 1574, Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582), the daimyo of
Owari, made a special visit to the famous collection. Art collecting played
an important role in that it reminded rulers to attend to the arts as well as
to political and military business. From Ashikaga Yoshinori's collection of
Chinese art, some twenty works survive, each stamped with his collec-
tion seal, Zakkashitsuin (cat. 100). Ashikaga Yoshimasa's collection of
Chinese painting at Higashiyama was so prestigious that even after its
dispersal, items from his collection continued to be called gyomotsu or
"honorable objects/' as late as the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
         The upper-class warriors had close connections with the Zen
establishment, and maintained relationships at various levels. For exam-
ple, the Ouchi family of Suô patronized Nanzenji in Kyoto as well as Zen
temples in their home province. Warrior families would also send their
sons to Zen monasteries for sinological education. Some daimyo families
would actively patronize a particular sub-temple, or even found one; the
sub-temple would usually become the family mortuary temple. The Ju-
kôin at Daitokuji for the daimyo family of Miyoshi and the Shinjôin sub-
temple at Tenryüji for the Hosokawa are two such examples.
         Their patronage of the Zen establishment naturally led some
daimyo to become accomplished poets and men of letters, worthy of
being commemorated in paintings inscribed by a host of erudite Zen
monks. Inscriptions on an early fifteenth-century painting of a mountain
villa (cat. 85) praised Ouchi Morimi (1377-1431), constable of Suô, for his
wisdom as a ruler and for his talent as an accomplished poet. Another
daimyo, Yamana Tokihiro (1367-1435), was a regular member of a poetry
 salon organized by Zen monks of Nanzenji in Kyoto under the patronage
 of the Ashikaga shogun Yoshimochi (1386-1428; cat. 83). Yoshimochi him-
 self was an inspired amateur painter, and some of his surviving works
 show a high artistic level (cat. 80). Among the artistic daimyo of the
 fifteenth century some showed an understanding of art surpassing that
 of their ecclesiastical counterparts. Hosokawa Shigeyuki (1434-1511), dai-
 myo of Sanuki Province, was a collector of Chinese paintings. Upon his
 retirement from military and administrative duties he became a Zen
                                                                                49
     priest. When Osen Keisan (1429-1493), a scholar-monk, visited Shigeyuki,
     the aging warrior told the monk that he wished to show him a landscape
     that he himself had painted on his recent trip to Kumano and other
     scenic spots on the Kii peninsula. When the scroll was opened there was
     nothing but a blank sheet of paper. The monk, struck by the emptiness
     of the painting, offered these words of praise:
         Your brush is as tall as the Mount Sumeru
         [cosmic mountain in Buddhism]
         Black ink large enough to exhaust the great earth;
         The white paper as vast as the void that swallows up all illusions.
50
A typical example of Kano Motonobu's work is the set of four sliding
door panels from Reiun'in exhibited here (cat. 97). During the Momo-
yama period, the various studios operated by the Kano family members
contracted to execute specific projects, and Eitoku's studio was very
much in demand. In fact Eitoku was so busy with the commissions that
came from Nobunaga and Hideyoshi that the artist could hardly take
care of his own household. At Azuchi, Eitoku, Mitsunobu, and assistants
executed panel paintings in ink and gold. The paintings of Buddhist
subjects and Chinese Confucian, and Daoist narrative themes were on
the upper floors. Landscapes and paintings of flowers and birds and
animals were distributed throughout the lower floors. Although the
Azuchi paintings have been destroyed, the evidence of other surviving
works contemporary with Eitoku, including the set of sliding door panels
from Myôrenji (cat. 121), permits us to speculate that the Azuchi panels
must have been monumental, brilliant due to the lavish use of gold, and
dynamic in design. In 1582 Nobunaga was assassinated, and Hideyoshi
assumed control of military affairs and the government. In 1583 he began
the construction of Osaka Castle and commissioned Eitoku and his ate-
lier to decorate its interior. None of the panels survived the fall of the
castle to the Tokugawa forces in 1614 and 1615, but Eitoku's legacy is
unabashedly reflected in the style of a monumental composition by
Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674), Eitoku's grandson and painter in service to the
Tokugawa shogunate. The Kano style patronized by the shogunate in
turn became a model emulated by the various daimyo who caused artis-
tic styles to be disseminated in the provinces during the Edo period.
         The monumental and heroic style of painting associated with
Eitoku cannot be separated from the mood of the age and the personality
of his major patron, Hideyoshi. Hideyoshi's personality and artistic tem-
perament were complex and even contradictory; he aspired to be stoic,
but could not resist epicurean pursuits. On one hand he sought the
rusticity of a humble tearoom, and on the other, he displayed ostenta-
tiously a gold tea house in his castle mansion in Osaka, of which a
description survives: "from the tatami-matted floor to the ceiling, from
pillar to the cross beams, all were covered with gold; teabowls, kettle,
spoon, everything was gold." Yet Hideyoshi was an enthusiastic patron of
indigenous Raku wares, characterized by simplicity and directness of
form and color (cats. 285, 286). In Hideyoshi the timbre and behavior of
the ruthless military hegemon seem to have been conditioned by the
famous art objects he owned.
         Particularly during the last quarter of the sixteenth century,
many famous art treasures once in the collections of the fifteenth-
century Ashikaga shoguns had been broken up. Individual paintings and
artworks fell into the hands of daimyo in the provinces or entered the
collections of wealthy merchant-aesthetes and tea adepts in Sakai, Nara,
Kyoto, and Hakata. Written records document the movement and pedi-
grees of some of the most coveted tea ceremony utensils and Chinese
paintings. Both Nobunaga and Hideyoshi had inherited some of the
prized works from the Ashikaga collections. A collection inherited by
Nobunaga was destroyed by fire in 1582, though some artworks were
handed to Hideyoshi who, known for his shrewd and level-headed de-
meanor during fierce battles, also set up a tea room where he served tea
between battles. On the very spot where one's life might vanish like the
morning dew, he used and admired the famous teabowls and Chinese
ink paintings he inherited from Nobunaga.
         In the seventeenth century, when the peaceful Tokugawa sho-
gunate was established, the warrior class continued to serve as custodi-
ans, practitioners, and patrons of the arts. Later, following Hideyoshi's
example, the Edo shogunate had tea masters in place for generations.
The tea master Kobori Enshü (1579-1647) developed his own set of rules
 of tea aesthetics; he amassed his own collection of art, some of it trace-
                                                                              51
     able to the Ashikaga collections and therefore extremely valuable. Such
     works came to be called meibutsu or "renowned pieces." The daimyo and
     collector Matsudaira Fumai (Harusato) (1751-1818) of Izumo Province
     built his own art collection. The works that survived from it are called
     Unshü meibutsu, or the masterpieces of Izumo Province. This tradition
     of recording the pedigree of an object also led collectors to treasure
     boxes, inner and outer, for paintings; inscriptions on the boxes, either
     exterior or interior, by a known connoisseur; certificates written by con-
     noisseurs; letters of appreciation by a famous connoisseur, and so on.
             For the warrior, the balancing of bun and bu was easier said than
     done. In the Muromachi period the arts of bun were related to religious
     devotion or the practice of tea, No, or painting, and were more or less
     confined to private life; thus no conflict existed between bun and bu. In
     times of unrest, the public image of Muromachi daimyo like Ouchi
     Morimi and Hosokawa Shigeyuki (1434-1511) was based almost exclusively
     upon their activities as warriors and men of bu. The Edo period was a
     time of specialization. Maeda Tsunanori (1643-1724), daimyo of Kaga
     Province, gathered samples of handicrafts from throughout Japan, which
     resulted in an encyclopedic collection known as Hyakkô hishô, now in
     the Maeda Foundation, Tokyo. In times of peace, however, the reconcili-
     ation of bu, to maintain the warrior's public responsibility, and bun, to
     sustain and embellish the warrior's private world of the spirit, often
     resulted in tension. Peace itself undermined the very existence of war-
     riorhood and the concept of bu. Eventually, the eighteenth century saw
     the emergence of a group of daimyo whose activities were totally in the
     realm of bun: Satake Shozan of Akita (1748-1785; cats. 136, 137), Hoso-
     kawa Shigekata of Higo (1720-1795; cat. 139), and Masuyama Sessai of Ise
     (1734-1819; cat. 138). All three were natural scientist-artists whose path to
     their exclusive devotion to bun had been paved in the late seventeenth
     century, when peace was at last assured. In that period of transition,
     ironic anecdotes surfaced about Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646), a daimyo
     and a man of cultivation, who was both a great collector and an armor
     designer. One story describes Sansai's meeting with Hotta Masamori
     (1608-1651), who had asked to see the daimyo's collection of tea utensils.
     Sansai showed Masamori only arms and armor, however. Later, Sansai
     explained that since one warrior had been visited by another, none other
     than warrior's utensils could possibly have been shown (Kansai hikki,
     196). According to a second story, a daimyo from another province sent a
     messenger to ask Sansai to design a crested helmet for him. Sansai speci-
     fied that it should be made from paulownia wood in the shape of water
     buffalo horns. The messenger was puzzled by the choice of such fragile
     materials. Sansai explained that a helmet crest should break easily rather
     than distract the wearer, yet the messenger persisted in questioning
     Sansai, asking how such a fragile helmet could ever be mended. Sansai
     replied that a warrior in battle should not expect to live another day, and
     that this was the ultimate law of the military man:
         If a warrior is preoccupied with the breaking of his helmet ornament, how can he
         handle his own life, which he lives only once? Besides, a crest broken in combat will
         be truly magnificent to look at. But once life is lost, it can never be replaced/ Having
         heard this, the messenger asked no more questions, and left (Okinagusa, 588-589).
52
Contributors to the catalogue                      Chronology
AMW Andrew M. Wat sky                              Early historical period
AY  Ariga Yoshitaka                                Asuka 552-710
HY  Hiroi Yüichi                                   Nara 710-794
JIK Janet Ikeda Kohatsu                            Heian 794-1185
KS  Kawakami Shigeki
MK  Matsushima Ken                                 Medieval period
MR  Miriam Ricketts                                Kamakura 1185-1333
MS  Miyajima Shin'ichi                             Muromachi 1333-1573
NK  Nedachi Kensuke                                 Nanbokuchô (Northern and Southern
NYA Nakamura Yoriaki                                   Courts) 1333-1392
NYS Nakamura Yasushi                                 Sengoku jidai (Age of Wars) 1467-1573
SH  Soejima Hiromichi
SN  Suzuki Norio
                                                   Early modern period
SY  Sato Yasuhiro
                                                   Momoyama 1573-1615
TY  Takahashi Yüji
                                                   Edo 1615-1868
WA  Watanabe Akiyoshi
YK  Yuyama Ken'ichi
YS  Yoshiaki Shimizu                               Modern period
                                                   Meiji 1868-1912
Dimensions of all works are in centi-              Taishô 1912-1926
meters, followed by inches within                  Showà 1926-present
parentheses.
All Japanese and Chinese personal names            Chinese Dynasties
appear in the catalogue in traditional style,      Tang 618-907
                                                   Five Dynasties 907-960
with surnames preceding given names.
                                                   Northern Song 960-1127
"Left" and "right" mean the viewer's left          Southern Song 1127-1279
and right when referring to paintings,             Yuan (Mongol) 1279-1368
proper left and right when referring to            Ming 1368-1644
sculpture and robes.                               Qing 1644-1911
                                                                                             53
PORTRAITURE
          55
     i Minamoto Yoritomo                           cles portray Yoritomo as a suspicious,
       hanging scroll; ink and color on silk       brutal, and ruthless warrior, the portrait
       139.4 x 111.8 (547/8 x 44)                  here represents him as a courtly official
       Kamakura period,                            rather than as a mighty military chieftain.
       ist quarter of 13th century                       This painting is part of a set of four
        Jingoji, Kyoto                             surviving   portraits at Jingoji; the others are
                                                   of the retired emperor Go-Shirakawa; the
        National Treasure
                                                   courtier Fujiwara Mitsuyoshi (1132-1183);
     A courtierlike figure wearing tailed cer-     and Taira Shigemori (1138-1179), the eldest
     emonial headgear (kdburi), carrying a cer-    son of Kiyomori (1118-1181), the warrior
     emonial sword, and clad in starched           chieftain of the defeated Taira clan. These
     formal silk attire (kowasdzoku) is seated on four in turn are believed to correspond to
     a three-layered tatami mat. He holds a        four paintings from an early set of five that
     shaku, a wedge-shaped, thin wooden slat,      was once at Sentôin, Jingoji, as recorded in
     on which the program for a ceremony           an early fourteenth century document of
     would be written. His blue sash (obi), orna- Jingoji. The fifth portrait of the set, that of
     mented with a gold phoenix design, termi- Taira Narifusa (fl. 1157-1177), a chamberlain
     nates in strands of gold and blue. Its outer of Go-Shirakawa, has long been lost.
     borders are decorated with parallel bands            How the ensemble was formed and
     of green, yellow, blue, and red and a zigzag came to be at the Esoteric Buddhist sanc-
     pattern in gold. The eyes look sharply to-    tuary of Jingoji may be partially explained
     ward the right, and the lightly bearded       by several interconnected circumstances
     face and neck of the sitter are white,        of the politics played out around the per-
     slightly tinted with thin brown washes,       son of the ex-emperor Go-Shirakawa dur-
     starkly contrasting with the red of the       ing the second half of the twelfth century.
     robe's lining.                                Sentôin was built in 1188 to prepare for an
           The black outer robe (/io), which dom- imperial visit by Go-Shirakawa, which
     inates the composition, is intricately orna- took place two years later. Go-Shirakawa
     mented with floral patterns in lustrous       and Yoritomo were both associated with
     black paint over a ground of matte black, a the temple through the priest Mongaku
     feature that has become more readable         (fl. c. 1173-1203), a former warrior who was
     from the recent cleaning and remounting       responsible for much of the extensive re-
     of the scroll. The peony roundels on the      building campaign at Jingoji in 1182, and
     white silk undergarment (shitagasane) are     whose painted portrait also survives at the
     rendered in pale ink. The hem of the sit-     same temple. Mongaku had angered Go-
     ter's silk trousers is ornamented with intri- Shirakawa by plying him with excessive re-
     cate floral and checked patterns of silver    quests for funds for the rebuilding
     leaf, now tarnished. Along the borders of     campaign,     and was exiled to Izu Province
     the tailpiece of the headgear are four        (part of present-day Shizuoka Prefecture).
     rhomboid patterns. The painting has suf-      There he met Yoritomo, who had been ex-
     fered damage along the upper border and       iled there also, and their close association
     in the right half of the tatami mat, includ- began. Later, it was through Yoritomo's
     ing its sheathing cloth. The green mala-      support and the eventual funding from
     chite pigment of the tatami surface has       Go-Shirakawa that Jingoji was successfully
     flaked off considerably, exposing the silk     rebuilt.
     support underneath.                                  The courtier Mitsuyoshi played an in-
           Executed in the consummate picto-       termediate     role between Go-Shirakawa
     rial technique of the courtly tradition of    and Yoritomo when the latter became the
     yamato-e indigenous to Japan, this paint-      power to be reckoned with and an ally in
     ing is one of the earliest extant examples     Go-Shirakawa's ploy to be rid of the politi-
     of formal secular portraiture. The sitter is   cal influence of the Taira clan. Mitsu-
     traditionally identified as Minamoto Yori-     yoshi's portrait, in composition a mirror
     tomo (1147-1199), the first shogun who, af- image of Yoritomo, faces to the left. Taira
     ter defeating the rival Heike, or Taira, clan Shigemori, the subject of the fourth por-
     at Dannoura in 1185, ruled Japan from Ka- trait, was, unlike his father, favorably
      makura as the chieftain of the Minamoto       treated by Go-Shirakawa and became the
     clan. In 1192, soon after the death of the     Inner Minister of the old regime, but he
      formidable retired emperor Go-Shirakawa was dismissed by Kiyomori and died
     (1127-1192), Yoritomo received from the        young, before his father. Shigemori's por-
     court the coveted title of Seiitaishdgun       trait also faces to the left, counterbalanc-
     (Great General Who Quells the Barbari-         ing that of Yoritomo. The entire set when
      ans). Yoritomo became the supreme com-        assembled as a group exudes a strong com-
      mander of the warriors and the head of        memorative character and can be seen as
      the military government, and concurrently an expression of political symbolism.
      was appointed to Senior Second Rank, a              The surviving four paintings at Jingoji
      prestigious court rank from which he          are by different hands, although since the
      could claim legitimacy and exert influ-       early fourteenth century they have been
      ence. Although medieval military chroni-      attributed to Fujiwara Takanobu (1142-
                                                    1205), a low-ranking courtier serving the re-
56
1
    57
2                                                                          3
tired emperor Go-Shirakawa. A painter            Hôjô also included the most highly cul-       hama) due to illness, and he died the fol-
with a considerable reputation, Takanobu         tured people then in Kamakura. Portraits      lowing year. It is not certain when he
is remembered as an expert in the art of         of these four clan members have been          became a priest, but it seems to have been
nise e (semblance picture), which often          handed down at Shômyôji; the portrait of      around the time when he retired to his
meant depiction in a small format of peo-        Sanetoki, painted around 1275, and that of    villa in Kanesawa.
ple in real life. The Takanobu attribution       Sadamasa (cat. 3), painted around 1345, are         The portrait of Sanetoki is of the type
of the Jingoji portraits, however, is not well   included in this exhibition. These por-       known as a hottaizd (clerical portrait).
accepted today. The portraits probably           traits, divided by approximately seventy      Sanetoki has a shaven head, wears a kesa
date from the first quarter of the thir-         years, exemplify the changes in portrait      (priest's mantle) over a hoi (priest's robe),
teenth century.                            YS    painting of upper-class warriors that oc-     holds a fan in his right hand and a rosary
                                                 curred during that time.                      in his left, and sits on a tatami mat. The
2 Hôjô Sanetoki                                        Hôjô Sanetoki was the grandson of       sitter's countenance is beautifully cap-
  hanging scroll; ink and color on silk          Yoshitoki (1163-1224), the second regent of   tured with fine flowing lines, while the
  74.0 x 53.7 (29 Vfc x 21 Vs)                   the Kamakura shogunate. Sanetoki served       straight lines used for his robes display a
                                                 in various important posts of the shogun-     dynamic movement of the brush. Judging
  Kamakura period, c. 1275
                                                 ate and was assistant to Yasutoki (1183-      from the lively expressiveness of the por-
    Shômyôji, Kanagawa Prefecture                1242), the third regent, and Tokiyori         trait, it was most likely painted in Sane-
    National Treasure                            (1227-1263), the fifth regent. Erudite in     toki's last years or not long after his death,
                                                 Confucianism, he was a strong cultural fig-   perhaps for such an occasion as an anni-
Hôjô Sanetoki (1224-1276), Hôjô Kanetoki         ure in the Kamakura area. He not only         versary of his death.                       AY
(1248-1301), Kanesawa Sadaaki (1278-1333),       founded the Kanesawa Bunko (Kanesawa
and Kanesawa Sadamasa (1302-1333) were           Library) and collected books, but also
members of the Hôjô clan, whose leaders          founded Shômyôji. In 1275 he retired to
controlled the Kamakura shogunate. The           Kanesawa (present-day Kanazawa, Yoko-
58
                                                                   5
3 Kanesawa Sadamasa                              tate eboshi (erect black headgear) on his       4 Ashikaga Yoshimochi
  hanging scroll; ink and color on silk          head, a kariginu (hunting robe), and              hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
    77.1 X 53.1 (303/8 X 20 7/8)                 sashinuki (baggy pants tied at the ankles).       113.6x59.0(443/4x231/4)
    Nanbokuchô period, c. 1345                   In format this is an idealized portrait of a      Muromachi period, no later than 1414
                                                 military leader, more stylized than the por-
    Shômyôji, Kanagawa Prefecture                                                                  Jingoji, Kyoto
                                                 trait of Sanetoki. The carefully painted
    National Treasure                                                                              Important Cultural Property
                                                 face has a thick layer of pigment over
This portrait of Kanesawa Sadamasa               which light vermilion lines are drawn and       Ashikaga Yoshimochi (1386-1428) was the
(1302-1333) is one of four portraits at Shô-     vermilion shadows added. Stylistically, this    fourth shogun of the Muromachi shogun-
myôji representing four members of the           is a transitional work anticipating warrior     ate. Yoshimochi is seated on a raised ta-
powerful Hôjô family (cat. 2). The young-        portraits of the Muromachi period. It was       tami mat wearing a headgear known as a
est of the four depicted, Sadamasa was the       probably painted around 1345, the thir-         kdburi and a courtier's robe. This portrait
son of Kanesawa Sadaaki (1278-1333). After       teenth anniversary of his death, long after     depicts him as the Naidaijin, a high official
serving as shogunal deputy in Kyoto and          the Kanesawa family line had come to an         of the imperial court who assisted the min-
as governor of Musashi Province, he              end and when Shômyôji had regained its          isters of the Right and the Left, rather
moved to Kamakura and headed the sho-            former influence.                               than as the Seiitaishogun (Great General
gunate's office of justice in charge of terri-         The inscription in the lower right        Who Quells the Barbarians), the head of
torial disputes. In 1333, together with his      corner reads, Sadamasa, former ruler of         the military class.
father, he fought against Nitta Yoshisada's      Musashi.                                   AY        His depiction here strongly resembles
(1301-1338) forces and was killed at Yama-                                                       that of Minamoto Yoritomo (cat. i),
 nouchi in Kamakura.                                                                             painted two centuries earlier: both men
     In this portrait Sadamasa sits on a ta-                                                     wear the formal regalia of an imperial aris-
 tami mat. Formally dressed, he wears a                                                          tocrat, and the designs on their robes are
                                                                                                 Chinese-inspired. Both have their faces set
                                                                                                                                           59
off by the touch of red at the collar. The      Suruga Province (part of present-day Shi-          either side by banks on which pine trees
comparison of Yoshimochi, in the eulogy,        zuoka Prefecture), and visited Seikenji.           grow. Tiny figures appear, one on a bridge
to a "golden phoenix and jade dragon"                 When Ashikaga Yoshimasa (1436-               at the right and another in a fishing boat
also reflects the ardent sinophilia of the      1490) succeeded to the shogunate in 1443,          on the left. In the distance across the wa-
Ashikaga shoguns and of their times. The        shôen (private manors) formerly belonging          ter, hills and buildings—perhaps a temple
eulogy above the figure is dated to 1414,       to temples were restored to their owners           complex—are faintly visible. The style of
when Yoshimochi was twenty-eight:               in compliance with Yoshinori's orders. Ac-         the painting is after the Chinese Song Dy-
                                                cording to the inscription, this portrait of       nasty academic mode. Its theme is
Portrait of the Seiitaishdgun, Junior First
                                                Yoshinori was painted in commemoration             thought to be the famous Eight Views of
   Rank, Administrative Position of Inner
                                                of that event, a fact supported by docu-           the Xiao and Xiang Rivers. Kano Ma-
   Minister, painted from life:
                                                ments at Myôkôji. Also, beneath Shûhô's            sanobu (1434-1530) was known to have
An accomplished man who responds to this
                                                signature (on the extreme right), Yoshi-           painted this theme for Yoshimasa's Hi-
   world, a golden phoenix, a jade dragon;
                                                masa himself added a short inscription and         gashiyama villa in 1483. In addition, Ma-
Neither common nor saintly; at once a man
                                                his kaô saying that the painting is a trea-        sanobu was thought to have made
   of the world and a man of the spirit. The
                                                sure of Myôkôji.                                   sketches of Yoshimasa during his lifetime,
   brush-tip [of this writing] makes an
                                                      In the portrait Yoshinori is formally        one of which he used as the basis for a
   ardent vow for the Diamond Eyes—for a
                                                dressed; he wears an eboshi (black head-           posthumous portrait employed in Yoshi-
   revelation of the Body of the Victory
                                                gear) and a warrior's robe with a koshiga-         masa's funeral service. Although the paint-
   Bodhisattva [Jizó Bosatsu].
                                                tana (short sword) tucked into his sash,           ing exhibited here has not been identified
Sixth day, ninth month, twenty-first year of
                                                holds a chükei (a type of folding fan), and        with that posthumous portrait, its style, es-
   Oei [1414]
                                                sits barefooted on a two-tiered tatami             pecially in the landscape, suggest that it
Respectfully inscribed by Taiun                 mat.                                        MS     could be a Kano school work, if not by Ma-
   [Jakujgm of Butsunichisan.
                                                                                                   sanobu himself.                           MR
[illegible square relief seal]
Taiun [square relief seal]                      6 Ashikaga Yoshimasa
                                                  hanging scroll; ink, color, and gold leaf        7 Mounted warrior
Taiun Jakugin, who inscribed this eulogy,         on silk                                            hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
presumably was a priest of the temple But-        44.2 x 56.0 (173/8 x 22)                           100.3x53.3(391/2x21)
sunichisan. Neither the priest nor the tem-       Muromachi period, i5th century                     Nanbokuchô period, i4th century
ple has been identified. This portrait is
at Jingoji, the temple that Yoshimochi            Tokyo National Museum                              Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
patronized.                                                                                          Important Cultural Property
                                                Unusual in its detailed description of a
     A small circle surrounded by red ap-       room's interior, this portrait is believed to      In the fourteenth century, Japanese paint-
pears above the inscription, a symbol, per-     be of the eighth Ashikaga shogun, Yoshi-           ing reflected reality by depicting the elite
haps, of the sun. The circle recurs in          masa (1436-1490). The figure is shown              in their military capacity. Here we see a
another version of Yoshimochi's portrait at     seated on a mat on a raised tatami mat in          high-ranking warrior on a fine horse, his
Jisaiin, which is dated to 1412. Similar sym-   full ceremonial court dress, his feet bare.        tachi sword unsheathed for action but the
bols are found also in portrait paintings of    White, green, red, and blue pigments are           broken arrow in his quiver perhaps sug-
the god Hachiman, the titular deity of war-     used to portray the figure and his sur-            gesting that he is coming from battle. He
riors, suggesting that Yoshimochi, as the       roundings, as well as black ink and gold           has traditionally been identified as Ashi-
head of the Ashikaga family and as sho-         leaf. Some areas of gold leaf have flaked          kaga Takauji (1305-1358), head of his clan
gun, saw himself as vested with military        off.                                               and founder of the Muromachi shogunate
authority and even divinity.               MS         Unlike some of the more famous por-          who lived most of his life on the battle-
                                                traits of shoguns and high-ranking war-            field.
5 Ashikaga Yoshinori                            riors, such as cat. i, this portrait is not a            The kad above the figure's head both
  hanging scroll; ink and color on silk         monumental one. The painting dimin-                supports and contradicts this identifica-
  74.8 x 38.8 (291/2 x 151/4)                   ishes rather than enlarges the stature and         tion. It is by the hand of Yoshiakira (1330-
  Muromachi period, c. 1458                     bearing of the figure by placing it within         1367), Takauji's son and successor as
                                                specific surroundings. Yoshimasa's sho-            shogun, and a portrait of Takauji bearing
  Myókóji, Aichi Prefecture                                                                        Yoshiakira's kad is recorded as having once
                                                 gunate (1443-1473) was a troubled one, and
  Important Cultural Property                                                                      belonged to the powerful Asakura family
                                                he was not known_as a great warrior or
Ashikaga Yoshinori (1394-1441) left the ab-      ruler. During the Onin Revolt (1467-1477),        of the Muromachi period. But it has also
bacy at Shôren'in in 1428 to return to the       a struggle between rival factions for suc-        been argued that for a son to place his kad
lay world and became the sixth shogun.           cession of the shogunate, Yoshimasa abdi-         prominently above his father's image
On the tenth day of the ninth month,             cated his position. He preferred a life of        would have been a grave breach of deco-
1432, Yoshinori left Kyoto for a visit to        retirement, practicing and patronizing the        rum, and that this must therefore be a por-
Mount Fuji. The inscription on this work,        arts, including No drama, painting, callig-       trait of one of Yoshiakira's vassals, perhaps
by Zuikei Shühó (1391-1473), the abbot of        raphy, and tea. The active cultural life es-      Hosokawa Yoriyuki (1329-1392). Based on
Rokuon'in, recounts this trip. Yoshinori         poused at his villa in the Higashiyama area       the family crest engraved on the horse's
stopped on the twelfth day at Myôkôji,           of Kyoto (later to become Jishôji, popularly      fittings, it has also been proposed that this
Aichi Prefecture, a major regional Zen           known as Ginkakuji) gave rise to one of           is a portrait of Ko Moronao (d. 1351), a war-
monastery, founded in 1348, where he             the most productive artistic eras in Japa-        rior who once served Takauji.              MS
stayed half a day. The temple, in prepara-       nese history.
tion for the shogun's visit, reportedly re-            It is probably because of this unique
landscaped its humble garden and pond.           aspect of Yoshimasa's retirement that he is
On the eighteenth day he reached Mount           depicted in such an artistic interior set-
 Fuji, where he stayed at the estate of Im-      ting. In front of him and to his side is a lac-
 agawa Norimasa, the shugo (constable) of        quered mirror stand. Behind him are four
                                                 panels of a fusuma (sliding door) painting,
                                                  which shows a body of water flanked on
60
6
8 Hosokawa Sumimoto                          scholar-monk Keijo Shurin (1444-1518) in       with a large kuwagata (hornlike projec-
  hanging scroll; ink and color on silk      the tenth month of 1507, when Sumimoto         tion). A tachi hangs from his belt, and a
  119.7x59.7(471/8x231/2)                    was at the peak of his career. Half a year     koshigatana (short sword) is tucked into his
                                             later, on the ninth day of the fourth          belt. He holds a halberd and a whip in his
  Muromachi period, no later than 1507
                                             month of 1508, Sumimoto was driven away        right hand and, in his left, the reins. Typi-
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                       by Hosokawa Takakuni and fled once             cal of portraits of mounted warriors, the
    Important Cultural Property              again to Omi; he continued to fight            horse is shown from the side, lifting its
Hosokawa Sumimoto (1489-1520), born to       against Takakuni until his death in 1520,      front right and rear left legs. The depic-
a branch of the Hosokawa family, was         though he never regained his position.         tion of the horse suggests that this portrait
adopted by Masamoto. In the sixth month           According to the Hosokawa family          was painted by an artist of the Kano
of 1507, when his stepfather, Masamoto,      history and lineage record, Sumimoto had       school.
was killed by his vassal Kosai Mataroku      a certain Kano artist with the Buddhist              Keijo Shürin's inscription, which is in-
Motonaga, Sumimoto escaped to Omi            rank Hdgen (Eye of the Law) paint this         cluded in his collected literary works,
(present-day Shiga Prefecture). Kosai Mo-    portrait after the example of a 'Victorious    reads, in part:
tonaga supported Hosokawa Sumiyuki,          portrait" of Ashikaga Takauji (1305-1358),     . . . Long ago the Genji clan subjugated the
Masamoto's other adopted son who had         founder of the Muromachi shogunate;            east of the capital Military leaders rose in
come from the Kujô family, but in the        Keijo Shürin added an inscription, and the     the eastern provinces. From Hosokawa Yon-
eighth month of the same year, Hosokawa      painting was handed down in Shinjôin, a        haru to his son Yoriyuki, they were first
Takakuni, Miyoshi Yukinaga, and others       subtemple of Tenryüji, the Zen temple          called Kanrei [deputy shogun]....
came to Kyoto with their forces and killed   founded in Kyoto by Ashikaga Takauji.                 Hosokawa Sumimoto, a great archer
Hosokawa Sumiyuki and Kosai Motonaga.        Shinjôin, the mortuary temple of the Ho-       and horseman, is far above other humans.
Sumimoto then succeeded to the leader-       sokawa clan, was also Sumimoto's Bud-          He is also versed in waka [Japanese poetry]
ship of the Hosokawa family. The inscrip-    dhist title; the temple no longer exists.      and appreciates the moon and the wind....
tion on this portrait was added by the             Sumimoto wears a type of armor           Outside the citadel he takes bows and ar-
                                             called haramaki (cats. 150,151) and a helmet
                                                                                                                                       61
     7
62
8
    63
9                                                                        10
rows; in meditation and reading of sacred        9 Ando En'e                                   Zen priests), he sits on a clerical chair, his
books he protects Buddhism. Inside and out-        hanging scroll; ink and color on silk       shoes on the footstool. He rests his folded
side, pledging to the mountains and rivers          120.0 X 58.0 (47 V4 X 227/8)               hands in his lap, unlike Zen priests who in
for the sake of the rulers and vassals, always      Kamakura period, no later than 1330        their portraits usually hold a hossu (Zen
with propriety and benevolence, he attains                                                     monk's whisk) or shippei (bamboo staff).
                                                    Nara National Museum
saintly wisdom.                                                                                     The painting portrays a robust phy-
                                                    Important Cultural Property
     An auspicious day in the tenth month                                                      sique, capturing the sturdy and dignified
of the fourth year ofEisei [1507], Keijo         This portrait of the lay Zen Buddhist         appearance of the warrior with even lines
Shùrin was ordered to and respectfully           Ando En'e was painted during his lifetime. in light ink. The drapery, too, is depicted
added an inscription.                            En'e is the Buddhist name of Andô Suke-       with an economy and directness of brush
      Keijo [tripod-shaped relief seal]          yasu, son of Ando Renshó (1240-1330), who line.
      Shùrin [square intaglio seal]        MS    was a military leader of the late Kamakura         Above the figure are three square
                                                 period and a patron of Kumedadera, a          seals and an inscription written by the
                                                 temple that belonged to the Esoteric          Chinese Zen monk Ming-ji Chu-jun (1262-
                                                 Shingon school of Buddhism in Izumi           1336) on the first day of the second month
                                                 Province (part of present-day Osaka Pre-      of 1330.
                                                 fecture). Little is known about the sitter.   His eyebrows long like a tree trunk, and his
                                                      In this portrait, formerly in Kumeda-       nose straight like a zhong [bell].
                                                 dera, En'e is tonsured and wears a kesa
                                                 (priest's mantle). As in chinsd (portraits of
64
11                                                                   12
His appearance dignified and majestic, and       He is worthy of being a model of all human      10 Muso Soseki
  his spirit brilliant and heroic.                 relationships for myriad ages.                   Muto Shui (fl. mid-i4th century)
He is incomparably knowledgeable in the                                                             hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
                                                 Ming-ji was a friend of the sitter's father,
  martial arts, like the ancient Chinese                                                            120.0 X 64.5 (47 V4 X 253/8)
                                                 Renshó, whose portrait painting is also at
  military books Liu Tao and San Luo.                                                               Nanbokuchô period, i4th century
                                                 Kumedadera. At the request of En'e, the
As to his cultivation in arts and scholarship,
                                                 Chinese monk added an inscription to               Myôchiin, Kyoto
  he is peerlessly learned like the ancient
                                                 that portrait five days after he had written       Important Cultural Property
  Chinese books Pa Su and Jiu Qhiu.
                                                 this inscription, both of which are impor-
"Western Valley Stream" [Xi-jian Zi-tan                                                          Muso Soseki (1275-1351) was born in Ise
                                                 tant rare examples of Ming-ji's callig-
  (1249-1306), a Chinese monk] created a                                                         Province (part of present-day Mie Prefec-
                                                 raphy.                                     AY
  drop of rough waves and it caused in the                                                       ture). His association with monastic estab-
  eastern sea a thousand yards of billows.                                                       lishments began when he was three years
He is solemn and thoughtful, dignified yet                                                       old. He first studied the Tendai and
   not fierce.                                                                                   Shingon schools of Buddhism but con-
His retreat is noble, and he enjoys a                                                            verted to Zen, and, after studying with the
   long-lasting pleasure in the mountains.                                                       distinguished Zen master Kóhó Kennichi
In a hundred generations of glory, he stirs a                                                    (1241-1316), he became his successor.
   [benevolent] breeze upon the sea.                                                                  Muso was a figure of the greatest
Breaking the bind of the net of religious                                                        prominence in his own time. He moved
   teaching, he is loyal to Zen Buddhism.
                                                                                                                                            65
easily among the powerful of both the im-       the emperor Go-Komatsu (1377-1433), at            ful merchant who made his money in the
perial court and the shogunate, serving         age six Ikkyü became a child attendant of         China trade and gave financial support to
both as spiritual adviser, political adviser    Shógai Zenkan at Ankokuji in Kyoto.               the rebuilding of Daitokuji. Thus the por-
and go-between, and scholarly eminence.         Later he mastered Zen of the Rinzai               trait can be dated after 1474 and before
That Emperor Go-Daigo and Shogun Ta-            school under the distinguished master             1481, the year of Ikkyn's death.         AY
kauji were enemies did not prevent Muso         Kasô Sôdon (1352-1428), who lived at the
from accepting the patronage of both. In        hermitage Zenkóan in Katada, Omi Prov-            12 Sakugen Shüryó
1325, supported enthusiastically by the em-     ince (present-day Shiga Prefecture). Ikkyü           hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
peror Go-Daigo (1288-1339), he became ab-       led a peripatetic life, training a handful of
                                                                                                     126.0 x 49.4 (49 5/8 x 19J/2)
bot of Nanzenji in Kyoto. He also was the       disciples without regard to their class ori-
                                                                                                     Ming, no later than 1541
founding abbot of Rinsenji, a Rinzai Zen        gins. Finally in 1474, in response to an im-
temple in Kyoto. After the death of Go-         perial summons, he became the                        Myóchiin, Kyoto
Daigo, he founded Tenryùji through the          forty-seventh abbot of Daitokuji and led             Important Cultural Property
patronage of Ashikaga Takauji (1305-1358)       the rebuilding of the temple, much of
                                                which had been destroyed in the Onin         Sakugen Shüryó (1501-1579), an erudite
and his brother, Tadayoshi (1306-1352), and                                                  Zen priest of the Rinzai school in the late
revived Saihóji, thus fostering the golden      War (1467-1477). In the following year he
                                                erected a tomb for himself, which he         Muromachi period, was the third-
age of the Rinzai school of Zen in Japan.                                                    generation abbot of Myóchiin, a subtem-
Many prominent priests were disciples of        named Jiyótó, in Kokyü, Takigi village of
                                                southern Yamashiro Province (part of         ple of Tenryüji. He was also an important
Muso Soseki, including Shun'oku Myôha                                                        figure in the history of Ming-Japanese rela-
(1311-1388), Mugoku Shigen (1282-1355),         present-day Kyoto Prefecture), and lived
                                                in a hermitage that he built by its side.    tions. He visited Ming Dynasty China
Zekkai Chüshin (1336-1405), and Gidó                                                         twice, not as a Buddhist pilgrim or student
Shüshin (1325-1388). Together they con-         The hermitage, Shüon'an, still stands in
                                                Takigi, known by its more popular name       but as a government envoy, first as the
tributed to the peak of the literary move-                                                   vice-envoy from 1539 to 1541 and later as
ment known as Gozan Bungaku                      Ikkyüji (Ikkyü's temple). A notable poet
                                                and calligraphier as well as a priest, Ikkyü the chief envoy. He wrote excellent prose
(Literature of the Five Mountains, compo-                                                    and poetry in Chinese, and during these
sitions in classical Chinese by Japanese         criticized and vehemently despised the
                                                 contemporary Zen hiearchy.                  trips he associated with Ming scholars and
Zen priests). Muso was also a significant                                                    painters.
calligraphier, poet, and designer of gardens.          In this portrait Ikkyü sits in a chair
                                                 holding a bamboo staff in his right hand,          In this painting Sakugen, wearing a
      The inscription on this painting, in                                                   Confucian scholar's cap and a Buddhist
Soseki's hand, reads from left to right:         as in a traditional chinsd (portrait of a Zen
                                                 priest). Even in this conventional clerical monk's robe and kesa, is seated on a
The lower extremities from hips to heels         portrait, however, his unconventional and   bench, books by his side. He holds a book
  cannot expound a theme,                        rebellious personality is expressed by his  and seems to be reciting from it, convey-
So only half a torso is visible within the       unshaved head, the mustache, and the in-    ing the image of Sakugen the literary man.
  Kenka gate.                                    formal way he sits, his right foot on his left     The inscription above the figure was
                                                 knee with his shoes still on. The haunting  written in the first month of 1541 (the
(translated in Boston 1970, 60)                                                              twentieth year of the Jiajing reign-period
                                                 face is drawn with simple brush lines;
There is a signature at the lower right in       Ikkyü looks at the viewer from the corner   of the Ming Dynasty) by Ke Yuchuang, a
small calligraphy: Painted by Mutô Shùi.                                                     literary man in Ningbo, at the request of
                                                 of his eyes while his face is turned slightly
This portrait probably corresponds to the        away.                                        San'ei, a priest who accompanied Sakugen
one recorded in 1678 in Honchd Gashi                   The inscription is in Ikkyü's hand:    to China. Sakugen would have just re-
(History of Japanese Painting) as a painting                                                  turned to Ningbo after completing his first
by Mutô Shüi for Mugoku Shigen, Musó's          Lin Ji's posterity does not know Zen          mission in the north. The inscription testi-
disciple and the second abbot of Tenryüji,      Facing Mad Clouds, who can teach Zen?         fies to the affection between Sakugen and
with an inscription by Muso Kokushi             For the past thirty years it's been heavy on  Ke Yuchuang, a friendship also recorded
(Muso, the National Teacher). Mutó Shüi,          the shoulders                               in Shodoshü (Collected works: the first
also Musó's disciple, was a painter who         Alone bearing the Songyuan school of Zen. mission), one of Sakugen's Ming journals
specialized in portraiture.                                                                   (entries of 1/30/1541, 8/21/1539, and io/io/
                                                Soben, the Zen practitioner and great
     Descriptively rendered, Musó's face is                                                   1539). Ke Yuchuang's inscription, written
                                                  patron, after getting my vulgar portrait
outlined with thin lines, and light ver-                                                      in formal (or regular) script, signed by him
                                                  painted, asked me to write an inscription,
milion shading is added. The contours and                                                     and followed by five square seals, reads:
                                                  so I complied with his request.
folds of the drapery are drawn with great       Formerly at Daitokuji ofMurasakino [area Encomium for the Portrait oflsai Sakugen,
economy of line.                          AY      north of Kyoto], Jun Ikkyù [over Ikkyü's       the Zen Master
                                                  seal], Old Priest under heaven.
11 Ikkyû Sójun                                                                                The master is a lofty priest from Japan. Sent
                                                Lin Ji is Linji Yixuan (d. 867), the Chinese     as an envoy to China, he lives
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
                                                monk who founded the Linji (J: Rinzai)           temporarily in the district ofMingzhou.
   98.0 x 43.0 (385/8 x 167/8)                  school of Zen. "Mad Clouds" is a refer-          He has a sense of decorum; he is versed in
   Muromachi period, no later than 1481         ence to Ikkyü's sobriquet, "Kyôunshi,"           literature and scholarship, and I am
   Shüon'an, Kyoto                              Child of Mad Clouds." Songyuan is the            fortunate to know him. His junior
   Important Cultural Property                  school of Zen taught by the Chinese priest       companion San'ei, the prelate, happened
                                                Songyuan Chongyue (1132-1202). Ikkyü             to take out this small portrait of the
Ikkyü Sójun (1394-1481), known for his          signed formerly at Daitokuji, referring to
penetrating mind and wildly unconven-           his involvement in 1474 with the rebuild-
tional behavior, was an exceptional Zen         ing of the monastery followed by his brief
priest of the Muromachi period. Son of          abbacy there. The inscription says that the
                                                portrait was painted for Sôben, a success-
66
13                                                                         14
     master, and showed it to me. I composed       13 Asakura Toshikage                          cellent archer and horseman, he was also
     an inscription for this portrait:                hanging scroll; ink and color on silk      something of a scholar, poet, and patron of
                                                      81.5x44.0(32x173/8)                        the arts, as well as a pious Buddhist. He
His appearance is peaceful; his forehead                                                         was acquainted with the Zen priest Ikkyu
  contains jewels inside                              Muromachi period, i5th century
                                                                                                 and donated wood at Ikkyu's request for
In a scholar's hat and a priest's robe, he sits       Shingetsuji, Fukui Prefecture
                                                                                                 the rebuilding of Daitokuji. Toshikage be-
  solemnly with legs crossed                          Important Cultural Property                came a priest in his later years under the
His letters are richly written; his religious                                                    Buddhist name Eirin Soyu.
   mind is refreshing                              Asakura Toshikage (1428-1481) was a pow-
                                                   erful daimyo of the mid-Muromachi pe-              Toshikage is shown here seated on a
Though his appearance can be beheld, his                                                         raised tatami mat, wearing a warrior's
   erudition is unfathomable                       riod. During the Onin War (1467-1477), he
                                                   ousted Shiba Yoshitake as shugo (consta-      robe, a hôi (priest's robe), and a kesa (Zen
His brush flows beautifully, whether in                                                          priest's stole), indicative of both his secular
   Japanese or Chinese poetry                      ble) of Echizen Province (present-day Fu-
                                                   kui Prefecture), routed all challengers,      and his religious aspirations. He holds a
A diplomatic envoy to the emperor, in old                                                        chùkei (a type of folding fan) in his right
   temples and guest halls                         and, based in Ichijôdani, laid a firm foun-
                                                   dation for the fortune of the Asakura fam-    hand and prayer beads in his left. The
His clear voice reverberates; he receives great                                                  pose is formal and generic, but the fea-
   imperial favor                                  ily. The principles of his ruthless but
                                                   competent management of the province          tures are specific and individualized and
After journeying through beautiful places,                                                       the personality of the sitter is subtly and
   he tires and rests in Japan                     are reflected in the seventeen-article
                                                   house laws of the Asakura family. An ex-      penetratingly revealed, much as in con-
 His body will be ever healthier, and he will                                                    temporary portraits of Zen ecclesiastics.
   live a long life.                          AY
                                                                                                                                             67
15                                                                    16
Judging by the degree of realism, this por-   On becoming a Buddhist monk, he took           an able administrator as well as fighter,
trait is likely to have been painted during   the name Sóun'an Sotan. His career             and the house laws known as 'Twenty-one
Toshikage's lifetime or soon after his        closely paralleled that of his contemporary,   Articles of Sôunjidono" reflect his deter-
death.                                        Asakura Toshikage (cat. 13): beginning as a    mination to preserve his descendants from
      The portrait has been at Shingetsuji,   daimyo's retainer, he proceeded to seize       the kind of overthrow that had made him
a temple founded by Toshikage in Ichijó-      land and usurp power wherever the occa-        a daimyo. (Sôunjidono is a posthumous
dani, which later became the mortuary         sion permitted, controlling Izu and Sagami     title taken from Hójó Sóun's mortuary
temple of the Asakura family.                 provinces (Shizuoka and Kanagawa prefec-       temple.)
                                              tures) from Odawara before he died. His              In this powerful portrayal, Hójó Sóun
14 Hójó Sóun                                  son and grandson continued the work, and       sits barefooted on a raised tatami mat,
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk      the Later Hójó (to distinguish them from       wearing a hoi (priest's robe) and kern (Zen
   93.5x50.7(367/8x20)                        the Hójó regents of the Kamakura period)       priest's stole) over a warrier's robe, holding
   Muromachi period, early loth century       ruled the Kantó region until their over-       a chùkei (a type of folding fan) in his right
                                              throw by Hideyoshi in 1590.                    hand and clenching his left. The facial ex-
     Sôunji, Kanagawa Prefecture                   Like Asakura Toshikage, Hójó Sóun         pression reveals the resolute nature of the
     Important Cultural Property              was a ruthless and treacherous man, but        sitter. This portrait was probably painted
The warrior Hójó Sóun (1432-1519) first                                                      in Sôun's lifetime, after he became a
went by the name Ise Shinkuró Nagauji.                                                       priest, or else soon after his death.      AY
68
17
                                                                                                                                          69
clenching his left fist. A long tachi sword is   them. He has close contacts with all peo-               Shingen had a monumental build, as
placed at his left. With slender face, wide-     ple and selects talents to administer his         can be seen in this work, an unusual por-
open eyes, and well-trimmed beard, Mo-           territory....                                     trait with an outdoor setting. The painting
tonari is depicted without the idealization            When he holds the Mori family sword         is accompanied by a letter written by
evidenced in later portrait paintings of mil-    and subjugates the enemy, his wisdom tem-         Shingen's son, Katsuyori, which says that
itary leaders.                                   pers the best of swords, such as the famous       it was painted in Shingen's lifetime and
      According to the inscription above         pair forged by the Chinese smiths Ganjian         that it was to be offered to Seikeiin. The
the sitter, the portrait was painted during      and his wife, Moxie [of the 3rd century           seal Nobuharu, stamped at the lower left,
Motonari's lifetime at the order of his first    A.D.]. When he waves a fan and commands           identifies the painter as Hasegawa Tô-
son, Takamoto. The inscription, dated            garrisons, it is as if he consults with Sun Wu    haku, who was then known as Nobuharu.
1562, was written by Ninnyo Shügyó (d.           and Wu Qi [ancient Chinese military strat-        The painting was done when Tôhaku was
1574, the ninety-first abbot of Shôkokuji        egists of the 4th and 3rd centuries B.C.          in his early thirties.
and forty-second abbot of Rokuon'in) at          respectively]....                                       The warlord and his highly decorative
the request of a certain Jiku'un Eshin, pre-           He loves to praise courageous men of        garments are delineated in precise and col-
sumably a monk of Nanzenji, the monas-           loyalty and valor. His brave tiger face recalls   orful detail, following the yamato-e tradi-
tery that Motonari patronized.                   the ambition of Ban Chao [famous Chi-             tion considered appropriate for depictions
      The long inscription lauds the ances-      nese general of 1st century A.D.]. His por-       of great men. In the suggestion of land-
tral lineage of the Mori family, tracing it      cupine hair resembles the beautiful beard of      scape the painter reveals his interest in the
back to the Oe family, descendants of the        Commander Huan Wen [fl. 2nd half of 4th           freer ink-painting style derived from
emperor Kanmu (737-806), and mention-            century A.D.]. The triple stars [the Mori         China.                                    MS
ing the virtues and merits of one Oe Masa-       family crest] add brightness to his beautiful
fusa (1041-1111), a distinguished scholar,       abode. The family crests of the generations       18 The emperor Go-Yozei
poet, and civil administrator, from whom         of the powerful and rich decorate his mili-          Kano Takanobu (1571-1618)
Motonari was directly descended. Replete         tary tent                                            hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
with allusions to Chinese history and liter-           He recites and composes Japanese               107.0 X 6o.l (42*/8 X 235/8)
ature, and embellished, in the best sense        poems. As a connoisseur of old books, he             Momoyama period, early ryth century
of the word, with purple prose, this in-         enjoys many different editions of poetry an-
scription accords Motonari the stature of a      thologies to visit the ancient steps of early        Sennyüji, Kyoto
sage-warrior. The inscription reads in part      Japanese poetry. With devotion, he makes     The emperor Go-Yozei (1571-1617) sits on a
(starting with the second half of the elev-      the reading of Indian Buddhist scriptures    mat placed over a large tatami. He wears
enth line from the right):                       his daily task, a sign of sincere faith in the
                                                                                              an eboshi (black headgear) and an informal
                                                 Buddha.                                      courtier's robe. As the io7th emperor, Go-
Now, Morí Motonari, the ruler ofAki, Cour-
                                                       His allies always believe in his words.Yôzei reigned from 1586 to 1611, during the
tier Ûe, and Honorary Ruler ofMutsu prov-
                                                  "Being good to neighbors is a precious vir- period when Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-
ince, converted early to the Three Jewels        tue, a man of virtue will never be alone" are
[i.e., Buddhism]. His Buddhist name is Ni-                                                    1598) subjugated the entire country and
                                                 indeed the right words for him. He has       Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616) gradually es-
chirai, and his title is Ddshun. As to his
                                                 given the family headship to Takamoto and    tablished political power, a time when aris-
power, he rules over a dozen provinces and        lives in retirement on Juzan. I cheer loudly
controls over ten thousand troops. In the                                                     tocratic society was regaining relative
                                                 for his long life.                           stability. Go-Yôzei not only made efforts
past, Courtier Oe Masafusa ruled nine prov-
                                                        Written in the fall of the fifth year of
                                                                                              to revive public events and ceremonies,
inces, two islands, and western regions un-      Eiroku [1562], humble priest, formerly of
der Dazaifu [regional capital in Kyushu],                                                     but was committed to learning: he studied
                                                  Rokuon'in, Nanzenji.                        classical literature, including The Tale of
where he lived for five years. To think, Mo-
                                                        Ninnyo [square relief seal]           Genji, and enjoyed Japanese poetry, callig-
tonari's lineage must also be Masafusa's                [illegible tripod-shaped relief seal] AY
posterity. Slowly but steadily progressing for                                                raphy, and painting. He was instrumental
five hundred years, how right it is—the root                                                  in persuading the scholar-poet and daimyo
is big with thriving foliage; the source is      17 Takeda Shingen                            Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610;), when Yüsai
high and full of water. Indeed they are well        Hasegawa Tôhaku (1539-1610)               faced a siege by enemy troops in 1600, to
called the Oe [Big River] family, and he is         hanging scroll; ink and color on silk     pass on his knowledge of the poetics of the
well called Jdshun [Perpetual Spring]. Ah,          42.0 x 63.0 (i6l/2 x 243/4)               Kokinshù to the imperial prince Hachijô
what prosperity!                                                                              (1579-1617), Go-Yozei's younger brother.
                                                    Momoyama period, late i6th century
       Zen Master Jiku'un, formerly of Nan-                                                   Through Go-Yozei's interest in the art of
zenji, because Motonari is the monastery's          Seikeiin, Wakayama Prefecture             printing, movable wooden type was used
patron, conveyed the order of Takamoto,             Important Cultural Property               to publish many Chinese and Japanese
Motonari s heir, to have a portrait of Warrior                                                classics.
                                                 Takeda Shingen (1521-1573), a daimyo dur-          Two seals are stamped at the left of
Motonari painted during his lifetime. Mas-       ing the Age of the Wars, began his career
ter Jiku'un asked this rustic to write a word                                                 Go-Yôzei's portrait, an oblong relief seal,
                                                 by supplanting his father as lord of Kai     Kano, and a tripod-shaped relief seal, Ta-
above the portrait. Although I have not met      Province (present-day Yamanashi Prefec-
Warrior Motonari, because I know the Zen                                                       kanobu, identifying the artist. Kano Ta-
                                                 ture). He brought Shinano and Suruga         kanobu was the second son of Kano
master I dare not decline. Thus I give a few     Provinces under his control and captured
words of praise:                                                                               Eitoku (1543-1590). Following the death of
                                                 portions of Kôzuke, Tôtômi, and Mikawa        his elder brother, Mitsunobu, in 1608, he
       His power expanding over the sea, his     Provinces. Advancing on Kyoto, the ulti-
fame reaching the clouds, in full solemnity                                                    became the central figure in the Kano
                                                 mate goal in his military strategy, he died.  school and painted a wide variety of Bud-
 he attends the present emperor's royal cere-    As a youth he was a passionate student of
 monies. He assists his emperor to rule like                                                   dhist and literary subjects. When the im-
                                                 Chinese and Japanese poetry. He was also
 Emperors Yao and Shun [rulers of ancient                                                      perial palace was built in 1613, he presided
                                                 deeply religious, with special devotion to
 China]. He fathoms his master's teachings                                                     over its decorations, executing sliding door
                                                 the Tendai school of Buddhism and to Zen panels and wall paintings, some of which
 and penetrates the profound thoughts in         priests of the Myôshinji school. Shingen's    are preserved in Ninnaji in Kyoto. The
                                                 wife, Tenhórin Sanjó, was the daughter of
                                                 a courtier.
70
18                                                                          19
surviving panels, originally installed be-      poetry), calligraphy, tea, incense apprecia-   lifelong devout Buddhist and avid student
hind the emperor's seat, represent thirty-      tion, and flower arrangement. Striving for     of Zen, in 1651 he took the tonsure and
two Chinese historical luminaries,              a renaissance of cultural activities, he set   adopted the Buddhist name Enjô. He be-
including famous ministers up to and dur-       for the members of the court special days      came a patron and student of many cul-
ing the Tang Dynasty.                      SY   for scholarly pursuits and published, in       tured Zen monks, most particularly
                                                1621, Kôchô Ruien, a Japanese edition of       Takuan Sôhô (cat. 20), who shared his an-
19 The emperor Go-Mizunoo                       the mid-twelfth-century Chinese Huang-         ger at shogunal interference with imperial
   Gen'yó Shónin (1634-1727)                    chao Leiyuan (Classified quotations of         and clerical prerogatives.
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk        works by courtly scholars). Endowed with             Two portraits of the emperor Go-
   100.6 x 55.8 (395/8 x 22)                    artistic talent, he painted and also de-       Mizunoo were painted during his lifetime.
   Edo period, no earlier than 1680             signed the garden for the Shugakuin De-        One, in Hanjuin, Kyoto, painted by Kano
                                                tached Palace in northeastern Kyoto.           Tan'yu (1602-1674), bears an inscribed
     Unryuin, Kyoto                                   Though he was an intelligent and ca-     waka composed by the emperor himself.
The emperor Go-Mizunoo (1596-1680),             pable man Go-Mizunoo as emperor en-            The other, in Sennyüji, also in Kyoto, has
the third son of the emperor Go-Yozei           dured repeated frustrations and                two Japanese poems inscribed and dated
(cat. 18), acceded to the throne in 1611 and    humiliations at the hands of Tokugawa          to the nineteenth day of the second
in 1620 married a daughter of Tokugawa          leyasu and Hidetada (particularly Hide-        month, 1673. The portrait exhibited here,
Hidetada (1578-1631), the second shogun.        tada), who were determined to assert their     painted after Go-Mizunoo's death, is
Go-MizunoQ had a penchant for scholar-          authority over all spheres of Japanese life.   based on these precedents.
ship and was versed in waka (Japanese po-       After one too many heavy-handed sho-                 This portrait was painted by Go-
etry), renga (linked verse), kanshi (Chinese    gunal interventions, Go-Mizunoo regis-         Mizunoo's granddaughter, Gen'yô, a Zen
                                                tered his disgust by abdicating in 1629. A
                                                                                                                                       71
Buddhist nun, also known as Ringüji no
Miya. Two of the artist's seals can be seen
at the lower left. Genyô, who was named
Ake no Miya at her birth, was a daughter
of H5shunmon-in, the seventh daughter
of Go-Mizunoo. After the death of the em-
peror, she took the tonsure and became a
nun, changing her name to Gen'yô and
adopting the Buddhist title Shdzan. Like
her grandfather, she was a strong advocate
of Zen. She learned painting from Kano
Yasunobu (1613-1685), son of Kano Ta-
kanobu (cat. 18).
     The two poems, written on shikishi
(square poetry sheets) and attached to the
scroll, were copied from the inscriptions
on the Hanjuin and Sennyúji portraits of
the emperor, one from each. Deep melan-
choly and world-weariness is expressed in
these poems:
Painful, this
withered tree fence hidden
in the deep mountain;
would that at least my heart's
flowers were fragrantly abloom.
My life being thus,
in this world that I will never revisit
the thought of leaving a trace
of my calligraphy for a moment-
even that is sad.                          WA
20 Takuan Sóhó
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
   99.0x46.3(39x181/4)
   Edo period, no later than 1644
   Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
Takuan Sôhô (1573-1645) was a Zen priest
of Daitokuji during the early Edo period,
celebrated in his own time and after, as a
scholar, painter, calligraphier, and tea
adept. Through tea he came to be associ-
ated with the shogun and various daimyo,
and he taught Zen to Miyamoto Musashi                                              20
(1582-1645; cat. 128) and Yagyü Munenori
(1571-1646), two formidable swordsmen. In
1629, because he objected to the shogun-        There is vacuity, concealing nothing.          21 Toyotomi Hideyoshi
ate's policy of control over Buddhist estab-    Inside his eyes is no longer any shade,           hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
lishments, he was banished to the north to      Vacuity shows no illusory flowers;                109.0 x 51.0 (427/8 x 20)
Dewa province, but was pardoned in 1632.        The bamboo staff still in his hand,               Momoyama period, no later than 1600
During the 16305 he was friend and spiri-       The hossu brush only seeks idiocy. Ah.
tual adviser not only to Emperor Go-                                                              Saikyoji, Shiga Prefecture
Mizunoo, but also to lemitsu (1604-1651),       Sixteenth day, sixth month, the twenty-first      Important Cultural Property
the third Tokugawa shogun, and in 1639 he         yearofKan'ei [1644]
                                                Takuan, formerly of Daitokuji, in mock         Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) died at the
became the founding abbot of Tôkaiji in                                                        age of sixty-one. In accordance with his
Shinagawa, whose patron was lemitsu.              self-accusation.
                                                Sdhô [seal]     Takuan [seal]                  will, a mortuary shrine was built atop Ami-
      This portrait, executed in the chinsd                                                    damine in Higashiyama, Kyoto. The court
(Zen priest's portrait) mode, bears an in-            Takuan studied poetry (waka) with        bestowed the title Toyokuni Daimydjin
scription by Takuan himself dated to the        Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610) around 1603.        (Great Deity of the Rich Country) on Hi-
sixteenth day of the sixth month, 1644:         Yüsai's son, Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646),      deyoshi as deity of this sanctuary and post-
This world of desire, form, and formlessness    became daimyo of the Kumamoto do-              humously granted him Senior First Rank.
   is like a house on fire;                     main, Higo Province, and his grandson          A memorial ceremony was held annually
Inside a bag is an old crow,                    Mitsunao became an ardent patron of Zen        at the shrine on the anniversary of his
It tries to get out but can't.                  under Takuan's influence and tutelage.         death.
A child, skinny, worries about his father;      These circumstances explain why this por-            Many portraits of the deified Hide-
To this stubborn fellow both right and          trait was handed down in the Hosokawa          yoshi were painted. The earliest known ex-
   wrong are lost.                              family.                                 SY
72
21
     73
22                                                              23
ample, dated to 1598, the year of his death,   lies before taking service with the Toyo-           appear whenever and wherever
and inscribed by the monk Nanka Genkó,         tomi. At Sekigahara he neither aided nor         He shines all over India, China, and Japan
is at Kôdaiin, the mortuary temple of Hi-      opposed leyasu, remaining instead in             His steadfast eyes catch even the smallest
deyoshi's wife. Portraits of Hideyoshi ap-     Osaka with the Toyotomi. leyasu deprived            speck of dust.
parently continued to be painted until the     him of the rank of daimyo but granted him
Toyotomi family was exterminated by ley-       a small fief.                                         Tachibana Nagatoshi, the ruler
asu in 1615. However, no portrait dated                In this portrait Hideyoshi sits on a ta- Yamanaka of Yamashiro Province, asked
later than the fourth month of 1601 is          tami mat, wearing the court headgear            us to write an inscription for the
known.                                          called kdburi, a white courtier's informal      honorable portrait of Toyokuni. We firmly
      This portrait was painted for             robe, and bluish black sashinuki (baggy         declined but he was not satisfied, so I
Yamanaka Nagatoshi (Chóshun; 1547-              pants tied at the ankles). Like his fellow      respectfully wrote this short poem.
1607), a daimyo and retainer of Hideyoshi.      warlords Hôjô Sôun (cat. 14), Miyoshi Na-            Eighteenth day of eighth month, the
The Zen priests Genpo Reisan and Ikyó           gayoshi (cat. 15), and Mori Motonari (cat.      third year ofKeichd [1598].
Eitetsu added the inscriptions, both dated      16), he is shown with his right hand hold-            Old Genpo, Reisan ofNanzenji
to the fifth month of 1600. This date indi-     ing a folding fan and his left clenched in a          Genpo [tripod-shaped relief seal]
cates that the painting was made during          fist. Behind him is an ink landscape. Hi-
the uneasy period shortly before the Battle     deyoshi is portrayed here as seated in a        The second inscription is by Ikyó Eitetsu:
of Sekigahara (cat. 104), which confirmed        shrine. On a stylistic basis, the painting
                                                                                                By nature neither a devil nor a human
the hegemony of the Tokugawa. Yamanaka           can be assigned to the Kano school.
                                                                                                A reincarnation, a god under heaven
 Nagatoshi was originally a retainer of Sa-             The first inscription, by Genpo
                                                                                                In his thoughts, Japan and Korea are as
 saki Yoshikata of Omi Province, but served      Reisan, reads:                                    small as mustard seeds
 under the Oda, Shibata, and Tanba fami-
                                                 We lift our eyes to Toyokuni the Great Deity India and China are dust in his eyes.
                                                 When called upon a free being which can
74
24                                                                               25
Fifth month of the fifth year ofKeichd      gamasa was first an ally of Oda Nobunaga,        wrap). She holds a Buddhist sutra scroll in
   [1600]                                   but later turned against him and was de-         her right hand, indicating that the portrait
Humble monk Ikyd burns incense and          feated by Nobunaga's forces at the Battle        commemorates her death. The painting is
   respectfully adds this inscription.      of Anekawa in 1570. Three years later Na-        an idealized portrayal of one who was re-
Ikyô [square relief seal]                   gamasa stood siege in Otani Castle in            puted to be "the most beautiful woman
This inscription is for Tachibana Nagatoshi,Omi, his garrison headquarters, and he           under heaven."
   ruler ofYamanaka Castle, Junior Fifth    died in action at twenty-eight. Oichi no               This painting joins two others—a por-
   Rank, Toyotomi's vassal and a member of  Kata escaped death, having been sent to          trait of Oichi no Kata's first husband, Na-
   the court.                               Nobunaga's encampment. She then mar-             gamasa, and a portrait of Nagamasa's
                                         MS
                                            ried Shibata Katsuie (1522-1583). When           father, Hisamasa—at Jimyóin, the Asano
                                            Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) attacked          mortuary temple on Mount Kôya. The
22 OichinoKata                              Katsuie at Kitanoshô Castle in Echizen in        portraits of Nagamasa and Oichi no Kata
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk    1583, she entrusted her three daughters to       are assumed to have been painted in 1589
   96.0 x 40.9 (373/4 x i6Vs)               Hideyoshi and, when Katsuie committed            to commemorate the seventeenth anniver-
   Momoyama period, 1589                    suicide, took her own life as an expression       sary of Nagamasa's death and the seventh
                                            of loyalty to her husband. She was then           anniversary of Oichi no Kata's. They were
   Jimyóin, Wakayama Prefecture
                                            thirty-six. Her daughters became wards of         probably then offered to Jimyóin to join
   Important Cultural Property
                                            Hideyoshi, and one of them, Yodogimi, be-         the portrait of Hisamasa, which was
Oichi no Kata (1547-1583), a younger sister came his favorite consort. Another mar-           painted in 1569.                         AY
of Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582), married Asai ried Hidetada, the second Tokugawa
Nagamasa (1545-1573), a ranking warrior      shogun.
from Omi Province (present-day Shiga              In this portrait Oichi no Kata sits on a
Prefecture) when she was seventeen. Na-      tatami  mat wearing a white kosode and
                                             over it a patterned red koshimaki (waist
                                                                                                                                      75
23 Maeda Toshiharu
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
   78-8x39.4(31x151/2)
   Momoyama period, late loth century
   Chóreiji, Ishikawa Prefecture
   Important Cultural Property
Maeda Toshiharu, the head of a group of
wealthy farmers in Owari Province
(present-day Aichi Prefecture), was the fa-
ther of Toshiie (1538-1599), the first-
generation head of the Maeda clan, which
ruled Kaga Province (present-day Ishikawa
Prefecture). This portrait was reportedly
offered by Toshiie to Chóreiji (in Nanao
City, Ishikawa Prefecture) at the time of
its founding in commemoration of his fa-
ther. A later portrait of Toshiie's mother
(cat. 24) is also at Chóreiji.
      The painting presents Toshiharu at
the moment of a religious experience. His
head shaven, he is portrayed as a Buddhist
priest seated on a tatami mat and wearing
a Zen priest's stole over a priest's robe,
which partially covers a sword lying on the
tatami. His right arm resting on his knee,
Toshiharu holds a fan in his right hand and
rests his left hand on the tatami as he looks
up at the stylized purple clouds on which
Amida Buddha will descend to receive his
soul at the moment of death. In front of
him is a tenmoku teacup on a lacquer
stand. On the floor in front are a page,
who sits ceremoniously, and a servant
holding a ewer. The style of the painting is
provincial, and the composition is unique
for a commemorative portrait.
                                           AY
76
26                                                                              28
written by the priest Shinchi, the eighth         Hang the portrait painting for now              serve Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582). No-
abbot of Saikyóji. Saikyóji, devastated by a      And recite the sutras to honor her soul         bunaga later awarded Yüsai the Province
battle waged by Oda Nobunaga, was re-                                                             of Tango (the northern part of present-day
stored through Hideyoshi's contributions.         Twenty-first day, eighth month of the
                                                                                                  Kyoto Prefecture). After Nobunaga's
It is probably because of this relationship         twelfth year of Tenshd [1584]
                                                                                                  death during the Honnóji Incident, an un-
that his adopted daughter, Kikuhime, was          Shinchi, the High Priest [kaó]             AY
                                                                                                  successful coup instigated by his vassal
buried in Saikyóji and her portrait placed                                                        Akechi Mitsuhide, Yüsai took the tonsure
at that temple. Another version, presumed         26 Hosokawa Yüsai                               and became a priest, leaving the leader-
to be a copy of this portrait, is at Saihoji in      hanging scroll; ink and color on silk        ship of the family to his son Tadaoki (San-
Kanazawa.                                            104.0 x 51.0 (41 x 20)                       sai, 1563-1646). After the Battle of
      The inscription, a poem in Chinese, is         Momoyama period, no later than 1612          Yamazaki, in which Hideyoshi defeated
read from left to right:                                                                          and killed Mitsuhide, Yüsai became a
                                                     Tenjuan, Kyoto
Portrait ofKinkei Kùgyoku Ddjo [Golden                                                            close confidant of Toyotomi Hideyoshi
                                                     Important Cultural Property                  (1537-1598). In 1600, he sided with Toku-
  Cascade Heavenly Jewel Young Girl, the
  posthumous Buddhist title of Kikuhime]          Hosokawa Fujitaka (1534-1610), better           gawa leyasu (1543-1616) at the Battle of Se-
                                                  known by his Buddhist name Yüsai, was a         kigahara (cat. 104) against the Toyotomi.
Fall wind b/ows over grass and flowers
                                                  retainer of the fifteenth Ashikaga shogun       An astute military leader, Yüsai was also a
Death is inevitable still
                                                  Yoshiaki (1537-1597), but left him in 1573 to
                                                                                                                                           77
gifted poet and scholar of poetry: he re-
ceived the Kokin denju (secret teachings
on the poetics of the early-tenth-century
Kokinshù poetry anthology) from the San-
jónishi family (cat. 66). He also became an
important figure among the literary men
around Hideyoshi who pursued the art of
renga (linked verse).
      In this portrait the seated Yüsai ap-
pears relaxed, with a Chinese-style fan in
his right hand. Another portrait with an
identical composition was transmitted in
the Hosokawa family and is now in the
Eisei Bunko. A clan document indicates
that it was painted by a certain Tashiro
Tóyü, commissioned by Yüsai's widow
(cat. 27) on the third anniversary of his
death. Tashiro Tóyü may in fact be a mis-
interpretation of the name of Tashiro
Tôho, a painter who served the Hosokawa
clan. Since the Tenjuan portrait is exe-
cuted in the same style as the Eisei Bunko
version, the two may have both been
painted by Tóho. The inscription on the
painting exhibited here, read from left to
right, was written by the Zen priest Ishin
Suden (cat. 53), abbot of Nanzenji, in the
fifth month of 1612. His inscription is fol-
lowed by an illegible tripod-shaped relief
seal. Yusai, in 1602, restored Tenjuan,
which was the hôjô (abbot's quarters) in
Nanzenji. Excerpts from the inscription
read as follows:
. . . Renowned for his elegant pursuits, he is
a complete man combining arts [bun] and
arms [bu]. A man of nobility, a descendant
of the sixth grandson of the emperor Seiwa,
he was a ruler endowed with awesome dig-
nity and inspiring decorum.... He built a
splendid castle, which was majestic, beauti-
ful and high.... When he lectured on The
Tale ofGenji, the big river and the ocean
took in small rivers, like the River Min en-
tering Chu [name of an ancient country in
China]. He could argue right and left and                                    29
up and down.... He discussed Chinese po-
etic styles and recited by heart the secret
teachings of Japanese poetry, that is, Kokin-
shù, Man'ydshù [Anthology of myriad
                                                 27 Kójuin                                      nature is followed by his square relief seal.
leaves], and the Tale of he. He recited sit-
ting down or walking.... The round fan in           hanging scroll; ink and color on silk       The painting now forms a pair with that of
his hand sweeps away the muggy heat. The            104.0 x 51.0 (41 x 20)                      her then-deceased husband, painted a few
                                                    Edo period, 1618                            years earlier. The sitter faces her husband,
sharp sword he wears on his waist cut off
human passions and ties. Try to paint him;                                                      her palms joined in prayer and one knee
                                                    Tenjuan, Kyoto
it can't be done. Try to draw him; it can't be                                                  raised. This work, like cat. 26, also has a
                                                    Important Cultural Property
achieved. The more one looks up, the higher                                                     counterpart in the Eisei Bunko. The Eisei
                                                 Kójuin (1544-1618) is the posthumous Bud-      Bunko version has an inscription written
he is; the more one tries to delve, the harder
he is to penetrate . . . . The late Hosokawa     dhist title of the wife of Hosokawa Yüsai      in the eighth month of the same year by
Yùsai passed away suddenly on the twenti-        (1534-1610); she was a daughter of Numata      Yúsetsu Zuihó, which says that Hosokawa
eth day of the eighth month of the fifteenth     Mitsukane, ruler of Kumagawa Castle in         Tadaoki (Sansai, 1563-1646) had commis-
year ofKeichd [1610] at age seventy-seven.       Wakasa Province (part of present-day Fu-       sioned it.
His bereaved wife, Kdjuin, commissioned          kui Prefecture). For a while she had fol-            The inscription on this portrait eulo-
                                                 lowed the Christian faith, with the name       gizes Kójuin for her Buddhist faith and
an artist to paint a portrait of his benign
face, and asked me to write an inscription.      of Maria, having been baptized early in        her knowledge of Chinese literature, quali-
                                                 the Keichó era (1596-1615).                    ties that would have made her particularly
My refusal was unheeded, so I have written
 useless words and wasted statements.... MS           The inscription on this portrait, writ-   compatible with her husband. It reads, in
                                                 ten by Reikei Ungaku in the eleventh           part:
                                                 month of 1618, says that it was requested      . . . Her grace is bountiful, her courteousness
                                                 by Takayuki, one of her sons. Ungaku's sig-
78
30                                                                      31
knows no bounds.... Her late father con-       twenty-five stringed zither.... She loved      guished warrior and tea practitioner of the
tinued the Numata family, and served as a      books by [the Chinese Tang-dynasty poet]       late Momoyama and early Edo periods.
retainer at the shogun's camps [where he       Du Fu, and would write down [the Chinese       The oldest son of Hosokawa Yüsai (Fuji-
found her] a perfect match, marrying her to    Tang-dynasty poet] Hanshan's poem Maple        taka, 1534-1610), Sansai was an astute and
a Hosokawa. [She] retired to a splendid        Grove when she heard the theme of the Tat-     loyal vassal who served three military heg-
mansion with colorful beams, and her eldest    suta River in a Japanese poem.... Her          emons in their relentless quest to unify
son succeeded to the headship of the family.   memory will benefit from all her goodness,     the nation: Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582),
... Once she saw the cherry blossoms in the    and lovely leaves and branches [her descen-    Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) and, at the
capital and realized how Buddhism viewed       dants] will be countless....              MS    Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 (cat. 104), To-
all myriad things as ephemeral. Another                                                       kugawa leyasu (1543-1616). In this portrait,
time she stopped at cascades and understood                                                    Sansai wears a robe with the paulownia
                                               28 Hosokawa Sansai
how the pines ... kept their color with un-                                                    mon, the family crest of the Toyotomi.
                                                  hanging scroll; ink and color on silk             This commemorative portrait was
shaken constancy. When she recited from
the [Chinese] Book of Songs, she would dip        107.5 x Sl-S (42l/4 x 201A)                  commissioned in 1670 by San, an adopted
                                                  Edo period, 1670                             daughter of Sansai, around the time of the
 the brush in ink, ponder for a while, and
compose a tanka [thirty-one-syllable Japa-        Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           twenty-fifth anniversary of his death. It
 nese poem] on such themes as the rain on                                                      was presented to Kôtôin, a subtemple of
 Mount Fu and the waves of the Xiang           Seated on a tatami mat with a hossu (Zen        Daitokuji that was the mortuary temple
 River. Again, following Chinese metric po-    monk's whisk) in his right hand is Hoso-        Sansai had built for his father Yüsai. The
 ems, she would spontaneously play the         kawa Sansai (Tadaoki; 1563-1646), a distin-     long dedicatory inscription, dated to 1670
                                                                                                                                        79
and written by the monk Ken'ei Sotan              can be seen in the column at the far right       which belongs to the Sotó school of Zen
(1511-1672) of Kótóin, summarizes the             of the inscription. It is dated to 1587, when Buddhism. The inscription, whose author
events of Sansai's life. In the inscription,      Genpô was abbot of Nanzenji; the portrait remains unknown, gives Naoshige's biog-
Sansai is called Daikoji (Great Buddhist          is from Chôshôin, a subtemple of Nan-            raphy, highlighting his military and civil
Layman). It makes special mention of the          zenji. Genpô was the spiritual mentor of         accomplishments. Chief among them are
suicide of Sansai's Christian wife Gracia,        Baiin Genchü, Yüsai's younger brother.           his valor as a leader of Hideyoshi's expedi-
daughter of Nobunaga's assassin, Akechi           According to the inscription, Hasumaru           tion forces in Korea, his establishment of a
Mitsuhide. Before the Battle of Sekigahara        died at age twelve. He is described as a         school and the Buddhist temple Enkôji
(1600), in which her husband supported            conscientious student of classical learning, upon his return from Korea, and his
Tokugawa leyasu, Gracia had been taken            poetry, and music, as well as of the sword       loyalty, and his son's, to the Tokugawa
hostage by the leader of the opposing             and the crossbow.                                shogunate.
forces. To preserve her husband from                    In the portrait, Hasumaru still wears             The last five columns of the inscrip-
wavering in loyalty to leyasu out of con-         bangs, indicating that he had yet to per-        tion tell of the circumstances in which the
cern for her safety, Gracia committed             form the coming-of-age ceremony. Never-          portrait came to be painted:
 suicide.                                         theless, he is depicted wearing the formal
       leyasu rewarded Sansai's loyalty and       dress of the Momoyama-and Edo-period             . . . in the first year ofjdkyd [1684], when
 military support by giving him in fief Bu-       samurai; the sleeveless jacket with ex-          Abe,    Bungo no kami, and Hotta, Shimousa
 zen Province (parts of the_present-day Pre-      tended shoulders (kataginu) and full trou-       no   kami,   were ordered [by the fifth shogun
 fectures of Fukuoka and Oita), which he          sers (hakamd) over a kosode. The samurai's Tsunayoshi] to check letters of thanks [from
 ruled from the refurbished Kokura Castle,        standard long (Katana) and short (waki-          the past shoguns] kept in various daimyo
 leyasu also presented him with a coveted         zashi) swords are thrust through his sash.       families,    I was in Edo, and took to the castle
 Chinese chaire (tea container) named             His pose is also that of the adult samurai:      those given to our family. I explained [to the
 Rikyù shiribukura (Rikyü's fat bottom; cat.      right hand holding a folding fan, left hand      shogun] orally the honor of the manifold fa-
 277), as well as swords and Chinese Zen          clenched (see cats. 14,15,16). The pale blue     vors   [our family had received in the past]
 calligraphies.                                   and gold brocade of the kataginu and ha-         referring in particular to [Ryüzóji] Ta-
       In 1621, Sansai retired to Nakatsu Cas-    kama, and the chrysanthemum-and-lattice kanobu and Naoshige. I recalled things
 tle in Buzen Province, leaving the position      design on the kosode reflect the sumptu-         about the latter, our forebear, that are not to
 of head of the family to his son Tadatoshi.      ous fashions favored in the Momoyama             be forgotten. Indeed, bringing peace to the
 Tadatoshi became daimyo of Higo                  period.                                       MS nation through military feats, he became
 (present-day Kumamoto Prefecture) in                                                              the founder of the Nabeshima clan, which
 1632, and Sansai moved to Yatsushiro, also                                                        is now being revived. Thus, here is a portrait
                                                  30 Nabeshima Naoshige
 in Higo. With the nation at peace, Sansai                                                         [of Naoshige] clad in armor and I bow
                                                       hanging scroll; ink and color on silk       deeply to it.
 spent the remainder of his life between               84.5 x 41.0 (33J/4 x i6Vs)
 Yatsushiro, Kyoto, and Edo (present-day               Edo period, no later than 1685              The third day of the sixth month, the sec-
 Tokyo), devoting much of his time to the                                                          ond year ofjdkyd [1685].
 pursuit of tea and the supervision of kilns           Kôdenji, Saga Prefecture
  that he had established for the production                                                               At the bottom of the painting is writ-
                                                  Warriors in full battle dress are seldom por- ten Hizen jijù (Chamberlain from Hizen),
 of tea wares. He died in 1645 and was bur-       trayed in Japanese art. A portrait such as
  ied at Kôtôin, where his grave was marked                                                        an honorific court title.                    MS
                                                  this is especially rare in that the sitter is
  by a stone lantern that he had received         captured at the moment just before leav-
  from his tea master, Sen no Rikyü                                                                 31 Honda Tadakatsu
                                                  ing for battle, with his ceremonial robes
  (1522-1591).                               YS                                                          hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
                                                  and cap removed and laid behind him. His
                                                                                                         124.0 X 64.0 (48 3/4 X 25 */4)
                                                  helmet is placed beside him on the tatami
29 Hosokawa Hasumaru                              mat. He firmly grasps a fan in his right               Momoyama period, early 17th century
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk          hand and a tachi sword in his left. He                 Honda Takayuki, Tokyo
     66.4   X 34.0   (201/8 X 133/8)              bends slightly forward, with a determined              Important Cultural Property
     Momoyama period, 1587                        gaze. On the front of the cuirass the char-
                                                  acter miyako (capital) is written in archaic     Honda Heihachirô Tadakatsu (1548-1610)
     Chôshôin, Kyoto                                                                               was a famous military leader who served
                                                  script; its significance remains unknown.
     Important Cultural Property                                                                   Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616). Along with
                                                        The sitter is Nabeshima Naoshige
                                                  (1538-1618). At one time, he was a retainer       Sakakibara Yasumasa (1548-1606) and two
Almost all of the portraits of children from
                                                  of Ryuzôji Takanobu of Hizen Province             others, he is one of the so-called Shitennd
the Momoyama period were of deceased                                                               (Four Deva Kings) of leyasu. He followed
sons or daughters, painted at the request         (parts of the present-day Prefectures of
                                                  Nagasaki and Saga), a local warlord who           leyasu into more than fifty battles and, in
of the grieving parents. Behind every                                                               1601, as a reward for his long service, be-
child's face is the profound sorrow experi-       died in action during the 1584 Battle of
                                                  Shimabara and fought against the power-           came daimyo of a domain in Ise Province
enced by those left behind. The sitter de-                                                          (most of Mie Prefecture).
picted here, Hosokawa Hasumaru, was the           ful Shimazu forces. Naoshige then sup-
                                                  ported Takanobu's son Masaie. In 1590                    Tadakatsu sits on a folding chair,
ninth child of Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610).
On the eighth day of the seventh month            Masaie retired and Naoshige succeeded to wearing black armor; the actual armor
                                                  the leadership of the Ryüzóji clan. After         worn by the sitter is included in this exhi-
of 1587, the gravely ill Hasumaru arrived in                                                        bition,   (cat. 160.) A set of prayer beads
Kyoto from Tango for medical treatment            the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 (cat. 104),
                                                  on the order of Tokugawa leyasu (1543-            hangs from Tadakatsu's right shoulder
and curative prayer, to no avail. Yüsai                                                             across his chest. He wears a long tachi
learned the sad news of his son's death           1616), he subdued the forces of the Tachi-
                                                  bana clan in Chikugo Province (part of            sword and a shorter wakizashi and holds a
upon his return from a military venture in                                                          saihai (commander's baton). The forms in
Kyushu for Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-              present-day Fukuoka Prefecture), and the
1598).                                            Saga domain was officially recognized as
                                                  his.
                                                                                                    this portrait—the sitter's face, the hakama
                                                                                                    (trousers), even the sandal cords and most
     The inscription above the figure was                                                           remarkably the armor—are angular and
written by Baikoku Genpô; two of his seals              This painting is kept at Kôdenji, the
                                                  Nabeshima family's mortuary temple,
80
abstracted. Although there is no direct re-
lationship, this quality recalls the portrait
of Minamoto Yoritomo (cat. i).             SY
32 Kuroda Nagamasa
   hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
   120.0 X 59.5 (49 5/8 X 23 3/8)
   Edo period, no later than 1624
   Fukuoka Art Museum,
   Fukuoka Prefecture
   Important Cultural Property
33 Sakakibara Yasumasa
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk.
   112.0 x 46.0 (44 x iS^s)
   Momoyama period, early ryth century
   Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
   Important Cultural Property
Sakakibara Yasumasa (1548-1606) was a dis-
tinguished high-ranking warrior who, with
Honda Tadakatsu (1548-1610), was counted
among Tokugawa leyasu's (1543-1616) four
most devoted retainers, his Shitennd (Four
Deva Kings). Since the time of his father,
Nagamasa, the family had served leyasu.
                                                32
                                                     81
33                                                                        34
The name Yasumasa includes the charac-           34 Inaba Ittetsu                                nineteenth day of the eleventh month of
ter yasu, which he received from leyasu in          hanging scroll; ink and color on silk        1588.
appreciation of his loyalty. He achieved            94.0x54.6(37x211/2)                                The inscription on this portrait was
fame for his valor in battles, but after ley-       Momoyama period, probably 1589               written by Gyokuho Shôsô (1546-1613) of
asu's triumph at the Battle of Sekigahara                                                        Daitokuji in the tenth month of 1589; two
                                                    Chishôin, Kyoto
in 1600 (cat. 104), he found himself in op-                                                      of Shôsô's seals follow his signature. Al-
position to the more bureaucratic group of          Important Cultural Property
                                                                                                 though Ittetsu is presented as a priest, ton-
military leaders around leyasu. Realizing                                                        sured and clad in a dark outer robe, a tachi
that the age of battles was over, Yasumasa       Inaba Ittetsu (1516-1588) was the youngest      is at his side, reflecting his status as a war-
retired.                                         child of Inaba Michinori, a military leader     rior. According to the Lineage of the Inaba
      In this portrait Yasumasa sits on bear     of Mino Province (part of present-day Gifu      Family, Ittetsu's son Sadamichi asked an
fur, wearing black armor, also shown in          Prefecture). First he became a priest at Sü-    artist from Kyoto to paint this portrait.
this exhibition (cat. 159). He wears a long      fukuji, built by Saito Toshiyasu, the shugo-    The style of the painting suggests that the
tachi sword and a shorter wakizashi at his       dai (acting military governor) of Mino,         painter may have been Hasegawa Tôhaku
left waist and holds a saihai (commander's       with Dokushü Kansai as the founding             (1539-1610); who also painted a chinsd (por-
baton) in his right hand. A banner stands        priest. In 1525, when the Asai family of        trait of a Zen priest) of Gyokuho Shôsô.
behind him. On it is a circle, symbolic of       Omi advanced on Mino, his father and                  Portions of the inscription read as
the sun, and the character mu (nothing-          five brothers died in action. Ittetsu (Single   follows:
ness). A banner with the same design ex-         Iron) returned to the lay world and as-
ists today, but the sun and the character        sumed the position of head of the family.       He was a brave soldier in the martial world,
mu are in gold leaf on an indigo ground.         He served as a retainer under military            a loyal retainer of the family and country.
The portrait, the armor, and the banner          chieftains of four different clans—the            In him the mortal and the saintly
were all in the Sakakibara family until          Toki, Saitô, Oda, and Toyotomi. Ittetsu           coexisted. His image combined the
recently.                                   SY   died in Shimizu Castle in Mino on the             spiritual and the worldly, the two realities
                                                                                                   not interfering with each other....
82
35
     83
     36
84
37
     85
Here is my clumsy eulogy:                         valiant warrior with a spear... waging a           and lemitsu (1604-1651). He also was re-
                                                  battle totally under his control, this is like     nowned as a tea adept, and had built a tea
In good virtue and fragrant name he had no        [the Chinese general] Zhuge Liang, though          house named Sunshdan in 1617 within the
   peer                                           in a different seat and a different robe....       precinct of Ryûkôin, a subtemple of Daito-
Cutting the sky horizontally, his treasured       He swings his poetry fan lightly and dances        kuji. He used Sunshdan as his artistic so-
   swore/ flashed as if with new snow and         in an elegant gathering. In spring he sees         briquet and was a great collector of art.
   frost                                          cherry blossoms in the capital, and daily re-      Among the treasures included in his col-
Sitting grand in this house, what is it that      cites poems from the Manyôshù. Through             lection at Sunshóan were twelve frag-
   he knows?                                      his window is the changing scene of the lake       ments from a codex of eleventh-century
Ironwood blossoms [a reference to his             under the moonlight, and he looks at the           calligraphy transcribing poems from the
   name and metaphor for something rare]          books by one hundred poets.... He left his         Kokinshü anthology. Known as the Sun-
   and spring are in heaven and earth.            place of living and threw away his office.         shdan shikishi (Sunshóan poem sheets),
   Ah!...                                  MS     Now he tills the Fields of Stones [that is,        they are now dispersed among various col-
                                                  Ishida, his family n a m e ] . . . .          MS   lections. The tea house no longer survives.
35 Ishida Masatsugu                                                                                        Kógetsu Sógan (1574-1643), a Zen
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk                                                             monk of considerable expertise in arts and
                                                  36 Matsui Yohachiró                                letters who had been instrumental in the
   61.0 x 35.8 (24 x 14)
                                                     hanging scroll; ink and color on silk           restoration of Daitokuji, inscribed this
   Momoyama period, no later than 1594
                                                     90.0 x 37.0 (353/8 x 14 l/z)                    scroll as follows:
   Jushóin, Kyoto                                    Momoyama period, probably 1594
   Important Art Object                                                                              Inscription beckoned by the portrait of
                                                      Hôsenji, Kyoto                                   Tokusôsaishu San'in Sdka Koji [Sakuma
Ishida Masatsugu (d. 1600) was the father                                                               Shógen] painted during his lifetime
of the warrior Ishida Mitsunari (1560-            Matsui Yohachiró (d. 1593) was the first-
                                                  born son of Matsui Yasuyuki (1550-1612).           A breeze of fresh wind sweeps away the
1600), who led a coalition of daimyo                                                                   worldly dust
against Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616) at the        Yasuyuki was a kard (elder) who served Ho-
                                                  sokawa Yüsai (1534-1610) and his son San-          Hiding in the thicket is a man growing old
decisive Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 (cat.                                                          Around his waist he still has a house and
104). Mitsunari had gained power as an im-        sai (1563-1646). Yohachiró served with
                                                  distinction during the 1592 Korean expedi-            rare treasures
portant retainer of Hideyoshi, and Masa-                                                             Polishing them with a three-foot hossu
tsugu's skills as a warrior and administrator     tion. He returned home with an illness,
                                                  however, and died on the fifteenth day of             [Zen monk's whisk] won't make them
also came to be in demand. He served as                                                                 clean.
daikan (deputy governor) of Sakai (near           the eighth month of the following year.
                                                  His grief-stricken parents commissioned            Written by Yawning Man
present-day Osaka), the area under the                                                               Kdgetsu [tripod-shaped relief seal]
Toyotomi's direct rule. After Mitsunari's         this posthumous portrait. The inscription,
                                                  focusing on Yohachiró's military feats in          Sdgan [square relief seal]
defeat at the Battle of Sekigahara and the
                                                  Korea, is dated the day before the first an-            Sakuma Shógen sits in front of a
fall of his garrison castle at Sawayama in
                                                  niversary of Yohachiró's death and was             screen painting of a dragon in a bamboo
Omi (present-day Shiga Prefecture), Ma-
satsugu and the rest of his family commit-        written by Genpo Reisan of Nanzenji; two           grove, opposite a boy attendant with a
ted suicide. Mitsunari was beheaded on            seals are impressed below his signature.           Chinese hair style. He himself is wearing
                                                        Yohachiró is sumptuously dressed in a        the informal loose gown and soft cap of
the banks of the Kamo River in Kyoto.
                                                  green Kosode with gold and dark green              the Chinese gentleman-scholar in retire-
       In this painting, the tonsured Masa-
tsugu is presented as a Buddhist cleric; his      flower and leaf designs, and over it the for-      ment or at leisure. Both the painting and
warrior status, though, is represented by         mal dress of a samurai (sleeveless jacket          the inscription compare Shógen to a high-
                                                  and full trousers) with a design of scattered      minded Chinese recluse. This portrait is
the short koshigatana sword at his waist.
His outer robe is richly patterned with           white pine needles. He is seated on a ta-          similar to another work depicting Shógen,
paulownia blossoms. The artist has cap-           tami mat and wears two swords. His right           painted by Kano Tan'yú (1602-1674; cat.
tured Masatsugu's imposing presence and           hand holds a fan and the left is clenched,         42) and also inscribed by Kógetsu, in 1641.
his sharp, determined expression, con-            as in so many warrior portraits of the time.       A note written on the back of the Shin-
veyed through the eyes and furrowed                The composition is close to that of the           juan painting says that on the original
brow.                                              portrait of Hosokawa Hasumaru (cat. 29).          wooden roller of the scroll, now lost, was a
       The inscription was written by Ha-          The oval face, delicate eyes and nose ren-        date corresponding to 1636. It is assumed
                                                   dered with sinuous lines, and small, thin         that the painting dates from around
 kuho Eryo, one-time abbot of Myôshinji.
 It is dated to 1594, indicating that the por-     lips contribute to an overall gentle facial        1636.                                    SY
 trait was painted during Masatsugu's life-        expression not unlike those seen in con-
 time. Two of Eryó's seals follow his              temporary genre paintings.                 SY      38 Sen no Rikyú
 signature. The inscription says that it was                                                             attributed to Hasegawa Tóhaku
 written at the request of Masatsugu him-         37 Sakuma Shógen                                       (1539-1610)
 self, and that Masatsugu had come under             Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674)                             hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
 Eryó's spiritual influence. The portrait            hanging scroll; ink and color on silk               80.6 x 36.7 (313/4 x 143/8)
 comes from Jushôin, a subtemple within              63.8 x 28.4 (z51/8 x iiv's)                         Momoyama period, no later than 1595
 Myôshinji founded by Eryô and named af-             Edo period, c. 1636                                 Sen Sosa collection, Kyoto
 ter Masatsugu's Buddhist title.
       The inscription reads in part:                Shinjuan, Kyoto                                  Sen no Rikyü (1522-1591) was born into a
                                                                                                      merchant family in Sakai, a bustling port
 . . . Talented both in arts [bun] and arms        Sakuma Shógen Sanekatsu (1570-1642) was
 [bu], his heart nourishes saintliness and wis-    a warrior who first served Toyotomi Hide-          city south of Osaka. After studying tea
 dom. . . . His body grand and robust; his de-                                                        with Kitamuki Dóchin (1504-1562) and Ta-
                                                   yoshi (1537-1598), and then three succes-
 corum awesome and full of dignity.... A           sive generations of Tokugawa shoguns:              keno Jóó (1502-1555), he became the lead-
                                                                                                      ing exponent of wabi (simple, or rustic)
                                                   leyasu (1543-1616), Hidetada (1578-1631),
 86
38   39
          87
     style tea in his own time, and perhaps the       While still in his teens, Seika entered Shô-
     most important (certainly the best known)        kokuji, one of the five major Zen monas-
     figure in the whole history of tea. He           teries of Kyoto, where he studied Zen as
     served as personal tea instructor to Oda         well as classical Chinese literature and
     Nobunaga (1534-1582) and then Toyotomi           Song Neo-Confucianism. Seika eventually
     Hideyoshi (1537-1598). This position en-         returned to lay life and led a renaissance in
     abled him to become a close confidant of         Song Confucian scholarship.
     Hideyoshi and to acquire the substantial              In the Edo period, Confucianism be-
     political influence inherent in such a rela-     came the official teaching of the govern-
     tionship. In 1591, however, for reasons now      ing samurai class, and daimyo employed
     unclear, Hideyoshi ordered him to commit         prominent scholars to assist them in gov-
     suicide.                                         erning. Hayashi Razan (1583-1657), Seika's
           Tanaka Sókei, thought to be related to     student and one of the inscribers of this
     Rikyû and one of the founders of the Raku        painting, served the shogunate, but Seika
     kiln (cats. 285, 286), commissioned this por-    himself refused official engagement, and
     trait. The Raku wares were developed un-         in his later years retired to a mountain re-
     der Rikyü's close aesthetic supervision.         treat at Ichiharano north of Kyoto. That
     The inscription was written by Shun'oku          retreat is the setting for this painting. Al-
     Sóen (1529-1611) of Daitokuji, the spiritual     though the retreat no longer stands, an old
     successor to Shôryô Sókin; both priests in-      well remains.
     structed Rikyü in Zen.                                The painter of the portrait, Kano
           Rikyü is portrayed in this painting as a   Sansetsu, was the leading student and
     lay Buddhist, wearing a black robe and           adopted heir of Kano Sanraku (1559-1635),
     holding a fan. The style of the painting, es-    whom he succeeded as head of the Kano
     pecially in the face, recalls that of Hase-      studio; he was also an admirer of Seika.
     gawa Tohaku who frequently painted for           The regular geometric composition is both
     Rikyü and Sôen. Tôhaku was commis-               characteristic of Sansetsu's work and
     sioned by "Rikyü to execute the ceiling          idiosyncratic within the Kano school. San-
     painting of the gate of Daitokuji. He also       setsu's signature can be seen at the lower
     painted sliding door panels in Sangen'in, a      right, followed by his seal.
     subtemple that was Sôen's residential                 Razan wrote the lower inscription,
     quarters. There is, thus, a strong possibil-     read from left to right, with a seal follow-
     ity that Tohaku painted this portrait.           ing his signature; in his collected works,
           The inscription reads, from left to        this poem is dated to 1639. Hori Kyôan
     right:                                           (1585-1642), another close disciple of Seika,
                                                      wrote the upper inscription, read from left
     Hat on his head and fan in his hand
                                                      to right and with two seals underlying his
     The solemn image he left behind captures
                                                      signature at the right. Both inscriptions
       what he always was
                                                      eulogize Seika's retreat and his studies of
     Like Zhao Zhou [a Chinese Zen priest
                                                       Confucianism.                              WA
       famous for his intuitive approach] he sits
       awhile and drinks tea
     This old man seems to gain knowledge             40 Ishikawa Józan
       without struggle.                                 Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674)
     Sdkei showed me Layman Rikyu's portrait             hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
       and asked me to write an inscription, so I        100.6 x 38.3 (395/8 x 15)
       have written a four-line verse and offer          Edo period, mid-i7th century
       this with incense.                                Jôzanji (Shisendô), Kyoto
     Fourteenth day, ninth month, fourth year of
       Bunroku [1595]                                 Although Ishikawa Jôzan (1583-1672)
     Sangen, Old Shun'oku Sôen                        fought with distinction in many military
     Sôen [square intaglio seal]                      engagements for Tokugawa leyasu (1543-
                                                MS    1616), in 1615, during the summer battle of
                                                      Osaka, he disobeyed his commanders out
     39 Fujiwara Seika living in leisure              of excessive zeal and was severely repri-
        Kano Sansetsu (1589-1651)                     manded. Jôzan relinquished his domain
        hanging scroll; ink on paper                  and went to Kyoto where he took the ton-
                                                      sure and became a monk at Myóshinji.
        119.5 x V-3 (47 x 123/8)                      Later, in order to support his mother when
        Edo period, early iyth century                she became seriously ill, Jôzan entered the
        Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, Tokyo            service of the daimyo Asano Nagaakira,
                                                      lord of Kii and later of Aki domains; upon
     Fujiwara Seika (1561-1619) was a Confu-          his mother's death, he returned to Kyoto.
     cian scholar whose teachings were of great       At the age of fifty-eight, he built a retreat
     significance in the early Edo period; Seika      in Ichijôji village, in northeastern Kyoto,
     was the name of his residence. He was de-        and asked Kano Tan'yü, the foremost
     scended from the aristocratic Reizei fam-        painter of that time, to paint portraits of
     ily, guardians and perpetuators of one of        thirty-six Tang and Song Chinese poets.
     the traditions of classical Japanese poetry.     Hanging them on the walls, Jôzan called
                                                      his retreat Shisendô (Hall of Immortal
88
40   41
          89
                                                            42
Poets), and lived there in retirement.           He reclines on the armrest at ease, wearing a   yama period. In this posthumous, com-
Shisendó, also known as Józanji, still             dark brown cap                                memorative portrait, Yúshó and his wife
stands today.                                    His face quiet and eminent, his spirit bright   Myôtei look at a painting of the Tang Chi-
     Jôzan studied Confucianism from Fu-           and lofty                                     nese poet Li Bo viewing a waterfall.
jiwara Seika (1561-1619). He was accom-          He communes with nature, nourishes his               The greater part of the inscription at
plished in Chinese poetry and reisho (C: li        inner spirit                                  the top of the portrait, written by Yushô's
shu), the archaic, clerical style of calligra-   His thoughts stubborn at age eighty, a          grandson Yüchiku in 1724, gives an ac-
phy, and also painted in the Chinese               hermit of three spirits                       count of Yushô's life. In the shorter sec-
mode. He was a friend of Hayashi Razan           Who is this hermit but Rokuroku Sanjin          tion at the right, Yüchiku has transcribed
(1583-1657) and Hori Kyôan (1585-1642),            [Jozan's artistic pseudonym].                 a letter written in 1608 by a Korean gov-
both also students of Seika.                                                                WA   ernment official named Pak Tae-gün who
     In this portrait, signed and sealed by                                                      sought a painting by Yüshó, whom he
Tan'yu at the lower left, Jôzan leans on an                                                      called "number one under heaven."
armrest in a relaxed manner. The pose is         41 Kaihó Yúshó and his wife                           Because the painting is stamped with
reminiscent of imaginary portraits of such          attributed to Kaihô Yüchiku                  the seals Kaihô and Ddki at the lower
famous literary figures as the Tang Chi-            (1654-1728)                                  right, the seals of Yushô's son Yusetsu
nese poet Li Bo and the Nara-period Japa-           hanging scroll; ink and color on paper       (1598-1677), it has long been attributed to
nese poet Hitomaro. The brushwork and               114.7 x 44-° (451/8 x 1T^}                   Yusetsu. Recent scholarship has deter-
use of colors are refined, and the sitter is        Edo period, early i8th century               mined that these seals were added later,
presented as a man of lofty thoughts and            Kaihô Hiroshi Collection, Kyoto              however, and the painting is now believed
of purity of mind. The inscription, written         Important Cultural Property                  to have been painted by Yüchiku.
in clerical-style script by Jôzan himself, is                                                          Myôtei wears a kosode robe and an
followed by his seal:                            Kaihô Yüshó (1533-1615) was one of the          uchikake (outer kosode worn without a
                                                 most prominent painters of the Momo-
90
             43
sash). According to the history of the         42 Kano Tan'yü                                 his face is deeply wrinkled. The sharp
Kaihó family written in Yüchiku's time,           Momota Ryüei (1647-1698)                    eyes, prominent hooked nose, tightly
this kosode and uchikake were gifts from          hanging scroll; ink and color on paper      closed lips, and square jaw nevertheless
lemitsu (1604-1651), the third Tokugawa           66.4 x 47.9 (26*78 x 187/3)                 convey the strength of the aging artist,
shogun, whom Myótei and Yüsetsu met               Edo period, late i7th century               who was to painting what Tokugawa
after Yüshó's death. The meeting was ar-                                                      leyasu was to politics.
                                                  Kyoto National Museum
ranged by lemitsu's wetnurse Kasuga no                                                             Although there is no seal on the
Tsubone, the youngest daughter of Saitô           Important Cultural Property
                                                                                              painting, an inscription, Painted by Ryüei,
Toshimitsu, a military leader and close        The painter Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674), the       identifying the artist, is written on top of
friend of Yüshó. In this painting, Myótei is   eldest son of Takanobu (cat. 18), not only     the lid of the box that contains the scroll.
portrayed with her back to the viewer, giv-    cemented the prestigious reputation of         Momota Ryüei was one of four close disci-
ing prominence to the kosode and the           the Kano school of painting, but also es-      ples of Tan'yü. He served the Shimazu
uchikake decorated with the Tokugawa           tablished the official painting style of the   family of Satsuma Province (part of
mon of three hollyhock leaves, thus re-        Edo period. This work is thought to be a       present-day Kagoshima Prefecture) as a
cording for posterity the honor bestowed       preparatory sketch for a finished painting,    painter, and also practiced medicine. AY
on the Kaihô family.                     SY    now lost, which was in the Kajibashi Kano
                                               family of Edo, founded by Tan'yü and one
                                               of the four Kano families that served the
                                               shogunate.
                                                     With concentrated gaze, Tan'yü holds
                                               a paintbrush in his right hand. He was
                                               probably in his last years when this por-
                                               trait was painted; he has lost much of his
                                               hair, he is flabby around the mouth, and
                                                                                                                                       91
        44
43 Minamoto Yoritomo                           Perhaps for this reason the statue of Yori-     44 Hojo Tokiyori
   polychromed wood                            tomo was placed in a building inside the           polychromed wood
   h. 70.6(273/4)                              shrine complex. Shirahatasha was de-               h. 68.9 (271/8)
   Kamakura period, 2nd half of i3th           stroyed by fire in 1280 and reconstructed          Kamakura period, late i3th century
   century                                     soon after. This statue dates to the period
                                                                                                  Kenchôji, Kanagawa Prefecture
                                               of Shirahatasha's reconstruction.
   Tokyo National Museum                            The figure holds a shaku (wooden cer-         Important Cultural Property
   Important Cultural Property                 emonial slat) in his right hand, and he         This statue of a fully dressed warrior is
Minamoto Yoritomo (1147-1199), a late          wears the informal court dress of the           said to be of Hojo Tokiyori (1227-1263),
Heian warrior, rose to political power by      Heian aristocrat: an eboshi (black head-        who as shikken (regent for the shogun) be-
destroying the rival Taira clan, and all po-   gear), a kariginu (hunting robe) on the up-     tween 1246 and 1256 exercised supreme
tential competitors within his own lineage.    per body, and sashinuki (baggy pants tied       power in the Kamakura shogunate. The
In 1192 he was appointed by the emperor        around the ankles) on the lower body. This      construction of Kenchôji, where this work
seiitaishdgun (Great General Who Quells        apparel, also found on the statue of Hojo       is enshrined, began in 1249 at Tokiyori's
the Barbarians) and, as the first shogun of    Tokiyori in Kenchôji (cat. 44), is typical of   initiative and was completed in 1253. Its
the Kamakura shogunate, initiated a            warriors' statues in the Kamakura period.       first chief priest was Lanqi Daolong (J:
warrior-class regime.                          The head and torso were carved from sep-        Rankei Doryú; 1213-1278), a Chinese Chan
      This statue of Yoritomo purportedly      arate pieces of wood, front and back, with      (Zen) priest of the Rinzai school. The tem-
was enshrined at Shirahatasha in the           additional pieces for the face and knees.       ple has been destroyed by fire several
Tsurugaoka Hachimangu in Kamakura. In          The interior of the statue is hollow, and       times; hence no contemporary written
1180 the Tsurugaoka Hachimangu was             the eyes are inlaid crystal. Much of the        documents concerning this statue are ex-
moved by Yoritomo from Yuigahama to its        original polychromy has been lost.         NK   tant.
present location, and it thrived under gov-                                                          Numerous works based on close ob-
ernment support in the following years.                                                        servation of the subject were made during
92
45
the Kamakura period. This trend toward          ing the brown sabi lacquer. The wooden               The figure wears the formal attire of a
realism resulted in many fine portraits of      ceremonial slat (shaku) in the right hand is    high aristocrat of the Heian period: a kan-
well-known personalities from the last half     a later addition.                        SH     muri (formal hat indicating court rank), a
of the thirteenth century on. Like the fig-                                                     tachi (slung sword), and in his right hand a
ure in cat. 43, Tokiyori wears an eboshi                                                        wooden ceremonial slat (shaku). The face
                                                45 Miura Yoshiaki                               is old and wrinkled, but the concentrated,
(black court headgear), a kariginu (hunting
robe), and sashinuki (baggy pants tied             polychromed wood                             severe gaze and the tightly closed lips con-
around the ankles). The small eyes, which          h. 99.5 (391/8)                              vey inner power.
gaze into the distance, mouth turned               Kamakura period, i3th-i4th century                 The head and body were made from
slightly down at the outer corners, arid up-       Manshôji, Kanagawa Prefecture                two separate pieces of wood, front and
turned nose capture the individuality of                                                        back, and the head was separated from the
                                                The warrior Miura Yoshiaki (Osuke, 1092-        body at the neck for further hollowing-out
the artist's model. The technical execu-
                                                1180) wielded great power in the Miura Pe-      and then reattached. The eyes are crystal.
tion seems to place this work in the later
                                                ninsula (Kanagawa Prefecture) and               Though the interior was hollowed out, the
half of the thirteenth century.
                                                surrounding areas in the late Heian pe-         walls remain thick, making the statue very
     The head and body are made of two
pieces of Japanese cypress (hinoki), one        riod. When Minamoto Yoritomo (1147-             heavy.
                                                1199) rose to attack the Taira clan, Yoshiaki         This portrait statue occupies a shrine
each for front and back; separate pieces
                                                led the Miura clan in support of Yoritomo.      called Gory ó My 5 j in in the Manshôji com-
are attached for the sides of the body, legs,
                                                He was defeated by the Taira, and he died       plex. Goryô Myôjin was purportedly built
and the robe, and the eyes are inlaid crys-
                                                in battle. Yoritomo, having become sho-         in 1212. The striking degree of stylization
tal. Cloth was glued onto the surface of
                                                gun in 1192, built Manshôji in honor of         of the body suggests that the portrait was
the statue, then coated with sabi urushi
                                                Yoshiaki near the site of his death in 1194.    made much later, toward the end of the
(thick raw lacquer mixed with pulverized
                                                An inscription inside the head of the           Kamakura period. Inside the body are
stone) and over this undercoating black
                                                statue states that Minamoto Yoritomo            three wooden tablets documenting,
lacquer was applied followed by white pig-
                                                built Manshôji for Yoshiaki.                    among other things, the restoration of the
 ment, and finally colored pigments. The
 surface has deteriorated, however, expos-                                                      statue in 1719.                           NK
                                                                                                                                         93
     46,
46 Itchin                                         bot of Konkoji, and the founder of Shô-             Details about the artist Kóshun are
   Kóshun (fl. 1334)                              jôkôji in Kanagawa Prefecture, the head-       unknown. However, like Kóshu, the sculp-
   polychromed wood                               quarters of the Jiji sect. However, in the     tor of a 1420 portrait of Ippen, also for-
   h. 79.0(31^/8)                                 course of the recent restoration, writing      merly at Konkôji, Kôshun is thought to be
   Nanbokuchô period, 1334                        was found inside the statue, stating that      a Kei-school sculptor and later follower of
     Chôrakuji, Kyoto                             Koshun sculpted this portrait of the fifty-    the famous Unkei (d. 1223).                NK
     Important Cultural Property                  seven-year-old Yo Amidabutsu (the Bud-
                                                  dhist name of Itchin). Itchin (1278-1355),
                                                  the sixth patriarch of the Jiji sect, was      47 Yishan Yining
This is one of seven portrait sculptures of
                                                  the abbot of Shôjôkôji and also later be-         polychromed wood
Jishü-school patriarchs from Konkôji, the
                                                  came the first abbot of the training temple       h. 76.0(297/3)
Jishü training temple on Shichijo Street in
                                                  Kôshôji, on Ichijó Street in Kyoto.               Kamakura period, c. 1317
Kyoto. When Konkôji was closed in 1908,
all seven statues were moved to Chôrakuji              The statue wears a simple kesa               Nanzen'in, Kyoto
in Kyoto. Jishü is a populist branch of the      (priest's mantle) over a priestly robe. The
devotional Jódo (Pure Land, or Amidist)          palms, joined in front of the chest, are        Yishan Yining (1247-1317), known in Japan
sect of Buddhism. It was founded by the          common to seated portraits of Jishü             as Issan Kokushi (National Teacher), was
monk Ippen (1239-1289) in the mid-               priests. The face, with crystal eyes, is de-    an erudite priest of Chinese Rinzai Zen
Kamakura period and remained a consid-           scriptively rendered. This portrait is the      Buddhism who came to Japan in 1299 car-
erable force in Japanese religious life          finest and oldest of the group of seven         rying a diplomatic letter from Emperor
through the fifteenth century, patronized        Chôrakuji sculptures, and it is significant     Chengzong of the Yuan dynasty of China.
especially by common people and by the           as a rare ;uzo, that is, a portrait made dur-   Although suspected by the Kamakura sho-
tough and unsophisticated warriors from          ing the subject's lifetime. (Most Japanese      gunate of being a Yuan spy, this deeply
eastern Japan.                                   "portraits" were posthumous, sometimes          cultured man had a strong spiritual impact
      According to temple tradition, this        by many generations.)                           on many people, including Hôjô Sadatoki
statue depicts Donkai (1265-1327), the                                                           (1271-1311), the shogunal regent from 1284
fourth patriarch of the Ji sect, the first ab-                                                   to 1301. Yishan became the abbot of Ken-
                                                                                                 chôji, Engakuji, and Jôchiji, renowned
94
Zen monasteries of Kamakura. His fame            with chinsó sculpture (portraits of Zen         returned to Kyoto with the backing of the
reached finally to Kyoto where he was in-        priests), he holds a hossu (whisk with long     shogunate and there, under the auspices
vited by the retired emperor Go-Uda              white hairs, symbolic of priestly office and    of the shogun Yoriie, converted Kenninji
(1267-1324), and was appointed the third         the brushing away of worldly thoughts) in       to the practice of Rinzai Zen. The affinity
abbot of Nanzenji. Go-Uda, devoted to            his right hand and sits on a chair (not ex-     of the warrior class for Zen, and the close
Yishan's faith, posthumously bestowed on         hibited). Chinsd sculpture typically cap-       relationships between members of the ba-
the priest the title Kokushi and built a         tures the realistic appearance of the           kufu and Zen prelates, which character-
mausoleum for him beside that of the em-         model, including such details as the large      ized the following several centuries, had
peror Kameyama (1249-1305), Go-Uda's fa-         mole on the left eyelid. The result is that     their beginnings in the work of Eisai. NK
ther. Yishan is known as the father of           the person's spirit also is conveyed. The
Gozan Bungaku (Literature of the Five            mild expression, the relaxed pose, and the
                                                                                                 50 Toyotomi Hideyoshi
Mountains), the literary movement es-            clothing, which is more or less symmetri-
                                                                                                    polychromed wood
poused by the scholar-monks of Japanese
Zen in the fourteenth and fifteenth centu-
                                                 cal, capture the unruffled state of mind of
                                                 the model. This fine chinsd was probably           h. 73.8 (29)
ries. He was also instrumental in transmit-      made around the time of Mujú's death in            Momoyama period, c. 1598-1615
ting from China to Japan the Zhu Xi              1312.                                              Osaka City
school of Confucianism.                                The head and body are made of two         Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598), the sec-
      An excellent example of chinsd sculp-      hollow pieces of wood, joined front to          ond "great unifier" of Japan, began his ca-
ture (portraits of Zen priests), this statue,    back. The Hdkydin dharani, a set of Eso-        reer in the service of the first, Oda
probably made soon after Yishan's death          teric Buddhist incantations, is written in-     Nobunga (1534-1582), whose military ge-
in 1317, is enshrined at Nanzen'in, a sub-       side, in Sanskrit. Most of the polychromy       nius carried him from a minor domain in
temple of Nanzenji and the site of the           that originally covered the entire surface is
                                                                                                 Owari Province to the mastery of most of
mausoleums of Kameyama and Yishan.               now lost, exposing the underlayers of sabi
                                                                                                 Japan. Hideyoshi's rise was even more dra-
Made of Japanese cypress (hinoki), the           urushi (raw lacquer mixed with pulverized
                                                                                                 matic: this son of a peasant farmer was
main part of the head and torso are made         stone) and black lacquer.                  SH   Nobunaga's equal as a strategist and his
of two hollow pieces joined front to back.
                                                                                                 superior as a diplomat. By 1590 he had re-
The eyes are crystal. Yishan holds a stick       49 Myóan Eisai                                  duced all of Japan to peace and fealty, had
called a keisaku (a disciplinary stick used
                                                    polychromed wood                             taken the title of Imperial Regent, and
on monks whose attention wandered dur-
                                                    h. 60.3 (233/4)                              could turn his attention to legitimating
ing meditation) in his right hand, and his
                                                    Kamakura period, i3th-i4th century           and controlling what he had won. Though
robe and kesa (priest's mantle) draped over
                                                                                                 his notion of civil administration was a
the chair (not exhibited).                  NK      Jufukuji, Kanagawa Prefecture
                                                                                                 simple and quite sketchy extension of the
                                                 Myôan Eisai (1141-1215) owes his eminence       domainal administration of a daimyo, his
48 Mujü Ichien                                   in Japanese history to two accomplish-          land survey (begun in 1585) transformed
   polychromed wood                              ments: the propagation of Rinzai Zen as         Japanese social and cadastral organization
   h. 79.4 (31^/4)                               an independent school of Buddhism, and          to the forms that prevailed throughout the
   Kamakura period, c. 1312                      the reintroduction (from China) of tea          Edo period. His territorial ambitions ex-
                                                 drinking and tea cultivation after several      tended to the (unachieved) conquest of
     Chômoji, Aichi Prefecture
                                                 centuries of disuse. Born in present-day        China; he understood the value of manu-
     Important Cultural Property                 Okayama Prefecture, he began religious          facturing and commerce and controlled
Mujü Ichien, born in 1226 in Kamakura,           life as a student of Esoteric doctrines, es-    them for his benefit; and his patronage of
was probably a member of the Kajiwara            pecially Tendai. But in the course of two       the arts was, by contemporary accounts,
family, which served the Kamakura sho-           trips to China to study Buddhist doctrine       both grandiose and knowing.
gunate. After taking the tonsure in Hitachi      he became persuaded of the greater valid-             As this sculpture suggests, he was ap-
Province (present-day Ibaraki Prefecture),       ity of Rinzai Zen teachings. Zen doctrines      parently an exceedingly homely man. No-
he studied the doctrines of the older            had been known in Japan since the sev-          bunaga, who greatly valued his abilities,
schools of Buddhism. He also studied Zen         enth century, but only as elements in the       called him "Monkey" (saru). Much of the
as a disciple of Enni Ben'en (1202-1280) at      teachings of other Buddhist schools; it was     extant portrait sculpture of Hideyoshi, like
Tôfukuji, a major Zen monastery in               Eisai who established Rinzai Zen as an in-      the painted portraits of him, was produced
Kyoto. He thus acquired a wide range of          dependent school, which soon acquired a         for the shrines built after his death. When
Buddhist learning. In 1262 Mujú became           great and influential following.                the Toyotomi family was destroyed by To-
the founding abbot of Chômoji, where he                On his return in 1191 from the second     kugawa leyasu (1543-1616) in 1615, these
lived for fifty years, during which time he      of his two trips to China, Eisai preached       shrines, which deified Hideyoshi, were de-
wrote many books, including Sasekishù (A         for a time in Kyushu, where he founded          stroyed or closed. Thus this sculpture can
Collection of Sand and Pebbles), a famous        Shôfukuji (near Hakata, present-day Fu-         be dated to the period between 1598 and
anthology of Buddhist stories in ten vol-        kuoka) and cultivated the tea seeds he had      1615.
umes. In 1282 he declined an invitation to       brought with him. He expressed his con-               Although its history is not known, this
become the second abbot of Tôfukuji. He          viction of the life- and health-giving prop-    work is one of the most idiosyncratic ex-
died in 1312 at the age of eighty-six at         erties of tea in Kissa ydjdki (On Drinking      amples of sculpted portraits of Hideyoshi.
Rengeji in Ise (Mie Prefecture), which he        Tea and Maintaining Health). His Zen            While the face reflects the stylized expres-
also headed. He left the following parting       teachings met with opposition from the es-      sion of the No mask of an old man, it still
verse:                                           tablished schools, and the court in Kyoto       retains a sense of realism and individuality.
A seagull floats over the sea                    enjoined Eisai to silence on the subject of     The work is made with the yosegi zukuri
Seven and eighty years                           Zen. But in 1199 he was in Kamakura,            technique (hollow joined woodblock), and
The wind rests, the waves are still              where his converts among the shogunate          the coloring and pedestal are later addi-
 Calm as in the days of yore.                    and the warriors included Hôjô Masako           tions.                                   NYS
      Muju's portrait is enshrined in the         and Minamoto Yoriie, widow and son of
 Founder's Hall at Chômoji. As is common          Yoritomo. In Kamakura in 1200 he became
                                                  founding abbot of Jufukuji, and in 1202 he
96
47
     97
     48
98
49
     99
  50
100
SI
                                               101
       h
53 Ishin Suden                                 shohatto (Rules for the Military Houses,        joined-wood (yosegi) structure of the head
   polychromed wood                            that is laws governing the daimyo and sam-      and body is no different from typical ex-
      h. 32.7 (127/8)                          urai) and the laws prohibiting Christianity.    amples. The eyes are crystal. The coloring
      Edo period, iyth century                 Also wielding tremendous influence with         of the hat, the chair, and the staff is well
                                               leyasu's successor, Hidetada, he was called     preserved. Although the face is somewhat
      Nanzenji, Kyoto
                                               Kokue no Saishd, or the premier who wore        lacking in liveliness and the body is gener-
Ishin Suden (1569-1632) was an early Edo       the black robes of a priest. He lost power      alized, this sculpture demonstrates the
Zen Buddhist priest of the Rinzai school.      during the reign of lemitsu (1604-1651), the    technical mastery of the era.              NYS
He was born to a retainer of the Muro-         third Tokugawa shogun.
machi shogunate, which collapsed when                This small portrait sculpture is placed
he was a child, and he entered the Zen         in the upper floor of the gate of Nanzenji,
monastery of Nanzenji and became a             which was rebuilt by Suden in 1628. Su-
priest. He became abbot in 1605, reinvigo-     den, seated on a chair, wears a hat, a
rated the monastery, and lived at Kon-         priestly robe, and, over it, a kesa (priest's
chiin, a subtemple. Serving Tokugawa           mantle). His left hand is palm down, while
leyasu (1543-1616) from 1608 on, he drafted    the right hand originally held either a ship-
the shogunate's diplomatic correspon-          pel (bamboo whip used for Zen training) or
dence. Eventually he supervised a wide         a hossu (whisk with long white hairs sym-
range of diplomatic and religious activi-      bolically used to brush away worldly
ties, and he participated in the drafting of   thoughts), now lost. The sleeves and the
laws for the shogunate, including the Buke     hem of the robe hang deeply in front, and
                                                a staff is placed at the side.
                                                     Although this hollow statue is small
                                                for a chinsd (Zen priest's portrait), the
102
53
     103
CALLIGRAPHY
          105
      54 Letter                                      (1274), is a recollection of the Chinese
         Wuxue Zeyuan (1226-1286)                    priest's friendship with his Japanese disci-
         hanging scroll; ink on paper                ple Muzo Jóshó (1234-1306), a relative of
         35.8x69.4(14x273/8)                         the regent Hojo Tokiyori (1227-1263).
         Kamakura period, 1283                       Muzo, originally from Sagami province,
                                                     went to China as a Zen student-pilgrim in
         Engakuji, Kanagawa Prefecture
                                                     1252, and there in 1254, while studying at
         Important Cultural Property                 Wanshouchan Si, on Mount Jing near
      Wuxue Zeyuan (Mugaku Sogen in Japa-            Hangzhou, he met Daxiu Zhengnian in
      nese), also known as Zeyuan (Shigen in         1254. Muzo returned to Japan after four-
      Japanese), was a Chinese monk of the Rin-      teen years of traveling in China, and was
      zai (Linji) school of Zen (Chan). A native     followed not long after by Daxiu
      of Mingzhou on the southeastern coast of       Zhengnian.
      China, he came to Japan in 1279, the year            The text recounts their first meeting
      the Chinese Southern Song Dynasty was          at the place of their master Shiji Xinyue
      overthrown by the Mongols, at the invita-      (d. 1254), their ensuing friendship, and
      tion of HÔjô Tokimune (1251-1284), regent      their reunion after Zhengnian's arrival in
      of the Kamakura shogunate. Appointed           Japan. It also relates Muzô's visit in 1274 to
      abbot of Kenchôji in Kamakura, Zeyuan          Hôgenji in Sagami Province, where
      taught Zen to Tokimune and many other          Zhengnian was abbot: Muzo asked
      warriors. When Tokimune founded Enga-          Zhengnian to add a preface to a scroll of
      kuji in 1282, Zeyuan was appointed its         poems by Chinese monks on the theme of
      founding abbot.                                the Stone Bridge at Mount Tiantai, the
            This letter from Wuxue Zeyuan to         great Buddhist center in Zhejiang Prov-
      Hôjô Tokimune was written in 1283, the          ince that Muzo had visited. The poem
      year after the founding of Engakuji,            scroll itself is lost, though the first half of
      though dated only to the eighteenth day         the poems are known through a later copy.
      of the seventh month. Demonstrating the         Zhengnian's calligraphy is an elegant ver-
      friendship between the regent and the           sion of the kaisho (regular, or standard)
      Chinese monk, the letter thanks Toki-           mode. The taut but dynamic structure of
      mune for the shden (manors) offered to          individual characters reflects the tradition
      the temple, including the Tomita manor of       of the great Northern Song Chinese callig-
      Owari Province, and for the migydsho            rapher Huang Tingjian (1045-1105). In the
      (writ) that designated the temple as the        quality of the brushstrokes, however,
      shogunate's place of worship.                   Zhengnian, like Wuxue Zeyuan, was influ-
            Zeyuan, who had a large number of         enced by the style of Yan Zhenqing (709-
      followers among Kamakura warriors,              784) of the Tang Dynasty.                     NYA
      played an important role in transmitting to
      Japan the contemporary Chinese calli-         56 The sobriquet Shun'oku
      graphic style of the Song Dynasty, which          and a dedicatory poem
      was strongly influenced by the great callig-
                                                        Muso Soseki (1275-1351)
      rapher of the Tang Dynasty, Yan Zhenqing
                                                        hanging scrolls; ink on paper
      (709-784).                                NYA
                                                        sobriquet, 34.0 x 77.7 (133/8 x 305/8);
      55 Preface to poems                               poem, 35.2 x 74.4 (13 7/8,x 29^4)
                                                        Nanbokucho period, 1346
          Daxiu Zhengnian (1214-1288)
          hanging scroll; ink on paper                  Rokuôin, Kyoto
          32.4 x 110.0 (12 3/4 x 43 vy                  Important Cultural Property
          Kamakura period, 1274                     Muso Soseki (cat. 10) from Ise Province
          Goto Museum, Tokyo                        was famous as a Zen priest, adviser to the
          Important Cultural Property               great and powerful of the shogunal and
                                                    imperial courts, calligraphier, painter, poet,
      A Linji Chan (Rinzai Zen) priest from the scholar, and garden designer. He first stud-
      Zhejiang province in southeastern China, ied the Tendai and Shingon schools of
      Daxiu Zhengnian (J:Daikyu Shônen) came Buddhism, and later converted to the Rin-
      to Japan in 1269 at the invitation of the re- zai school of Zen. As a young Zen novice,
      gent Hojo Tokimune (1251-1284), as had his he was briefly a student of the Chinese
      countryman Wuxue Zeyuan (cat. 54).            scholar-monk Yishan Yining (1247-1317), an
      Zhengnian lived at the monasteries of         association that was instrumental in Mu-
      Zenkôji, Kenchôji, Jufukuji, and Engakuji, so's later scholarly and literary eminence
      and became the founding abbot of Jôchiji, and leadership of the Gozan Bungaku, the
      all in or around Kamakura. For nearly         Sinophile literary movement centered
      twenty years he promoted the Chinese          around the Zen monasteries. He lived in
      Song dynasty style of Zen among Kama-         the major monasteries of Nanzenji in
      kura warriors. His cultural as well as reli-  Kyoto and Engakuji in Kamakura, but also
      gious influence on Hojo Tbkimune and          founded many temples and retreats in re-
      Sadatoki (1271-1311) was profound.            mote areas. In addition to establishing a
            This document, dated to the fourth
      month of the eleventh year of Bun'ei
106
54
55
lineage of disciples who dominated Rinzai        arrangement, is a dedicatory poem that           57 Fugen, Shukuryù, Keishô
Zen and its cultural tradition for many          accompanies the first:                              Ashikaga Yoshimitsu (1358-1408)
generations, Muso enjoyed the confidence                                                             hanging scrolls; ink on paper
                                                 A hundred flowers are originally flowers of
of the political leaders of his time. His con-     one branch                                        Fugen, 33.4 x 80.2 (13 l/s x 315/3);
verts included such luminaries as the em-                                                            Shukuryù, 33.5 x 80.2 (13 Vs x 315/8);
                                                 In the end I see that all fragrant flowers are
peror Go-Daigo (1288-1339), the regents                                                              Keishô, 33.5 x 80.3 (i^Vs x 315/3)
                                                   connected to my house
Hojo Sadatoki (1271-1311) and Takatoki                                                               Muromachi period, late 14th century
                                                 Suddenly opening the door, the peaceful air
(1303-1333), and the shogun Ashikaga Ta-
                                                   spreads                                           Engakuji, Kanagawa Prefecture
kauji (1305-1358) and his brother, Tadayoshi     Spring scene from here reaches all over the         Important Cultural Property
(1306-1352). With Musó's encouragement,             river and sand.
Ashikaga Takauji, who had first been Go-                                                          Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, the third shogun of
Daigo's ally and then his bitter enemy,          The name Shun'oku means "spring                  the Muromachi shogunate, was the grand-
built Tenryüji in Kyoto for the welfare of       house," and the poem, written at Nishi-          son of Takauji (1305-1358) and the son of
the deceased emperor's soul, and he made         yama, is dated to the spring of 1346. In the     Yoshiakira (1330-1367), the first and second
Muso its founding abbot. A master of gar-        third month of that year, Muso retired           shogun, respectively. Succeeding his fa-
den design, Muso created the gardens of          from the abbacy of Tenryüji to live in its       ther as shogun in 1366, Yoshimitsu built a
several Kyoto temples, including Saihoji         subtemple Ungoan. Muso was seventy-one           residence called Hana no Gosho (Palace of
and Tenryüji.                                    then and Shun'oku thirty-five. Musó's sig-       Flowers) in 1378 in the area of Kyoto called
      The calligraphy with the two semi-         nature, Bokutotsusd (simple and artless old      Muromachi, thus giving rise to the name
 cursive (gydsho) characters shun and oku is     man), and his seal appear between the two        Muromachi shogunate. In 1392, after fifty-
the sobriquet given to Muso's disciple           large characters; two seals and his signa-       six years of bitter division within the impe-
 Shun'oku Myôha (1311-1388); the callig-         ture are at the left of the poem.       NYA      rial family, Yoshimitsu succeeded in
 raphy with smaller characters, also in                                                           unifying the Southern and Northern
 semicursive script and in columnar                                                               courts. He became Dajd Daijin (prime
                                                                                                                                           107
          56
minister, the highest post in the imperial       Yoshimitsu is noted for his enthusiastic       kuji as the mortuary temple of Wuxue
bureaucracy) in 1394, and the following          and discriminating patronage of art and        Zeyuan (1226-1286), who was the latter's
year entered the Buddhist priesthood, as-        scholarship.                                   founding abbot. In keeping with their
suming the Buddhist name Doyu; he also                These three calligraphic works of two     function, the characters are written in the
used another Buddhist name, Tenzan. Tak-         characters each bear Ashikaga Yoshimi-         regular, or standard mode (kaisho), with
ing the tonsure, however, was not an abdi-       tsu's seals. Each work is stamped with a       great attention to balance and legibility.
cation of power but a means to wieldjt           vermilion square seal, Doyu, and a vermil-     They are dignified and monumental.
more effectively. He suppressed the Ouchi        ion tripod-shaped seal, Tenzan, referring to        According to the historical document
family and other powerful shugo daimyo in        Yoshimitsu's Buddhist names.                   Kamakura Gozanki (Record of the Kama-
the provinces and opened diplomatic rela-             Calligraphies of this type are known      kura Zen temples), Fugen, meaning "uni-
tions with China under the Ming Dynasty,         as gakuji, or "forehead characters." Incised   versal revelation," refers to the Tochido, or
calling himself Nihon kokud (King of Ja-         wooden plaques based on them were hung         Hall of the Local Deity; Shukuryù, mean-
pan). He also built a residential villa at Ki-   above the central entrances of temple          ing "lodging dragon," refers to the guest
tayama in northwestern Kyoto, which is           buildings. These three—Fugen, Shukuryû,        hall; and Keishd, meaning "cassia tree and
now Rokuonji, famous for its pondside            and Keishd—identify three buildings in         sunlight" refers to the Soshidô, or found-
Golden Pavilion (Kinkaku). In addition to        Shozokuin, originally a subtemple of Ken-      er's hall.                              NYA
his political and military abilities,            chóji, which was moved in 1335 to Enga-
108
57
     109
58
58 Wakagaishi                                  follower of the Zen priest Muso Soseki          kyô Ydhon—copied by Takauji; his young-
   Ashikaga Takauji (1305-1358)                (1275-1351). For the soul of the deceased       er brother, Tadayoshi (cat. 60); and Muso
   hanging scroll; ink on decorated paper      emperor Go-Daigo (1288-1339), Takauji           Soseki—was offered to Kongo Zanmaiin, a
      31.2 X 52.0 (l21/4 X 2Ol/z)              founded Tenryuji at Musô's urging and           subtemple of Kôyasan. Attached to the
      Nanbokucho period, 1344                  with Muso as its founding abbot. In his ef-     backs of the pages of the text are 120 po-
                                               forts to unify the country, he built in each    ems, each written on tanzaku (narrow
      Sekai Kyüseikyó (MOA Art Museum),        province a temple as a place of prayer for
      Shizuoka Prefecture                                                                      strips of poetry paper), including twelve by
                                               national peace and for the souls of the war     Takauji.
Kaishi is folded paper on which poems are      dead (whether they had fought with him                The paper in this example, known as
written at formal occasions, such as a ban-    or against him). This wakagaishi was re-        kumogami (paper decorated with cloud
quet. The term literally means paper kept      portedly offered to Kongôbuji, the Eso-         patterns), creates an illusion of space suit-
in the breast of the kimono ready to be        teric Shingon headquarters temple atop          able to the spirit of the poem. The poem
used when prompted. When waka (Japa-           Mount Koya in Wakayama Prefecture.              itself, occupying the three right-hand
nese poems) are written, they are called            Takauji was also a poet. Eighty-five       columns, is fluidly written in the Japanese
wakagaishi; when renga (linked verses) are     tanka (short poems) by him are included in      kana syllabary. The colophon occupies the
written, they are called rengagaishi.          the poetry anthology Zoku Goshùi Wd-            two lines at the right and is written in
      This wakagaishi was composed and         kashü and other imperial anthologies. The       semicursive (gydsho) characters. The poem
written by Ashikaga Takauji, the clan          Tsukubashù of 1357, an anthology of linked      expresses Takauji's devotion to Koyasan:
chieftain and successful warlord, who in       verses, contains sixty-seven of his renga. In
                                               this example of wakagaishi, Takauji praises     Atop Mount Takano [that is, at Koyasan]
1338 was appointed Seiitaishdgun (Great                                                        the religious candle
General Who Quells the Barbarians), the        the long tradition of the Buddhist faith on
                                               Mount Kôya. A colophon following the            mil never be extinguished',
first shogun of the Muromachi shogunate                                                        in the future world, whoever the ruler,
in Kyoto.                                      poem reads, tenth day, tenth month, third
                                               year ofKdei [corresponding to 1344], Mina-      it will shine as brightly.              TY
      Though his entire adult life was spent
in battle, intrigue, and the pursuit of        moto no Ason Takauji, Senior Second
power, Takauji was also deeply religious, a    Grade followed by Takauji's kad. Two days
                                               before this date, the Buddhist text Hdjaku-
110
59
59 Letter                                        placement, Takauji asks that Yoshiakira ar-     (popular name for Kyôô Gokokuji) in
   Ashikaga Takauji (1305-1358)                  range it quickly if he has an appropriate       Kyoto. From the time the shogunate was
   hanging scroll; ink on paper                  piece of land. The spontaneous calligra-        established in 1338, there was a division of
     31.0 X 44.0 (12 !/4 X iy 3/8)               phy (sôsho) and the subject of the letter re-   authority between Ashikaga Takauji (1305-
                                                 flect the affable and evenhanded side of        1358), who took military leadership, and his
     Nanbokuchô period, mid-i4th century
                                                 Takauji's character. The letter was proba-      younger brother, Tadayoshi, who super-
     Tokyo National Museum                       bly written in 1353 while Takauji remained      vised daily political affairs, including law-
                                                 in Kamakura, entrusting Kyoto to Yoshi-         suits. This writ was issued to convey a
As the emperor Go-Daigo's chief military         akira. It is addressed to Bômondono, a fa-      court decision based on Tadayoshi's
supporter, Ashikaga Takauji overthrew the        miliar name of Yoshiakira, after the name       authority.
shogunate and was instrumental in exter-         of his residence at Bómon.                TY         The management of some privately
minating the Hôjô family, which had con-                                                         owned manorial land in Harima province
trolled the shogunate for over a century.                                                        had been turned over to Tôji by the em-
But the two allies soon fell out, as each dis-   60 Writ
                                                    Ashikaga Tadayoshi (1306-1352)               peror Go-Uda (1267-1324) in the twelfth
covered the other's determination to be                                                          month of 1313, as were other similar prop-
master of the realm. Not without much               hanging scroll; ink on paper
                                                    35.0 x 57.0 (133/4 x 22^/2)                  erties in 1317. However, in 1349 the temple
hard fighting, Takauji drove Go-Daigo                                                            appealed to the shogunate against the jitd
from Kyoto and set up in his stead an em-           Nanbokuchô period, 1349
                                                                                                 (estate stewards) of the original owners,
peror of the rival line, who obligingly ap-          Kyoto FuritsuSógo Shiryókan                 who since 1340 had occupied the land and
pointed Takauji shogun.                              Important Cultural Property                 diverted the temple's lawful revenues. De-
      Takauji wrote this letter to his son and                                                   spite the government's summons, the
heir, Yoshiakira (1330-1367), the second         This document, one of over twenty-four          stewards had not come to Kyoto to justify
shogun. He has unwittingly given away,           thousand known as the Tôji documents, is        their actions. Therefore, Ashikaga Tada-
the letter says, a portion of the land once      a gechijd (warrior's order given to his re-     yoshi ordered in this writ that their illegal
owned by Akamatsu Norisuke (d. 1351), a          tainers) by Ashikaga Tadayoshi in response
powerful daimyo of Harima and Bizen              to the complaint of a certain Kôshin, the
provinces who supported the Ashikaga.            zdss/zo (temple representative) of Tôji
Since Norisuke had demanded land for re-
                                                                                                                                          111
           60
61
112
62
occupation be stopped, one-fifth of their        tempted to reassure the court and the           ince to Gifu in Mino Province; it signals
land be taken away, and the management           townsmen by preventing pillage and gen-         his intention to unify Japan under his own
of the areas returned to Toji. The writ is       eral lawlessness on the part of his troops.     rule through military power. Nobunaga
dated to the twenty-seventh day of the in-       To this end he issued under his seal spe-       used this seal until the first month of 1570;
tercalary sixth month of the fifth year of       cific orders of protection and prohibitions     thereafter he used the same characters in
Jôwa (1349). Although the document may           against violence to persons or property.        a horseshoe-shaped vermilion seal.        YK
have been written by a scribe serving Ta-              The document illustrated here was is-
dayoshi, the writ is official, since Tada-       sued for the protection of Tóji, and con-
                                                 sists of three articles of prohibition:         62 Letter
yoshi added his kad at the end.          TY
                                                                                                    Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598)
                                                 Prohibited in the Tdji complex                     - hanging scroll; ink on paper
61 Prohibitions                                  Item: Violence and disturbance by our              28.6 48.5 (11 1/4 X 151/8)
   Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582)                         forces
   hanging scroll; ink on paper                                                                     Momoyama period, 1590
                                                 Item: Unlawful taking of land and arson
   35.5x53.0(14x207/8)                           Item: Cutting down bamboo and trees                Myohoin, Kyoto
   Muromachi period, 1568                        Those who violate these rules will be swiftly   Toyotomi Hideyoshi, one of Japan's most
   Kyoto FuritsuSógóShiryókan                       and strictly punished. This is ordained      powerful military leaders, was the son of
   Important Cultural Property                      from above.                                  an unknown peasant. He served Oda No-
                                                 The ninth month of the eleventh year of         bunaga (1534-1582), and after Nobunaga
Oda Nobunaga is remembered in Japanese              Eiroku [1568], Danjô no Jo [Judge of the     was assassinated in 1582 by his vassal
history for his attempts in the latter part of      Office of Justice]                           Akechi Mitsuhide (1528-1582), Hideyoshi
the sixteenth century to unify under his                                                         defeated and killed Mitsuhide in just nine
                                                      Toji was the Kyoto headquarters of
aegis a nation torn by civil strife among                                                        days. In the following year Hideyoshi de-
                                                 Esoteric Buddhism, and the document is
many contending barons. Having first uni-                                                        stroyed his rivals Oda Nobutaka (1562-
                                                 among the twenty-four thousand and
fied Owari and Mino provinces, he en-                                                            1583), the third son of Nobunaga, and
                                                 more historical documents that constitute
tered Kyoto on the twenty-sixth day of the                                                       Shibata Katsuie (1522-1583). Between 1585
                                                 the 'Toji documents." The oval vermilion
ninth month of 1568, as a supporter of                                                           and 1590 he conquered or brought to
                                                 seal, Tenka Fubu (military rule throughout
Ashikaga Yoshiaki (1537-1597), who became                                                        terms the following powerful rivals: the
                                                 the nation), at the bottom of the left
shogun under his auspices. Upon taking                                                           Chosokabe family of Shikoku, the Shi-
                                                 column is a seal Nobunaga began to use
control of the capital, Nobunaga at-
                                                 around the eleventh month of 1567, when
                                                 he moved his garrison from Owari Prov-
                                                                                                                                          113
   63
mazu family of the Satsuma domain in            Now that I have at last had Odawara tightly      down. At a later date the letter was cut in
Kyushu, and the Later Hôjô family, who          besieged, I control eighty percent of what       half along the crease and rejoined so that
controlled the Kanto from their garrison        goes on in the provinces, and even sum-          both parts are right side up.            YK
town of Odawara. After these tremendous         moned peasants so that they would follow
victories, he subjugated the other daimyo       my strict orders. Since Odawara is the key to    63 Letter
without a fight, thus achieving national        the Kanto and to the entire nation, I have to
                                                                                                    Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616)
unification and laying the foundation for       starve them out, so it will have to take time.
                                                                                                    hanging scroll; ink on paper
Japan's early modern society.                   However, as for myself, I will return to
                                                                                                    3O.2 X 51.5 (ll7/8 X 20J/4)
     This personal letter, written in a         Kyoto before the year is over, partly to in-
loose, informal cursive (sdsho) by Hide-        quire after you and the young prince, so I          Edo period, 1615
yoshi, is dated to the first day of the fifth   will see you. Please feel at ease. Farewell.        Tokyo National Museum
month of 1590, during Hideyoshi's siege of           First day of the fifth month.                  Important Art Object
Odawara Castle, the headquarters of Hôjô
Ujimasa (1538-1590) and his son Ujinao          "Dainanko," a dialectical variant of daina-      After the death of the military leader To-
(1562-1591), the leaders in the east. Ad-       gon (Grand Councilor), refers to Hidenaga,       yotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598), Tokugawa
                                                Hideyoshi's half brother. Hidenaga was ill       leyasu and his allies defeated a great coali-
dressing his mother, Tenzuiin (referred to
                                                in Kyoto that spring but seems to have re-       tion of daimyo led by Ishida Mitsunari
in the letter by her title Omandokoro, or
                                                gained his health and returned to his cas-       (1560-1600) at Sekigahara in 1600 (cat. 104),
mother of the Sesshd (regent, that is Hide-
                                                tle at Yamashiro in Yamato Province (part        and in 1603 he was appointed by the em-
yoshi's mother), Hideyoshi inquires after
                                                of present-day Nara Prefecture). The             peror Seiitaishdgun (Great General Who
her health and reports the military
                                                "young prince" refers to Hideyoshi's first       Quells the Barbarians), thus formally es-
situation:
                                                son, Toyotomi Sutemaru (cat. 51), who was        tablishing the Edo shogunate. Passing on
Please, please do not worry about me. I am      born in the fifth month of the previous          the charge of the shogunate to his son, Hi-
very healthy and am fed well, so I would        year. In this one letter two sides of Hidey-     detada (1579-1632), in 1605, Tokugawa
like you to feel at ease. I beg you to take a   oshi's character are revealed: the inexora-      leyasu came to be called Ogosho, an hon-
trip and divert yourself so you will feel       ble conquerer, and the affectionate son.         orable title for a former shogun or sho-
young. Also, more than anything else I am             The paper was originally folded in         gun's father. He destroyed Toyotomi
happy to hear that Dainanko is healthy.         half along the crease that runs across it.       Hideyori (1593-1615), the son of Hideyoshi,
Please tell him to concentrate on his health    The letter was begun with the fold under-        in the battles at Osaka in the winter of
all the more.                                   neath, then the paper was flipped to con-        1614 and the summer of 1615, and laid the
      I am delighted to hear from you again     tinue the text on the other side, the fold       foundations for the two hundred and fifty
and again. Please do not worry about me.        still at the bottom; when the paper was un-      years of the Edo shogunate.
                                                 folded, one side of the letter was upside
114
64
65
     115
                  66
     This letter, in leyasu's informal cur-    or Chobo are known, each of them reflect-          This wakagaishi (paper of poems'; cat.
sive (sdsho) writing style, is addressed to     ing his tender affection for his grand-     58), brushed by Yüsai, contains two poems
Chobo, maid of his granddaughter               daughter.                                 YK he composed on cherry blossoms, each
Senhime, and inquires after Senhime's                                                       poem based on one line of a Chinese
health. He says that he is sending a certain                                                couplet:  Í face flowers all day long / Re-
Tôkurô as a messenger to bring him news        64 Wakagaishi
                                                   Hosokawa Yusai (1534-1610)               maining   flowers are fragrant in the wind.
of his granddaughter:                                                                       The   poems   convey the peaceful thoughts
                                                   hanging scroll; ink on paper
Í am truly concerned about her illness, and                                                 on a spring day of an old poet who has
                                                   Zy.l X 41.0 (1O5/8 X 10 Vs)
caringly I write the following.                                                             lived through the vicissitudes of a world
                                                   Momoyama period, late loth-early
     Since Ï worry about how she is feeling                                                 torn by incessant warfare:
                                                   iyth century
in her illness, Ï am sending Tôkurô. How is                                                 Two Compositions
she doing? I want to know the particulars.         Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                                                            Hôin [Seal of the Law; the highest
Tôkurô should report back in detail.           Hosokawa Fujitaka, or Yüsai, his better-        Buddhist rank given by the court]
     To Chobo         Daifu                    known Buddhist name, was a high-ranking         Genshi [alternative Buddhist name of
     Senhime, the daughter of the second       warrior and daimyo whose life spanned           Yúsai]
shogun, Hidetada, lived at Osaka Castle as     the late Muromachi and Momoyama pe-
                                               riods. The second son of Mibuchi Haru-       Í face flowers all day long [in Chinese]
the wife of Toyotomi Hideyori until the
castle fell in the fifth month of 1615. She    kazu, he was adopted in 1540, at the age of Here since the morning sun—
then married Honda Tadatoki. After Tada-       six, by Hosokawa Mototsune. He served        when at all
toki died in 1626, she lived in Edo under      Ashikaga Yoshiharu (1511-1550), the twelfth did the light shift?
the name Tenjuin. The maid Chobo               shogun, and after his death became an ally I have not even looked aside
served Senhime, changed her name to            of Oda Nobunaga (1534-1582), supporting      being with flowers all day till dusk.
Matsuzaka Tsubone, and lived until the         Yoshiaki (1537-1597), the fifteenth shogun.
                                                                                            Remaining flowers are fragrant in the wind
age of ninety. The letter is signed Daifu      Later he served Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-
                                                                                               [in Chinese]
(Inner Minister), referring to leyasu. Sev-    1598) and became the daimyo of Miyazu
eral other letters from leyasu to Senhime       Castle in Tango Province, with a fief of
                                                120,000 koku.
116
67                                                                                68
     \ it has already                                 bunaga (1534-1582) as the daimyo of                 Sansai was not the author of this
     scattered them                                   Miyazu Castle in Tango Province. When          poem, which appears in one of the pref-
     perhaps it regrets today;                        Akechi Mitsuhide (d. 1582) assassinated        aces to the tenth-century Kokinshù (An-
     sending flowers' fragrance                       Nobunaga, he tried to persuade Sansai,         thology of ancient and modern Japanese
     spring -wind blows.                              who was his son-in-law, to join his cause.     poems). Sansai copied out the text of this
                                                      In spite of the marriage alliance, Sansai      well-known poem partly as a prayer, partly
           Yûsai is a very model of the cultivated    threw his support to Toyotomi Hideyoshi
     daimyo: competent in warfare and admin-                                                         as an exercise in calligraphy.
                                                      (1537-1598), Nobunaga's trusted vassal,             The note attached to the left edge ad-
     istration-, a famous poet of the arts and lit-
                                                      who defeated and killed Mitsuhide. Later       dresses this copy of the poem to Nentoku
     erature of antiquity. He left many works
                                                      Sansai served Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616)      Daimyój in (Great God of the Year), be-
     on classical literature, including Hyakunin      and became the daimyo of Kokura Castle
     isshushd (Annotations on A Poem Each by                                                         cause it was written on the New Year's
                                                      in Buzen, northern Kyushu. Sansai was a        Day as a prayer to the guardian god of the
     One Hundred Poets) and he monogatari             cultured man well versed in Japanese po-
     ketsugisho (Annotations on Tales                                                                coming year. It is signed Sansai Soryu,
                                                      etry and painting. He is remembered as an      Soryu being Sansai's Buddhist name. YK
     oflse) as well as an anthology of poems,         important disciple of the tea master Sen
     Shùmyôshù.                                 YK
                                                      no Rikyü (1522-1591).
                                                            Sansai wrote this wakagaishi (paper of   66 Concerning Kokinshù
     65 Wakagaishi                                    poems; cat. 58) in the semicursive (gydsho)       Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610)
        Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646)                    mode, arranging the characters on the pa-        hanging scroll; ink on paper
        hanging scroll; ink on paper                   per in the style called chirashigaki (scat-      29.0 x 38.0(113/8 x 15)
        3i.ox47.o(i2 1 / 4 xi8 1 / 2 )                 tered writing):                                  Momoyama period, 1600
        Edo period, early iyth century                Flowers on the trees                              Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
        Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                            in bloom at Naniwazu                           Much knowledge of all kinds, including
                                                      say, 'Now the winter                           that in the realm of bun (arts) and bu
     Hosokawa Sansai (Tadaoki), son of Hoso-          yields its place to the springtime!'           (arms), was in Japan considered secret, or
     kawa Yüsai (1534-1610), served Oda No-           Flowers blooming on the trees.                 privileged, and was transmitted orally from
                                                      (Translated in McCullough 1985^ 319.)          a master to a worthy pupil—a process
                                                                                                                                            117
known in traditional Japan as denju (liter-    "brush traces of men of antiquity." (By          ern Japanese poems). The twenty-volume
ally, "to transmit and impart"). Knowledge     contrast, the Chinese or Chinese-inspired        Kokinshu, in which the emperor Daigo
of how to read and understand poems of         calligraphy produced by Zen monks was            (885-930) had contemporary and recent
antiquity, too, was handed down that way.      known as bokuseki, or "ink traces")              poets' waka (31-syllable Japanese poems)
This document is about Kokin denju, the              This is a fragment from an early-          collected by imperial edict, is the oldest
transmission of criticisms and interpreta-     twelfth-century transcription of the late-       anthology of such poems of Japan. Along
tions of the poems in Kokin wakashù (Ko-       tenth-century Shuishd (Selected                  with Shin Kokinshu (New anthology of an-
kinshù for short; Anthology of ancient and     gleanings), a private (as opposed to impe-       cient and modern Japanese poems), it is
modern Japanese poems), an early-tenth-        rial) anthology in ten volumes said to have      the most famous imperial anthology.
century compilation. Knowledge of the          been compiled by Fujiwara Kintô (966-                 This fragment is from a kohitsugire
Kokin denju tradition, which was begun by 1041), a courtier and poet of the mid-Heian           called Minbugire—supposedly so called af-
the poet Sôgi (1421-1502) of the Muro-         period. The fragment is called a shita-e         ter an owner who bore the title Minbu
machi period and passed on within the          (underdrawing) because there is a delicate       (Officer of the Department of Finances).
Nijô school of poetry, was considered a su-    drawing on the paper, in silver paint, of        Originally the Minbugire was in book
preme achievement in the Japanese po-          plants and birds.                                form. The poems were written in two
etry tradition of the middle ages.                   Originally from the first of a set of      columns each, with eight to ten columns
      Hosokawa Yúsai, the calligraphier of     scrolls, this fragment presents seven lines      on a page. The fragment here, a single
this document, was a member of the Nijô        on the theme of spring. The first three          page, contains two poems and half of a
school and learned in the art of Kokin         columns from the right are a headnote to         third copied from the Kokinshu, one poem
denju. The document is a certificate of Ko- the poem, which composes the next two               by Oshikôchi Mitsune (fl. c. 900), a com-
kin denju from Yüsai to the imperial           columns. The remaining two columns are           piler of the Kokinshu, and two by anony-
prince Hachijô (Prince Toshihito, 1579-        the headnote to the next poem, which is          mous poets. The transcribed poems are
1629), the younger brother of the emperor      not transcribed here. The text reads:            numbered 793,794, and 795 in the fif-
Go-Yozei (1571-1617). On the eighteenth                                                         teenth volume of the Kokinshu, entitled
day of the seventh month of 1600, just be-     Priest Ekei, on cherry blossoms in bloom in
                                                                                                "Love":
                                                  a dilapidated house which nobody was
fore the Battle of Sekigahara (cat. 104), the
                                                  expected to visit:                            Anonymous
forces of Ishida Mitsunari (1560-1600) laid
 siege to Yüsai at Tanabe Castle in Tango      On a field of wild grass                         If there were never
 Province (part of present-day Kyoto Pre-      in an uninhabited house                          the slightest flow of water
 fecture). On the twenty-seventh day, Go-      cherry blossoms are in bloom;                    in the dry river
 Yôzei, gravely concerned that the Kokin       will they perhaps peacefully                     of our love, then I would think
 denju tradition might_end with Yüsai, had     scatter in the wind?                             the channel doomed to vanish.
 Prince Hachijô send Oishi Jinsuke, his                                                         Mitsune
 councilor, to persuade Yüsai to make          Composed while regretting the falling
 peace. As a military man, Yüsai declined.        cherry blossoms at the house of               Has your love then cooled?
 This certificate, dated the twenty-ninth         Yoshichika, Junior Middle Councilor.          Well and good as Yoshino,
 day of the seventh month, 1600, indicates           The beautiful, fluent kana calligraphy     River of Good Fields:
 that Yüsai, facing the possibility of death,                                                   I will still bear in memory
                                               is ascribed to Minamoto Toshiyori (1055-
 had decided to make Prince Hachijô his        1129), an attribution that cannot be ac-         the words we spoke at the start.
 successor in the Kokin denju tradition.       cepted with certainty. Several calligraphic      Anonymous
 Signed at the end Yùsai and Genshi, both      works by the same hand are known, in-
 of them Buddhist names, the document                                                           In this world of ours,
                                               cluding Gen'eibon Kokinshu (the Gen'ei-
 records three generations of Yüsai's line of era edition of the Kokinshù), Gosenshù-           what is it that resembles
 transmission of Kokin denju: first Sankôin, gire (Fragments of the later anthology of          the human heart?
 a courtier also known as Sanjônishi Saneki ancient and modern Japanese poems), and             Dyestuffs from the day flower
 (1511-1579), who transmitted Kokin denju                                                       (all too quick to fade away).
                                               Sujigire (Fragments of the Kokinshu) all of      (Translated in McCullough 19853,174.)
 to Yüsai; second, Yüsai himself; and third, the early twelfth century.                    YK
 Prince Hachijô, to whom Yüsai passed on                                                             The flowing calligraphy suggests a
 the tradition.                             YK                                                  slow movement of the brush, with atten-
                                               68 Minbugire                                     tion to even spacing between characters
                                                   hanging scroll; ink on decorated paper       and some characters linked with a consis-
 67 Shitae Shuishdgire                              25.4 x 17.0(10 x 63/4)                      tent leftward tilt. The imported Chinese
     hanging scroll; ink on decorated paper         Heian period, early i2th century            paper is decorated with a design of ara-
     26.3 X 18.5 (l03/8 X 7^4)                                                                  besques, roundels, and phoenixes printed
                                                    Sekai Kyüseikyo (MOA Art Museum),
      Heian period, early i2th century                                                          in mica. Although the calligraphy is com-
                                                    Shizuoka prefecture
     Tokyo National Museum                          Important Art Object                        monly ascribed to Minamoto Toshiyori
                                                                                                (1055-1129), a poet of the late Heian period,
 Beginning in the late sixteenth century,       Besides being cut up into fragments to          there is no evidence for this attribution.
 the connoisseurship and collecting of old      adorn the tokonoma during the tea cere-         Judging from the calligraphic style, the po-
 Japanese calligraphies, particularly to        mony, fine old calligraphies might also be      ems appear to have been copied in the
 adorn the tokonoma of the tea hut during       dismembered to be pasted into albums            twelfth century.                          YK
 tea ceremonies, led to the systematic dis-     known as tekagami, or "mirrors of [skilled]
 membering of old Japanese books and            hands." These albums of kohitsugire (cat.
 scrolls, particularly those of thirteenth-     67) were collectors' items, or copyists'
 century date or earlier. These fragments       models, or both together. They became
 (kire or -gire, literally, "cut pieces") are   popular during the seventeenth century.
 known as kohitsugire, kohitsu being a               The piece shown here is a fragment
  shortened form of kojin no hisseki, or        of a transcription from the early-tenth-
                                                century compilation Kokin Wakashù (or
                                                Kokinshu, Anthology of ancient and mod-
 118
     6ç Precepts of the Seven Buddhas                 sive (gydsho) modes, executed in bold,
        Ikkyú Sójun (1394-1481)                       rough, and swift brushwork that conveys
        hanging scroll; ink on paper                  something of the tempestuous nature of
        125.3 x 3 2 - 2 (493/8 x 125/8)               the calligrapher. The brush was apparently
        Muromachi period, i5th century                made of a piece of bamboo, finely split at
                                                      one end. The brush movement was so
        Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                      quick that Ikkyú inadvertently omitted the
     A single line of bold calligraphy fills the      character "good" from the second verse.
     narrow paper:                                    This character was added later in small,
                                                      precise calligraphy, to the right of Ikkyú's
     Do not commit evil deeds;                        text. On the lower left is stamped a square
     Strive to do good deeds.                          relief seal, Ikkyu.                       YS
     These are the first two of four verses
     known as Shichibutsu tsùkai no ge, or
     Verses of Precepts of the Seven Buddhas,
     from the early Buddhist sutra Zdichi-agon-
     kyd (Ekottara-agama-sutra in Sanskrit;
     translated into Chinese during the Eastern
     Jin Dynasty, AD 317-420), which summa-
     rizes the essential teachings of the Bud-
     dhas. The remaining verses, not
     transcribed here by Ikkyu, read:
     Purify your thoughts—
     This is what the Buddhas teach.
     The calligraphy is by the famous Zen
     monk Ikkyu Sojun (cat. 11). A work like
     this, written in a single column, is known
     as ichigydsho, or a single line of calligraphy
     that often transcribes revered names or
     epithets or extracts from sacred texts—a
     kind of written icon. This form is distinctly
     Japanese, being unknown in China. A cal-
     ligraphy with four large characters, Sha Ka
     Nyo Rai (the Buddha Sakyamuni), written
     by Tettô Gikô (1295-1369), the second ab-
     bot of Daitokuji, is an early Japanese ex-
     ample of ichigydsho. It is possible that
     Ikkyu, in his deep veneration of this mas-
     ter, followed the same format. Another
     well-known work in this format by Ikkyu is
     an epithet, The First Patriarch, Great Mas-
     ter Bodhidharma, in a private collection in
     this country.
           Ikkyu was born on New Year's Day,
     1394, the son of the emperor Go-Komatsu
     (r. 1392-1411); because he was born outside
     the palace he was never acknowledged as
     an imperial son. Ikkyu was a passionate
     and outspoken iconoclast—a harsh critic
     of received pieties, ceremonious practices,
     and the contemporary Zen establishment,
     which thrived through the patronage of
     the Ashikaga government and powerful
      daimyo. His fulminations against most of
      the Zen hierarchy were vitriolic, and he
      refused all clerical appointments, choosing
      instead to move from one small hermitage
      to the next, training only a handful of dis-
      ciples. Ikkyú finally became abbot of
      Daitokuji, in 1474, at the age of eighty-
      four, but only in response to an imperial
      summons to rebuild the devastated Daito-
      kuji, and he retained the post for less than
      a year.
            The calligraphy here is somewhere
      between the regular (kaisho) and semicur-
69
                                                                                               119
RELIGIOUS
SCULPTURE/
             121
      yo Fudo Myôô with two attendants
         Unkei (d. 1223)
         polychromed wood
         h. Fudô Myôô, 136.8 (537/8); Kongara
         Dôji, 77.9 (305/8); Seitaka Dôji, 81.8
         (3^A)
         Kamakura period, 1186
         Ganjôjuin, Shizuoka Prefecture
         Important Cultural Property
70
122
      ji Senju Kannon                                 72 Anteira Taishó and Santeira Taishó
         gilt bronze                                     polychromed wood
         h. 104.5 (4ia/8)                                h. Anteira Taishó, 91.5 (36);
         Kamakura period, c. 1237-1247                   Santeira Taishó, 81.7 ($2l/s)
         Nagoji, Chiba Prefecture                        Kamakura period, i3th century
         Important Cultural Property                     Honzan Jionji, Yamagata Prefecture
      This gilt bronze Buddhist image, with           Anteira Taishó (Divine General Anteira)
      forty-two arms cast separately and at-          and Santeira Taishó (Divine General San-
      tached to its body, represents the typical      teira) are two of the Twelve Divine Gen-
      form of Senju Kannon (literally thousand-       erals (Jüni Shinshó), attendants of Yakushi,
      armed Kannon, though most images were           Buddha of Healing. The twelve divine
      made with "many" arms representing the          generals, presented as armored warriors,
      canonical thousand). The thousand arms          are said to protect devotees of the Yakushi
      stand for the infinite number of means          Buddha. In the Yakushi Hall at Honzan
      that Kannon, Bodhisattva of Compassion,         Jionji, the twelve generals flank the princi-
      employs to save suffering creatures. Origi-     pal images, the triad of Yakushi and his bo-
      nally this image also represented Eleven-       dhisattvas Nikkó (Solar Radiance) and
      Headed Kannon, each head symbolizing a          Gakkó (Lunar Radiance).
      vow to save the world. But the eleven                  Each general represents one of Yaku-
      small heads and the image of Amida, Bud-        shi's vows to save humankind. In addition,
      dha of Compassion, to whom the bodhi-           the twelve generals correspond to the
      sattva Kannon pertains, have been lost.         twelve horary animals who represent the
      Portions of fingers and accessories are also    twelve divisions of heaven in ancient Chi-
      missing.                                        nese astronomy: rat, ox, tiger, rabbit,
            A kao carved in the joint of one of the   dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey,
      hands indicates that this image was made        rooster, dog, and boar. Each animal repre-
      for Chiba Tanetoki, a descendant of Chiba        sents one year of a twelve-year cycle; it
      Tsunetane who was a supporter of Mina-           also represents a day in a twelve-day cycle,
      moto Yoritomo (1147-1199). Tanetoki was a        a two-hour period in each day, and a com-
      minor ruler in the northeast section of          pass direction. Each general would protect
      present-day Chiba Prefecture. Following          the time periods and direction ruled by his
      the custom of warriors of eastern Japan,         corresponding animal. Anteira Taishó cor-
      who typically built a place of worship in-       responds to the rabbit, Santeira Taishó to
       side their residences to enshrine a Bud-        the snake.
      dhist image, Tanetoki probably placed this              Among the twelve pieces, the statue
       Senju Kannon in a corner of his dwelling.       of Santeira Taishó is particularly fine. He
      This piece probably was made between             strikes a vigorous pose, with his left arm
       1237 and 1247, when Tanetoki served the         raised, and wind-blown hair and sash. His
       Kamakura shogun, before the Kamakura            upturned face expresses anger through
       area became the center of sculpture in the      the knitted brows and the down-turned
       Eastern provinces.                              mouth. The image is made of Japanese
            The protruding abdomen adds a note         cypress (hinoki) in the joined woodblock
       of realism to the otherwise columnar form.      technique (yosegi zukuri), in which the
       The style of this powerful figure derives       main part of the figure—head and torso—
       from Unkei's (d. 1223; cat. 70), which set      is assembled from more than two pieces of
       the standard for sculpture in the eastern       separately carved and hollowed-out wood.
       provinces. A delicate expression in the          Cloth is pasted on the surface of the sculp-
       slanting eyes under long arching eye-           ture, which is then coated with sabi urushi
       brows, the narrow hips, and the elabo-          (a paste of raw lacquer and pulverized
       rately draped garment, though, are less          stone), black lacquer, and white pigment.
       characteristic of Unkei, and suggest the in-     Over this, flower designs and dragons are
       fluence of Higo Jôkei, a sculptor of Bud-        carefully drawn with shaded colored pig-
       dhist images who was then active in Kyoto        ments. For the hair and the cuirass, cut
       and who adopted the style of Song dynasty        gold leaf is applied.
       Buddhist paintings.                     NYS            Sagaeshó, where Jionji is located, was
                                                        a manor famous from the Heian period for
                                                        its fine horses, which were sent to Kyoto
                                                        for the use of the courtiers. In the main
                                                        hall of Jionji are a number of statues, in-
                                                        cluding the five aspects of the Bodhisattva
                                                        of Wisdom and Intellect (Monju Goson),
                                                        which were made in Kyoto in the late
                                                        twelfth century. This indicates the exis-
                                                        tence of an early and strong tie between
                                                        the temple and Kyoto. The statues of the
                                                        Twelve Divine Generals were probably
                                                        made by a Buddhist sculptor in Kyoto.
                                                                                                    SH
124
71
     125
      72
126
73 Aizen Myóó in shrine
   Join and Shükichi (fl. 1297)
   gilt bronze
   h. figure, 7.9 (31/8); shrine, 30.0 (ii3/4)
   Kamakura period, 1297
   Shômyôji, Kanagawa Prefecture
   Important Cultural Property
Aizen Myóó (Lord of Passions), like Fudó,
is one of the Kings of Bright Wisdom,
guardians of Buddist truth. He symbolizes
the transformation of the human passions,
particularly lust and greed, into Enlighten-
ment. He is customarily shown, as here,
wearing a lion crown, with a third eye of
wisdom in the center of his forehead, with
six arms, and with an Esoteric Buddhist
symbol in each hand. Since the myoo are
fierce aspects of the Buddha, his hair
stands up in anger. Behind him is a sun
halo, and he sits, like most Buddhist dei-
ties, on a lotus throne. Beneath the lotus
blossom seat is a vase, traditionally con-
taining treasures; these are depicted on
the base of the lotus throne, closely follow-
ing the iconographie prescriptions of Eso-
teric Buddhist sutras. Much care has been
lavished on the realistic modeling of the
angry face and the exaggerated folds of
the hem of the garment.
      The lion crown, hair, arms, and acces-
sories were each made separately. Each of          73
the many tiers of the pedestal is made of
cast bronze, hammered bronze plate, and
cast silver, and decorated with gold and sil-
ver gilt and inlay. The wooden zushi (min-
iature shrine) may have been made at the
same time as the image, or shortly after.
An inscription on the back of the pedestal
indicates that this small, elaborately cast
image was made at Shômyôji in 1297.
      The names of the sculptors, Join and
Shükichi, father and son, are recorded in
the inscription. Calligraphy on other ex-
tant items in Shômyôji reveals that Join
and Shükichi were metalworkers from the
Eastern provinces and were active at Shô-
myôji and at Gokurakuji in Kamakura, an-
other Esoteric Buddhist temple. This
image has a simplicity and directness that
bespeaks the style of provincial artisans.
                                             NYS
                                                        127
74 JizóBosatsu
   polychromed wood
   h. 167.5 (66)
   Kamakura period, late i3th century
      Jufukuji, Kanagawa Prefecture
      Important Cultural Property
74
128
75
75 Dainichi Nyorai in shrine                    nies performed by learned Esoteric monks.       image is said originally to have been en-
   lacquer and gold leaf on wood                     Dainichi is shown seated cross-legged      shrined in Hokkaiji, built in the late
   h. figure, 32.1 (i25/s); shrine, 83.7 (33)   on a lotus throne in the standard posture       twelfth century by Ashikaga Yoshikane
   Kamakura period, late izth century           of Buddhist meditation. His hand gesture        (d. 1199), an important figure in the Kama-
    Kôtokuji, Tochigi Prefecture                (S: mudra) is specific to Esoteric Bud-         kura shogunate in the northern part of
                                                dhism: the right fist clasps the index finger   Ashikaga. Yoshikane's wife was a younger
Dainichi Nyorai (or Dainichi Buddha) was of the left hand, symbolizing all-                     sister of Hôjô Masako, wife of Minamoto
the principal deity of the Esoteric Tendai      encompassing and cosmic wisdom. The             Yoritomo (1147-1199), the founder of the
and Shingon schools of Buddhism, which          hand gesture and the golden Wheel of the        shogunate. Around that time, the Hojo
exalted him as the source of all existence.     Buddhist Law identify him as Ichiji             family placed Buddhist images by Unkei in
Esoteric Buddhism, which originated in          Kinrin—ichiji being the magical "single         Ganjôjuin, Shizuoka Prefecture. Consider-
India, reached Japan via China in the           syllable" that expresses Dainichi's power,      ing the close kinship of the Ashikaga to
ninth century. This new form of Bud-            kinrin being the "golden wheel" symbolic        the Hôjô, it is possible that this statue of
dhism, into which elements of Hinduism          of Buddhism's universality. The pedestal,       Dainichi was indeed made by Unkei (d.
had been merged, emphasized magical             made of lacquered and gilded wood, forms        1223, cat. 108), who worked for the Hôjô
cult practices, mystical formulas, an enor-     a lotus throne, supported by eight wooden       family.                                      SH
mous pantheon of vastly empowered and           gold-painted lions, of which four are ex-
intricately related deities, religious ecstasy, tant. Crystal pendants hang from the tips
and the conviction that only the initiate       of the lotus petals. X-ray examination of
could participate actively in the faith. As     the figure of Dainichi has revealed that on
often happened with Buddhist deities            the inside are a round jewel (shingetsurin,
translated to Japan, in the late Heian and      ring of the moon-clear heart), probably of
Kamakura periods Dainichi the cosmic            crystal, and a miniature five-tier stupa, a
principal acquired also the role of protec-     pagoda of a type specific to Esoteric Bud-
tor and provider of such secular benefits as dhism (gorintd), probably of wood. Part of
health and various forms of worldly suc-        the surface of the miniature shrine has re-
cess, though as an Esoteric deity he could      cently been restored.
be appealed to by the lay devotee only               Although the statue of Dainichi is
through the mediation of exotic ceremo-         small, details of the face are precisely ren-
                                                dered and the body is well balanced. This
                                                                                                                                          129
                                                              76
yo Hachiman with two attendant deities        exemplifies the latter. The association of
   Kyókaku (fl. 1326)                         Shinto deities with Buddhist temples, and
   wood                                       indeed their conflation with Buddhist dei-
   h. Hachiman, 72.3 (2872); Okinaga          ties, was a characteristic phenomenon of
   Tarashihime, 44.3 (lyVz); Himegami,        the Heian period.
   45.2 (173/4)                                     The Iwashimizu Hachimangü had
   Kamakura period, 1326                      been built by Minamoto Yoriyoshi (999-
      Akana Hachimangü,                       1075). Following his ancestor's example,
      Shimane Prefecture                      Minamoto Yoritomo (1147-1199) estab-
                                              lished a Hachimangú at Tsurugaoka in Ka-
      Important Cultural Property
                                              makura, site of his newly created warrior
                                              government. Because of Yoritomo's
The triad is composed of Hachiman (the        veneration of the god, Hachiman became
god of war) in the center wearing a courtly   widely revered as the patron deity of the
robe (ho) and holding a wooden ceremo-        Minamoto lineage as well as the guardian
nial slat (shaku), with Okinaga Tarashihime   of the military class and hence "god of
(Empress Jingü) to his right and the god-     war."
dess Himegami (often identified as Hachi-           Akana Hachimangü is located in the
man's consort) to his left. The style of      mountainous area of Shimane Prefecture
their clothing is modeled after that of the   near the border of Hiroshima Prefecture.
court of the Heian period.                    As a branch of Iwashimizu Hachimangü, it
     Hachiman has been worshiped at           has been in existence since at least the
least since the Nara period. His oldest ex-   twelfth century. In 1965, when this triad of
tant shrine is located in Usa (present-day    Hachiman with two attendants was re-
Oita Prefecture, Kyushu), where he seems      stored, inscribed wooden tablets were dis-
to have been a local and relatively minor     covered inside the image of Hachiman.
Shinto deity. In the mid-eighth century       The tablets greatly clarified the circum-
Hachiman was dramatically elevated to         stances of its creation. According to the in-
Shinto tutelary deity of Tôdaiji, the impe-   scription, in 1326 the jitô (estate steward)
rially commissioned Buddhist temple in        of the area, joined by several others, com-
Nara. This set a precedent for the building   missioned the triad from Kyokaku of
of Hachiman shrines, both independently       Yamashiro Province (present-day Kyoto),
and within the precincts of Buddhist tem-     a great sculptor of Buddhist images.
ples; the Hachimangü, built at Iwashimizu           Hachiman is made of Japanese nut-
south of Kyoto, exemplifies the former sta-   meg (kaya, Torreya nucifera); while Japa-
tus, the Hachiman shrine at Tôji in Kyoto      nese cypress (hinoki) is used for the other
130
                                               able by the miniature pagoda that Bisha-          1201 for a raigde ceremony. Also extant at
                                               monten characteristically holds on his            Jódoji, founded by the priest Shunjóbó
                                               upturned left palm while brandishing a            Chógen (1121-1206), who restored Tôdaiji
                                               weapon in his right hand.                         of Nara in the Kamakura period, are
                                                     Pursuant to their protective function,      twenty-five of the original twenty-seven
                                               images of the Four Heavenly Kings were            bodhisattva masks made at the same time
                                               usually placed at the corners of a temple         for the same ceremony. In Jódoji's Amida
                                               altar whose center was occupied by Bud-           Hall is a colossal wooden Amida triad, also
                                               dhas and bodhisattvas. In a central altar         by Kaikei. Jódoji was an Amidist temple
                                               triad, Bishamonten would often flank an           founded by the enormously influential
                                               image of Sakyamuni Buddha, with the               monk Shunjóbó Chógen, who supervised
                                               goddess Kichijóten, also of Hindu origin,         the restoration of Tôdaiji in Nara after its
                                               on Sakyamuni's other side. In time Kichi-         destruction during the civil war of 1180-
                                               jóten came to be regarded as Bishamon-            1185, and who became both patron and re-
                                               ten's wife. As a principal image,                 ligious mentor of the sculptor Kaikei.
                                               Bishamonten would himself be flanked, as                Raigd-e is a ritual that reenacts the de-
                                               here, by Kichijóten and Zennishi Dôji, a          scent of Amida Buddha from his Pure
                                               young boy regarded as the divine couple's         Land (Jôdo; popularly called Western Para-
                                               child (and sometimes as an incarnation of         dise because it was believed to be in the
                                               Bishamonten himself). The best-known              western part of the cosmos), accompanied
                                               example of the Bishamonten triad, dating          by the bodhisattvas Seishi and Kannon
                                               from the late Heian period, is at Kurama-         and often by a heavenly host of lesser dei-
                                               dera in Kyoto.                                    ties, to take the soul of a dying devotee to
                                                     An inscription on the tenon connect-        the Pure Land of immeasurable bliss,
                                               ing the left foot of Bishamonten with the         where it awaits rebirth to a high state of
                                               base records that this triad was made by          being. This Amida image was probably
                                               the great priest Tankei, with the rank of         dressed in an actual costume and placed
                                               hdin (Seal of the Law). Tankei, the first son     on a wagon leading a procession of people
                                               of Unkei (d. 1223), was born in 1173 and par-     wearing the bodhisattva masks to repre-
                                               ticipated with his father around 1212 in          sent the heavenly host. An armature
                                               sculpting the Buddhist images for the Ho-         would have been inserted inside the image
                                               kuendó of Kôfukuji in Nara. In 1213 he was        to support it during the procession. The
                                               given the rank hdin, the highest honor            deity's hands form the gestures icono-
two figures. The main part of each image       awarded to sculptors of Buddhist images.          graphically specific to the "welcoming de-
is made of two separate pieces, one for the    In 1254 he made his best-known work, the          scent." The names of the contributors are
front and one for the back; the hair and       wooden Senju Kannon (Thousand Armed               written inside the image, as well as An
eyebrows are painted.                    SH    Kannon) for Myóhóin in Kyoto.                     (Sanskit), followed by Amidabutsu, the
                                                     Each of the figures in this triad is nat-   Buddhist name of Kaikei.
                                               urally posed and has small, well-modeled                Kaikei was active in the early Kama-
77 Bishamonten with two attendants
                                               features. Bishamonten's build is formida-         kura period, along with Unkei (d. 1223) and
   Tankei (1173-1256)                                                                            others, in the restoration of the Nara tem-
                                               ble, his stance unyielding, and his expres-
   polychromed wood                            sion adamant, but he is in no respect             ples. His earliest extant work is a wooden
   h. Bishamonten, 168.0 (66Vs);               contorted or grotesque. The expressions           statue of Miroku Bosatsu (Bodhisattva of
   Kichijóten, 79.2 feíVs); Zen'nishi Dôji,    of Kichijóten and Zennishi are calm and           the Future), which is dated 1189 (Museum
   71.2(28)                                    mild. In all these respects the figures are       of Fine Arts, Boston). There are approxi-
   Kamakura period, i3th century               typical of Tankei's style. Each of the im-        mately forty extant works by Kaikei, mak-
   Sekkeiji, Kôchi Prefecture                  ages is made of Japanese cypress (hinoki).        ing him especially important for the study
   Important Cultural Property                 The right and left halves of Bishamonten's        of the history of Japanese sculpture, since
                                               head and torso were carved from separate          it is possible to trace the continuous devel-
Bishamonten is one of the Four Heavenly        hollowed-out blocks, as were the back and         opment of his style. His most typical work,
Kings (Shitennô) who guard the Buddha's        front halves of the other two figures. The        known through many versions, is the
Law in the four quarters of the universe,      eyes are inlaid crystal. Bishamonten's ped-       standing statue of the descending Amida
the north being Bishamonten's special re-      estal is a small earth demon whom the de-         Nyorai, which is noted for its refinement
sponsibility. The Shitennô originated in       ity is often shown subduing. The pedestals        and detailed idealization.
India as Hindu deities, were early ab-         for Kichijóten and Zennishi Doji are later              Made in 1201, the work exhibited here
sorbed into the Buddhist pantheon, and         additions.                                   SH   dates approximately to the middle stage in
were transmitted with the faith to Central                                                       Kaikei's stylistic development. Although a
Asia, China, and Japan. In the course of                                                         portion of the surface is damaged, most of
this eastward passage they acquired their                                                        the original gilt lacquer remains intact.
military characteristics: armor and weap-      7 8 Amida Nyorai                                  Parts of Amida's halo have been restored.
ons in the style of China's Tang dynasty           Kaikei (active c. 1185-1223)                                                               SH
(618-907), and expressions and gestures of         lacquer and gold leaf on wood
fierce determination or even menace. Of            h. 266.5 (!047/8)
the Four Heavenly Kings, Bishamonten               Kamakura period, 1201
(also called Tamonten) is the most power-
 ful, possibly because East Asian geomancy         Jódoji, Hyógo Prefecture
 makes the north the direction of greatest         Important Cultural Property
 danger; he is also the only one worshiped
                                               This is the 8-shaku (approximately 240-
 independently. Images of Bishamonten
                                               centimeter, or 8-foot) image of Amida de-
 that have not lost their arms are identifi-
                                               scribed in documents as made by Kaikei in
                                                                                                                                            131
      77
132
78
     133
PAINTING
           135
79
      79 Tale of Obusuma Saburô                      what must have been a longer tale, and
         handscroll; ink and color on paper          even the scroll shown here is missing one
         28.8 x 1123.5 (113/8 x 449*/2)              section of painting.
         Kamakura period, late 13th century               Jiro, the elder brother was an aesthete
         Tokyo National Muséum                       who pursued music and poetry and sought
         Important Cultural Property                 the amenities of a life of artistic accom-
                                                     plishment (bun) modeled after the artisto-
      This illustrated tale is about two warriors,   cratic way of life pursued in Kyoto. He
      Yoshimi Jiro and Obusuma Saburô, both          took a wife, a former lady-in-waiting at
      sons of a powerful daimyo in Musashi           court, who bore a daughter, Jihi (Compas-
      Province in the east (parts of present-day     sion). Jihi grew into a stunningly beautiful
      Tokyo, Saitama, and Kanagawa prefec-           young woman, and her reputation spread
      tures). The alternating sections of text and   far and wide, resulting in offers of mar-
      pictures that survive tell only a portion of
136
riage from many provinces. A betrothal to       attended space for storage of armor (sec-        buro's residence, where his retainers prac-
Naniwa no Taró was arranged; their mar-         tion one).                                       tice riding and archery, and examine their
riage was to take place after a three-year           The younger brother, Saburô, was a          weapons. Saburô's wife, recognizable by
period.                                         gruff warrior disciplined in the martial arts    her curly hair and large nose, is inside,
      The scroll opens with a scene of Jirô's   (bu). He married a robust woman de-              where a child is held by one of the maids
domestic life. His men play the game of         scribed in the text as "seven feet tall [with]   (section two).
go; women view a painting and play musi-        curly hair, all spirals when tied. There was          When the two brothers were called to
cal instruments, all within courtly build-      nothing in her face so prominent as the          the capital to serve as military guards at
ings, complete with gardens and                 long nose. Her lips were curved down-            the emperor's palace, Saburô set out first
ponds—quite unlike the typical home of a        ward. There was no redeeming quality in          with his men, passing a group of brigands
rugged eastern warrior. Jiro, wearing a ca-     whatever she said or did." She bore three        who, aware of Saburô's martial prowess,
 sual white robe, converses with his wife in    sons and two daughters. The picture that         allowed Saburô to pass. Jiro and his reti-
 a chamber. Behind the chamber is an un-        follows the text depicts the activities at Sa-   nue followed; but they were attacked by
                                                                                                                                         137
the brigands. At the lower right Jiro,          who turns his head away from her (section          transmission line of the Zen (C: Chan)
dressed in casual clothes of dappled pat-       seven).                                            school. In the most important canon-
terns of blue against white, unarmed and              The tale narrated in this scroll is in-      ical collection of biographies of Zen
ill-prepared, squats on the ground before a complete. Although it begins with the                  partriarchs, Transmission of the Lamp (J:
helmet and a box containing the rest of his story of the two different brothers, the               Keitoku dentdroku; C: Jingde quandong lu)
armor. His men are getting it out. A bloody heart of the story seems to be Jihi's misfor-          (1002 AD), Hotei is included among ten
battle ensues, ending in slaughter of many tune and eventual compensation through                  "who reached the gate of Zen," that is, en-
men on both sides (section three).              her marriage to Naniwa no Taró, and the            lightenment. More significantly, Hotei be-
       Jiro died in the battle; Saburó had re-  intercession of Kannon, the Buddhist de-           gan to be regarded generally in Chinese
turned from the capital too late to rescue      ity. Although the painter of the scroll is         Buddhism as the reincarnation of the Fu-
his brother. Before Jiro died, he asked Sa-     unidentified, the painting is stylistically        ture Buddha Maitreya, who would appear
buró to make sure that his possessions, in-     comparable to another work, Ise shin-              in this world as the salvation figure after
cluding lands, be distributed among his         meisho utaawase (Poetry contest on the             the Laws of the Buddha had lost their ef-
vassals. He asked in particular that his        themes of the newly selected places-with-          fectiveness. In popular Buddhism Hotei
mansion be left to his wife and daughter        names around Ise), dated to c. 1295, now in        acquired additional benevolent attributes;
Jihi. letsuna, one of Jirô's faithful men,      the collection of the Ise Shrine.             YS   he was revered as the bestower of wealth
took Jiró's head home, but on his way the                                                          and the lovable companion and protector
Buddhist deity Kannon appeared before           80 Hotei                                           of children.
him. The deity told him that, in compas-             Ashikaga Yoshimochi (1386-1428)                     Soon after Hotei's death in 917 A. D.,
sionate response to Jihi's cries of grief,           hanging scroll; ink on paper                  his colorful exploits and enigmatic charac-
Jirô's soul would be assured of rebirth in           31.O X 56.0 (l2 V4 X 22)                      ter, reinforced by the belief that he had
paradise. The painting depicts the miracle           Muromachi period, 1st quarter of              been a living Buddha, began to appear as
of the deity Kannon over an ocean. The               fifteenth century                             literary and pictorial motifs in Chinese
rays of divine light emanate from the                                                              Buddhist literature and art. By the twelfth
crown of the deity and shine upon the                Fukuoka Art Museum, Fukuoka
                                                                                                   century, Hotei's image had been carved in
head of Jiro, which, wrapped in the clothes          Important Cultural Property                   stone and modeled in clay; he had been
he wore, lies by letsuna, who dozes on the                                                         painted by notable artists and had become
                                                Hotei (C: Budai; cats. 99,101), an eccentric
shore (section four).                                                                              a subject of distinguished poets and offi-
                                                Chinese figure with a special status among
       Meanwhile, at home, Jirô's wife and      the Chinese Buddhist saints and sages, is          cial scholars such as Su Dongpo (1037-
 Jihi anxiously awaited the news. Earlier,                                                         1101). During the reign of Emperor Gao
                                                shown grinning and leaning on a bulging
 Jihi dreamed of letsuna, carrying a hawk                                                          Zong (r. 1127-1163) the emperor himself
                                                sack. A wisteria wood cane lies on the
 perched on his left hand and a helmet in                                                          composed a poem on Hotei:
                                                ground nearby. The six-line inscription
 his right. The hawk flew toward the west       quotes stanzas of aphoristic verse from the
 and the helmet fell to the ground—a pre-                                                          In the blue sky, a small cloud; high above in
                                                Buddhist philosophical text, the Diamond             the sky, a solitary moon,
 monition. The hawk was the soul of her
                                                Sutra (S: Vajracchedika prajnaparamita Su-         [He] manages to dwell outside this world,
 father and the helmet his head. The paint-
                                                tra; J: Kongo hannya haramitsu kyd, or the           secretly in a faraway place,
 ing depicts letsuna, now back at Jirô's        "Perfection of Wisdom which cuts like a
 mansion, delivering the head to Jirô's wife thunderbolt"). At the lower right of the              Naturally seeking to hide in the market
 and daughter (section five).                                                                        place, strange is this hero.
                                                 sack is the square intaglio seal of the artist,   Wherever he goes he carries the cane and
       The next text relates the fate of Jirô's Kenzan no shd (seal of Kenzan), and a kad
 family after his death. Saburó, ignoring                                                            cloth bag,
                                                 is brushed below it. The cipher is that of        To satisfy his hunger, what's wrong with
 Jirô's parting request, steals, his lands and   the fourth Ashikaga shogun, Yoshimochi
 the mansion, evicts Jirô's wife and Jihi,                                                            wine or meat fresh with dripping blood?
                                                (1386-1428), and Kenzan (Prominent                 Farewell to the Jade Palace, farewell to the
 and makes them his servants. The next          Mountain) is Yoshimochi's Buddhist title
 painting in this sequence, now lost, proba-                                                         beautiful pavilion,
                                                 (dôgô).                                           Where the snow continues to fall.
 bly included a scene of the takeover of               The name Hotei literally means
 Jirô's mansion by the unruly Saburó and                                                                  Hotei's human eccentricities and his
                                                 "cloth bag," a reference to the sack, his
 his ugly and ambitious wife, and the oust-      only possession aside from the cane. In           supernatural attributes were enough to es-
 ing of Jirô's wife and Jihi. A fragment be-     Chinese and Japanese Zen Buddhist hagi-           tablish independent pictorial themes
 lieved to be a part of the missing section      ology, Hotei is considered an extraordinary       within the artistic tradition of Zen monas-
 was discovered and published in 1962. It                                                          teries.
                                                 figure, revered for his eccentric behavior
 depicts Jirô's wife and daughter, clad in       and cryptic sayings. Hotei's legend can be               The verses inscribed on this painting
 humble rustic clothes, drawing water from traced to the biography of Qici, an early               are not directly related to Hotei's biogra-
 a well for Saburó's horses. From this sec-      tenth-century Chinese Buddhist (though            phy nor to the literary nor artistic tradi-
 tion on, then, the tale turns to the fortune not of the Zen school) priest. He is said            tions established around the Hotei theme.
 of Jihi and her mother.                         to have walked around city market-                Rather Yoshimochi included the verses as
        Jihi and her mother have become the      places carrying his cloth bag and cane, at        a way of eulogizing Hotei as an enlight-
 servants of Saburó. The house is visited by times begging for money, and putting just             ened being. The verses are transcribed to
 the provincial governor, who notices Jihi's about everything he came across into his               form three pairs of couplets in an unusual
 beauty and proposes marriage to her.            bag, including pickled fish. He uttered            order: they are read from the third line
  Through trickery, Saburó's wife substi-        strange, incomprehensible words. Among             from the right to the last line on the left
  tutes one of his ugly daughters, thwarting     his supernatural attributes were the ability       and backward from the second line to the
  Jihi's marriage to the governor, who de-       to forecast the weather and to defy the            first on the right. Edward Conze trans-
  parts, brokenhearted. The last painting        cold and even death—after he died at               lated the verses from the Sanskrit as:
  shows the governor dressed in courtly           Fengchuan he was mysteriously seen in
  robe, preparing for a meeting with Jihi. To another province.                                    . . . dharmas should be forsaken, still more
  his right, the curly-haired daughter of Sa-                                                          so no-dharmas....
                                                       By the eleventh century AD Hotei had
  buró, excited by her prospect of marriage, become widely recognized as a truly en-
  tries to draw the attention of the guest,      lightened being outside the traditional
138
80
Self-identical (sama) is that dharma, and       Yoshimochi created his own ink paintings,          Chan (J: Zen) Buddhism, which survives
    nothing is therein at variance              several of which survive in public and pri-        vigorously ttfihis day. Many different
    (vishama)....                               vate collections, including some outside           types of portraits of Daruma exist, all
Those who by my form did see me,                Japan. Yoshimochi's paintings, like the            imaginary representations of the patriarch
And those who followed me by voice              works of most amateurs, vary in quality.           based on various narrative accounts. Here
Wrong the efforts they engage in,                     Stylistically, this Hotei painting fol-      Daruma is represented in half-length, cast-
Me those people will not see                    lows both the Chinese and Japanese prece-          ing a concentrated stare with bulging eyes:
. . . Everything has potential Dharma,          dents of the fourteenth century. The               He is clad as a monk, in a plain cassock,
    even as a dream, a faulty vision,           dynamic brushstrokes that make up Ho-              and his arms are folded in front of him.
    a bubble or a shadow;                       tei's sleeves and cane are reminiscent of          The long fingernail of the left thumb
As dew drops or a lightning flash.              the style associated with Yintuoluo (c.            marks Daruma as an ascetic; the earring
So should one view what is conditioned.         1350$), an Indian (or Central Asian) painter       on the left earlobe marks him as a princely
      In both public and private life, Yoshi-   active in China. Hotei's head shape, his           personage. At the lower right are stamped
mochi showed enthusiasm for the Zen             grinning face, and large ear recall another        a two-character relief seal, Bokkei, and a
school, and he himself was tonsured in          painting of Hotei by Mokuan Reien (active          circular relief seal, Saiyo, below it. They
                                                13405), a Japanese painter-monk and pil-           are the seals of the artist of the Soga clan,
1423. As the Ashikaga shogun he fre-
                                                grim in China.                                YS   Bokkei Saiyo, otherwise known as Hyóbu
quently issued economic policy directives
favorable to the Zen monasteries. His cul-                                                         Bokkei.
tural activities in Kyoto, especially after     81 Daruma (S: Bodhidharma)                               The written history of Zen Buddhism
his father, Yoshimitsu, died in 1408, were         Bokkei Saiyo (fl. 1452-1473)                    starts with the pseudobiography of
closely linked to notable scholar-monks, in-       hanging scroll; ink on paper                    Daruma, the founding patriarch of the
cluding Gyokuen Bonpô (cat. 84). Yoshi-            110.0x58.3 (431/4x23)                           school, which informs us that the teaching
mochi often sponsored poetry gatherings            Muromachi period, no later than 1465            he transmitted to China was fundamen-
for scholarly monks talented in Chinese-                                                           tally different from that which had been
                                                   Shinjuan, Kyoto                                 taught and practiced by other traditioinal
style poetry. The seventeenth-century              Important Cultural Property
biography of painters, Honchd gashi,                                                               Buddhists. Daruma taught that the Bud-
 mentions that Yoshimochi learned paint-                                                           dha's doctrine should be transmitted from
                                                Bodhidharma (J: Daruma) was an Indian
ing from the artist-monk Minchó (1351-                                                             mind to mind, by directly pointing at the
                                                prince of the early sixth century AD who
1431), and Minchó's biography in the same                                                          heart of a man so that he would see his na-
                                                went to south China to spread the practice         ture and attain his own Buddhahood.
source mentions the painter's close con-        of meditation. At first unsuccessful, he
tact with Yoshimochi. There is, however,                                                                 The history of Daruma portraiture
                                                crossed the Yangzi River and went north            dates as early as the eighth century AD in
little visual evidence that Minchó directly     to Mount Song, where he meditated for
influenced Yoshimochi's painting. In the                                                           China. As the commemorative portrait of
                                                nine years facing the cave wall at the             the founding patriarch of the Zen school,
close-knit cultural sphere of Kyoto Zen         Shaolin monastery. Daruma's teaching
temples, Yoshimochi had opportunities to                                                           a Daruma portrait would be displayed by
                                                subsequently evolved into a forceful reli-
see Chinese paintings. A talented ama-                                                             the Zen adepts on the fifth day of October
                                                gious movement, which became known as              for the memorial ceremony honoring his
teur, like Winston Churchill at his easel,
                                                                                                                                            139
      81
140
82
death. Many different types and styles of       and formerly of the Tokuzen[]i subtemple],     family name Soga, who served the warrior
Daruma portraits were painted in both           Jun Ikkyù respectfully eulogizes [stamped      clan Asakura in Echizen Province (now
China and Japan. The half-length type had       with a square relief seal Ikkyü]               Fukui Prefecture located on the Japan Sea
appeared already before the twelfth cen-              The poem is recorded, with slightly      coast). The Asakura, in turn, were for gen-
tury in China.                                  different wordings, in Ikkyü's collection of   erations vassals of the Shiba family who, as
     The inscription above is by the fa-        literary works Kydun shü (Mad Cloud            a branch family of the Ashikaga, had
mous Zen monk of Daitokuji Ikkyü Sôjun          Coll.). The Palace of King Xiangzhi men-       been kanrei (deputy shogun) in control of
(1394-1481; see also cat. 11). As Daruma        tioned in the last line of Ikkyu's poem is a   the Echizen region. At the time this
faces to the left, the inscription is written   Chinese name for the palace of the father      Bodhidharma painting was executed Echi-
from left to right:                             of Bodhidharma, thought to have been sit-      zen was ruled by Asakura Toshikage (also
                                                uated in South India, corresponding to         known as Takakage, 1428-1481; cat. 15), the
Followers in China and India conjure your       present-day Madras. Fifth-generation de-       powerful warrior and enlightened ruler of
  spirit;                                       scendant ofDaitd refers to Ikkyu's position    Echizen proper who controlled the area as
Half the figure, a portrait, reveals your       in the transmission line of teaching; fifth    shugodai (deputy constable). The Asakura
  entire body;                                  from Daitd (Great Lamp) Kokushi (Na-           family came under the influence of and
What did the grass mat at Shaolin [temple]      tional Master) to the monk Shüho Myóchó        actively patronized Ikkyü, and Bokkei is re-
  accomplish?                                   (1282-1337), the founding abbot of the         corded as one of his disciples. At least two
At the Palace of King Xiangzhi, spring of       Daitokuji monastery in Kyoto. Tokuzenji        portraits of Ikkyü were painted by Bokkei
  plums and willows.                            is a subtemple of Daitokuji, which had         Saiyo, one dated 1452 and the other 1453.
     The sixth year ofKansei [1465], day of     been refurbished by Ikkyu sometime              On the basis of the dates of these paint-
spring; [signed] Fifth generation descendant    around 1459 when he was appointed its           ings, it is assumed that this Bokkei is "Hy-
ofDaitd [Kokushi or the National Master]        abbot.                                          ôbu Bokkei" who is mentioned in the
                                                      The artist Bokkei Saiyo was the earli-    collection of literary works of the scholar-
                                                est of the group of artists known by the
                                                                                                                                        141
monk Kisei Reigen (1403-1488) as a student horse always being fearless at the battle              quently represented in narrative
of the painter Shübun, a frequent com-           ground, being one with men in spirit, thus       handscrolls of the medieval period in Ja-
panion of Ikkyü, and who died in Ise in          leading a great victory? One day, Jinzan,        pan, often in the stable of a warrior's resi-
1473. Not much else is known about our           donning gold armor, seated himself on the        dence. By the Muromachi period the
painter.                                         silver saddle and went to the South Gate of      subject became independent. The warrior
       In this work, the bold brushstrokes       the To;i[in] on Nijd Street of Kyoto, where      Ogasawara Norinaga, an instructor of
that delineate Daruma's robe are the mark        he summoned a painter to paint his portrait.     equestrian archery, had a portrait of his be-
of a Soga painter. The half-length type of       That painting is known as 'the armored por-      loved horse Tanjo (Short Cane) painted in
Daruma portrait, with the robe executed          trait', and the horse mounted [by the sitter]    1483, which was inscribed by the Zen
in sketchy brushwork, and with more care- is this very horse. In antiquity, the Emperor           monk Osen Keisan (1429-1493). In other
fully described facial features, was trans-      Gao Zu of the Han dynasty told Lu Jia            instances tethered horses were often
mitted to Japan from China during the            [from the state of Chu], 'I acquired my          painted on large screens showing horses
Muromachi period. The later Japanese             realm on horseback. How can I be bothered        and grooms (cat. 105). It is likely that the
versions are distinguished from the Chi-         by the Book of Odes and Canon of His-            artist of this painting used an existing
nese precedents by the bolder use of dark        tory?' Jia replied, 'You may have acquired       work as a model (funpon). In fact, the type
ink tones resulting in abstract, patterned       your realm on horseback, but how can you         of horse, the style of the mane, the man-
forms, especially in the definition of the       possibly rule your realm on horseback? [One      ner of tying the ropes to the halter and the
robe. The style of Bokkei, his immediate         achieves] the skill of government that en-       two posts, and the flat, stylized form of
successor Soga Sôjô (cat. 87), and two gen-      dures by cultivating both arts (bun) and         this horse are similar to features depicted
erations of Soga Chokuan (cat. 129) of the       arms (bu).' Thereupon Gao Zu had Jia write       in a pair of screens of tethered horses in
sixteenth century consistently show strong the accounts of the rise and fall [of the past         the Imperial Household collection. By the
individualistic brushwork and the achieve- rulers], thus laying the foundation for the            late fifteenth century and the early dec-
 ment of dramatic tonal contrasts, marking       Han [dynasty] that lasted for more than           ades of the sixteenth, Kano painters such
them as expressionistic artists who had          four hundred years. Lord Jinzan['s forces]        as Masanobu and his son Motonobu also
 emerged in the provinces after the mid-         rose in the east, dispersed rebellions that       began to depict this theme.
 fifteenth century.                           YS brought chaos to the nation, and restored to            Keijo Shürin, the inscriber of this
                                                 it the Correct Path. He brought peace to the      painting, was one of the most important
 82 Excellent Horse                               realm, establishing himself as the founding      scholarly Zen monks in fifteenth-century
      hanging scroll; ink and color on paper     chief of this [Ashikaga] family. All of this      Kyoto. He was born the son of Odate Mo-
      66.7x58.0(263/4x227/8)                     [he] began on the back of this horse. Jin-        chifusa, a warrior and waka poet, who
                                                 zan's rule delivered benevolent government,       served several shoguns closely, but espe-
      Muromachi period, c. 1502
                                                  benefiting all people. In addition, his heart    cially the eighth shogun Yoshimasa (1436-
      Kyoto National Museum                       was devoted to our [Zen] school and he of-       1490) during the Onin civil war
      Important Cultural Property                fered a vow in writing to [our patriarch]         (1467-1477). As a Zen monk Shürin be-
                                                  Shôgaku [Musô Soseki], establishing perpet-      longed to the influential school of Muso
This stately horse, tethered front and back       ual patronage of [our school], to be contin-     Soseki (1275-1351), mentioned in the in-
to a pair of square posts, is described in        ued by his offspring who passed it on to         scription as having had Ashikaga Takauji,
profile with contour lines. The horse's           their offspring, which has continued already     the first Ashikaga shogun, as his patron.
 forelock, mane, tail, and lower legs are         for more than a hundred years without in-        Shürin's career was intimately linked to
 painted in black ink. The body is colored        terruption. How felicitous this is! Now, the     the Shókokuji monastery, where he at-
 with light ocher, the headstall with vermil-     current wise Minister, the Barbarian-            tained its abbacy eight times between 1495
 ion, and the posts with light reddish            Subjugating Great Shogun, ordered a              and 1508.
brown. A long inscription by the Zen              painter to paint [a picture of] this horse,            Keijo Shürin's inscription is included
 monk Keijo Shürin (1444-1518) in the top         which he keeps close to him to look at. This,    in his voluminous collected literary works,
 third of the scroll consists of a narrative      too, is an instance of revering people of the    Kanrin koroshù, although without the
 concerning the horse, Shürin's short             past. [The shogun] asked this old rustic to      short poem and colophon. The works in
 poem, and a short colophon. Shürin writes compose a eulogy. I am obliged to do this
                                                                                                   the book are arranged in chronological or-
 that the horse depicted is a famous one,         by respectfully composing a short verse:         der, and this inscription can be dated to
 owned by the first Ashikaga Shogun, Ta-
                                                                                                    within three years after 1501. Based upon
 kauji (1305-1358), and that the current sho-     Victorious battle after battle the horse
                                                     neighs loudly,                                 such internal evidence, recent Japanese
 gun had the horse portrayed in order to
                                                                                                    scholarship has reasonably established that
 remind himself constantly of his ancestor's The shogun chastised enemies in the south,
                                                                                                    the painting was commissioned by the
 deeds. The colophon notes that the scroll           conquered rebels in the west.
                                                  Peace came to the realm',                         eleventh Ashikaga shogun, Yoshizumi
 was presented by the current shogun as a
                                                  The horse, tethered, bows to the emperor,         (1480-1511); that the master of the Ren-
 gift to the master of the Renkiken (annex
                                                                                                    kiken mentioned in the colophon is the
 of the Shókokuji Zen monastery in Kyoto).           and listens to the daybreak bush warbler.
                                                                                                    monk Juzan Eisô (1462-1508), a tonsured
 The inscription reads:                           [Signed] Rustic monk Shùrin
                                                                                                    son of the imperial prince Fushiminomiya
         The Prime Minister, Lord Jinzan [Sho-    [Colophon]                                        Sadatsune; and that the painting was exe-
  gun Ashikaga Takauji] [the founder of] the                                                        cuted around 1502.
  T5;i[in] temple, once owned a famous horse.           This hanging scroll was presented to
                                                                                                         The artist who painted this work was
  The affectionate care [he bestowed on the       the  master   of the Renkiken [an annex of
                                                                                                    possibly Kano Masanobu (1434-1530). Ma-
  horse] was quite extraordinary. When [the       the Jôtokuin subtemple of the Shókokuji
                                                                                                    sanobu was in direct service to the shogun-
  Lord] mounted the horse in a winning bat-       monastery] by the shogun. The purpose is to
                                                                                                    ate. He is known to have executed
  tle, chastising the enemy, the horse would      praise the horse's divine excellence.
                                                                                                    paintings of horses for the shogun and he
  neigh loudly, leading the officers' and sol-    [Signed] [Shu]rm recorded this.
        1
                                                                                                    could have had ready access to models on
 diers victorious cheers. Isn't this precisely          The Japanese tradition of depicting         which to base this painting. In March 1489
  what [the Lord's] vassals said about the        tethered horses dates back to at least the
                                                  Kamakura period. Tethered horses are fre-
 142
83                                           84                                               85
     he painted a portrait of the ninth shogun,       83 Banana Tree in the night rain                    The painting was made on behalf of a
     Ashikaga Yoshihisa (1465-1489). After the           hanging scroll; ink on paper                young monk of Nanzenji, Ikka Kenpu (fl.
     young shogun died in a battle, a commem-            95.9 X 30.9 (373/4 X 121/8)                 1410-1460). Later, poetic inscriptions were
     orative portrait of Yoshihisa armed and             Muromachi period, no later than 1410        added to the painting, imbuing it with
     mounted on a horse was commissioned                                                             multiple meanings and making it into a
                                                         Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
     from Masanobu by Yoshihisa's mother,                                                            shigajiku (see cat. 84, 86, 91), or "poetry-
                                                         Important Cultural Property                 painting scroll/' a favored format of the
     Tomiko. This latter painting, in full color
     on silk, is preserved at the Jizoin in Aichi     A humble hut, set in a landscape of hills      Muromachi period, particularly among
     Prefecture.                                 YS   and a lake, is flanked by a pine tree on the   Zen monk-litterateurs and their associates.
                                                      right and a banana tree on the left. On the    Among those who inscribed it were:
                                                      opposite shore, water cascades into the        twelve prominent Zen poet-monks; the
                                                      mist-covered lake, and a grove of willow       Korean scholar and government envoy
                                                      trees emerges from the mist. It is autumn,     Yang Su, who had come to Japan for the
                                                      as the bare tree branches indicate.            inauguration of Ashikaga Yoshimochi (cat.
                                                      Splashes of dark ink around the banana         4) to the shogunal seat succeeding his fa-
                                                      tree and the willow trees suggest rainfall.    ther Yoshimitsu, who had died two years
                                                      Fifteen inscriptions identify the theme.       earlier; and Yamana Tokihiro (1367-1435), a
                                                                                                                                             143
powerful military ruler of the Provinces of        a horizontal handscroll and only later cut        ten used as retirement quarters for the
Tajima (now northern Hyógo Prefecture),            up and mounted above the painting to              aged Zen monks.
Bingo (eastern Hiroshima Prefecture) and           make it into a shigajiku.              YS              The inscribers of this painting were a
Inaba (eastern Tottori Prefecture), and di-                                                          tightly knit group of like-minded souls who
rector of the office of military affairs (sam-     84 Plum Blossom Study                             shared cultural values and spiritual aspira-
urai dokoro) of the Muromachi govern-                 hanging scroll; ink and color on paper         tions with the person for whom the paint-
ment. Tokihiro, like Ouchi Morimi (cat. 85)                                                          ing was made. They are closely related to
                                                      119.8 x 35.4 (47 Vs x 137/8)
of Suó Province, was closely associated                                                              each other on more than one level:
                                                      Muromachi period, no later than 1419
with the literary monks of Kyoto who                                                                 through their clerical ranks and careers
formed a close-knit literary salon under              Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo                 within the Kyoto metropolitan monas-
Yoshimochi's patronage. Two of the in-                                                               teries, the shared benefits under the pa-
                                                   A stream flows in front of a scholar's study
scriptions were written in the year corres-                                                          tronage of the shogun Ashikaga
                                                   whose doors stand open. Boxes that may
ponding to 1410, thus dating the painting                                                            Yoshimochi (1386-1428), and the fellowship
                                                   contain paintings or calligraphy are
to no later than that year.                                                                          formed through their literary activities.
                                                   stacked in one corner of the room. Two
     The summer banana tree in the win-                                                              Daishü Shücho's poem reads:
                                                   pine trees soar high on the slope in the left
ter snow—first versified by the poet Wang
                                                   foreground, and on the opposite side is a         The green grass growing atop the tiny peak,
Wei (Chinese, 699-759) is a frequent para-
                                                   boulder surmounted by a pair of gnarled              spring is just around the corner.
doxical motif in Chinese poetry. Here it
                                                   plum trees. A boy sweeps the ground with          Trees, still devoid of leaves, stand amidst the
becomes a melancholy symbol of tran-
                                                   a long broom in front of the building, and           lingering snow.
sience and an embodiment of ephemeral
                                                   behind it a white wall with an open door          To wait for plum blossoms is akin to
phenomena and volatility. This corres-
                                                   encloses a garden. In the distance a range           awaiting elegant guests.
ponds to the way it often is described in
                                                   of rocky mountains emerges out of the             I swept the ground, lit the incense; now I
early Buddhist texts. Translations of the
                                                   mist. In the upper section of the painting           should turn to my books.
poetic inscriptions follow.
                                                   are Chinese poems inscribed by nine
Poem by Yamana Tokihiro (top row, ex-                                                                     Another poem, the second from the
                                                   prominent Zen scholar monks of Kyoto,
treme left):                                                                                         right of the second row, is by monk
                                                   all contemporaries. Of these Daishü
                                                                                                     Kengan Genchü (d. 1421), whose inscribed
[The night rain] jolts awake the guest from        Shüchó, who brushed his poem on the up-
                                                                                                     poem also appears in cat. 85:
  his sleep; restless: he will be up the rest of   per left, was the first to die, making 1419,
  the night. Though I know well the sounds         the year of his death, the latest possible        The chilling gale of spring's first day against
  of rain, rain hitting banana leaves makes        date of the painting.                               the February sky;
  special sounds indeed.                                 A spurious square relief seal stamped       Being at the Plum Blossom Study is what I
                                                   at the lower right hand corner claims the           enjoy most.
Poem, dated to the eighth month of the             painting is by Tenshó Shübun (fl. 1420-           Getting on in years, I heed little the news of
year corresponding to 1410, by Yang Su             c. 1461), the great ink painter of the first        coming spring;
(bottom row, second from right):                   half of the fifteenth century, but it is more     Gladly I pass it on to others, letting the
[Title] On visiting monks' quarters at             likely by an unknown painter. So famous             young take pleasure in it.
  [Auspicious] Dragon Mountain                     was Shúbun that many anonymous works
                                                   from the fifteenth century later came to               Finally, monk Gyokuen Bonpó (fl.
  [Nanzenji] I add a poem to the painting
                                                   be attributed to him. Stylistically, the          1420), the painter of orchids, wrote his
  Banana tree.                                                                                       poem at the lower left:
                                                   painting is reminiscent of Chinese paint-
Rain drops on the banana leaves, an                ings in the academic tradition known in Ja-       The spring wind I waited for came and
   autumn eve has deepened.                        pan during the Muromachi period. The                went, taking with it the white of my
I maintain decorum, sit properly and listen        stately, deliberate forms of the pine trees,        beard;
   to the lofty poems [of my esteemed              the rocks delineated by contour lines and         Where should I seek pleasure away from this
   colleagues.]                                    texture dabs, and the mountains executed            world? I must visit the abode of the
Where has the venerable Huiyuan [Chinese           in both line and ink washes are some of             immortals.
   monk-recluse at Mount Lu, 334-416 A.D.]         the stylistic features of the Chinese aca-        Near the grove of trees crimson blossoms
  gone?                                            demic tradition. The architecture of the            dapple the branches,
No one mentions him in his poem.                   study, the landscape imagery, and the tra-        Bursting forth all at once, it seems, for me.
Scholar from a foreign country, I cast my          ditional uniting of poetry and painting are                                                    YS
   thoughts [on Huiyuan] far into the              all Chinese-inspired.
   distance of myriad miles.                             A scroll such as this, which combines       85 Mountain villa
Poem by monk Seiin Shunjô (second                   a picture and contemporary inscriptions             hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
poem from left of the bottom row):                  written by its earliest viewers, is called a         8l.8   X 32.0 (32^4 X 125/8)
                                                    shigajiku, or "poetry-painting scroll."              Muromachi period, no later than 1415
Awakened from a dream I hear many
                                                    When the subject is a scholar's study, real
  sounds of rain against banana leaves;                                                                  Masaki Art Museum, Osaka
                                                    or imagined, as in numerous instances
A hall in the autumn night lit by the faint         from the early fifteenth century, it is called
  light of a solitary lantern—the scene of          a shosaizu, or a painting celebrating a          A small lakeside pavilion on stilts is par-
  purity.                                                                                            tially obscured by a cluster of rocks, a pair
                                                    study (cats. 86, 91, 85). In this example, the
Oblivious to all, the rain keeps falling on         poems not only express the feelings of the       of tall pine trees, and some bushes at the
  banana leaves' green, unmindful of my             viewers toward the study, but also name it       lower left. Behind the pavilion a stream
  melancholy thought and of the beard that          Taikaken (Awaiting Blossom Study; that is,       flows into a lake. The rocky mountains in
  is white as the frost.                            Plum Blossom Study). The suffix ken usu-         the central distance are flanked by pale sil-
                                                    ally means an apartment or annex of a resi-      houettes of still more distant mountains.
     It is most likely that the painting was
conceived as an independent hanging                 dential building of a subtemple within a         Touches of light blue on the peaks, the wa-
scroll and the inscriptions were written on         monastery. These apartments, which were          ter, the tiles of the pavilion, the bamboo
                                                    provided with shosai, or studies, were of-       leaves, and pine needles, as well as the
144
     87
86
          145
faint reddish brown of the rocks in the        Morimi was also instrumental in obtaining           Another poem, by the monk Keimei (dates
foreground, create subtle coloristic effects   a set of the Korean edition of the Buddhist         unknown), just above the pine trees, reads:
in this predominantly monochromatic            tripitaka, the complete collection of Bud-
                                                                                                   Even the plants and trees of China know
painting.                                      dhist scriptures, through his trade with
                                                                                                     your name;
      Like the Plum Blossom Study (cat. 84),   Korea. In 1410, Morimi published a
                                                                                                   The sword you raised over Kyushu, deadly
this work is a shosaizu (painting celebrat-    woodblock-printed edition of the Chinese
                                                                                                     and chilling as the winter's frost, is now
ing a scholar's study), an ink painting        Buddhist text Cang-cheng fa-shu (J: Zô/'ô
                                                                                                     resting.
genre that flourished in Japan from the        hossu), now known as the Ouchi edition.
                                                                                                   You swept the Lute Hall, so that you just sit
late fourteenth century throughout the         From 1418 until his death Morimi helped
                                                                                                     and chant.
Muromachi period. These paintings, de-         the shogunate in the building campaign of
                                                                                                   The seas are all green; the hills around the
picting an unassuming hut in an imagi-         the Shinto shrine Usa Hachimangu in Bu-
                                                                                                     realm clear.
nary landscape as a study or scholarly         zen (now Oita Prefecture in Kyushu). Af-
retreat, represent an ideal to which the       ter 1425, when he returned to Kyushu to             Two of the other poems liken the villa in
person for whom they were made would           quell an uprising there, Morimi had to              the painting to the famous Wang-chuan
have aspired. The significance of the land-    concentrate his energy on controlling his           Villa of the archetypal Chinese poet-
scape imagery is usually explained by a        domain. He died in 1431, at the age of fifty-       painter and scholar-official Wang Wei
group of poetic inscriptions added directly    five, in battle in Kyushu. He was buried at         (699-759), revered as an inventor of land-
on the painting, here by nine contempo-        the Zen temple Kokuseiji in his home                scape painting in China and Japan. One of
rary Zen monks. This painting and its po-      province of Suô.                                    them is by the monk Shüken (dates un-
ems celebrate the cultivated personality of          Stylistically, this painting is linked to a   known):
the warrior Ouchi Morimi (1377-1431), con-     number of similar works from the early              Merriment of music and song in the green
stable (shugo) daimyo of Suó Province          part of the fifteenth century. The pine               field does not eliminate the thoughts of
(now Yamaguchi Prefecture, located on          trees, rocks, and pavilion in the fore-               fame and fortune;
the western tip of Honshu), who in real        ground are carefully described. Like other          Too remote to reach are the mists and rain
life actually had built for himself a moun-    early ink paintings in which an attempt is            at the Wang chuan Villa.
tain villa to which he could retreat and       made to depict an all-inclusive landscape,          This otherwordly abode is the right place for
pursue his studies.                            the spatial relationship between the fore-            elegant souls;
      During the Muromachi period, the         ground and the far distance remains am-             Unusual plants carpet the green mountains.
political control of the Suô region as well    bivalent. The composition is probably
as the island of Kyushu, far away from the     based on a lost Chinese prototype, as is a               This painting, then, commemorates
seat of the shogunal government in Kyoto,      very similar painting in the Konchi-in in           the powerful constable daimyo Ouchi
was left to various contending local           Kyoto, which is dedicated to a young Zen            Morimi for his successful pursuit of the
powers, including the Ouchi family. After      Buddhist monk and depicts an idealized              arts of both war (bu) and peace (bun), in
s_everal years of factional battles, the       study.                                              the best tradition of the Japanese medieval
Ouchi family, chiefly through astute mili-           More than half of those who inscribed         warrior.                                  YS
tary and political maneuverings by             the Masaki painting, which was completed
Morimi, had come to control large blocks       no later than 1415 (the earliest known              86 Listening to the Pines Study
of territory, including northern Kyushu,       death date of any of the inscribers), are              hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
and in 1404 Morimi was officially recog-       also authors of similar eulogies added to               103.0 X 31.8 (40*72 X 12 Vz)
nized by the shogunate as the constable        contemporary paintings of similar format                Muromachi period, no later than 1433
daimyo of the whole region. With the cen-      and style. Some of their poems laud
                                               Morimi's essential virtues as a cultivated              Seikadô Bunko, Tokyo
tral base of power firmly established
                                               warrior. In one poem at the upper right, by             Important Cultural Property
within his domain and the large neighbor-
ing areas coming under his control,            the monk Genchü (d. 1421), the speaker is           A tall, gnarled pine tree, its roots precari-
Morimi frequently traveled to Kyoto            the warrior himself:                                ously clinging to a rocky bank, rises at the
where he was warmly received by mem-                                                               right. A pavilion is framed by the trunk
                                               To serve in the world or to retire as a
bers of the upper-class warrior society, in-                                                       and branches of the tree. Behind the pavil-
                                                  hermit—Í am yet to seek a resolution',
cluding the shogun, the deputy shogun                                                              ion soars a second, equally gnarled pine
                                               So first I built a thatched hut in the
(kanrei), and other ranking warriors. In                                                           tree, painted in ink so pale that it appears
                                                  mountains',
Kyoto, Morimi befriended erudite monks                                                             to be almost a shadow of the first. A
                                               I raise my head high to gaze at the
of the metropolitan Zen monasteries.                                                               mountain path leads from the left side of
                                                  mountain and ask what I should do;
Morimi's personal contacts with scholar                                                            the landscape, across a timber bridge over
                                               The mountain replies: 'A pleasure it will be
monks included the monk Ishô Tokugan                                                               a cascading stream on the left, to the pavil-
                                                  to serve in the government, but you will
(1360-1437), who was a frequent guest at                                                           ion. A jagged mountain towers in the cen-
                                                  not be as happy as when you return home
Morimi's villa in Suô, and who wrote a                                                             ter, its lower portion obscured by the
                                                  to retire!
long eulogy lauding Morimi and his villa.                                                          wafting mist.
Ishô also wrote a dedicatory inscription for   Another poem, the first from the right in                   Five inscriptions, written at different
a portrait painting of Morimi. The impor-      the second row, by the monk Shôshin                 times over a twenty-five-year period, are
tance of Ishô's relationship with Morimi       (dates unknown) is addressed to Morimi:             brushed at the top of the painting in a dis-
and the Ouchi family in Suô may also be                                                            orderly fashion. In fact, visible seams be-
                                               You, Sir, wise Governor, built a villa to seek
seen in another painting in this exhibition,                                                       tween the inscriptions indicate that they
                                                 repose;
the Choshdken (Listening to the Pines                                                              have been reorganized. The earliest of
                                               You made this realm your territory, where
Study; cat. 86).                                                                                   these, the one at the upper right, is by the
                                                 the mountains are blue and clouds white.
      Among Morimi's personal accom-           This idyllic place far surpasses the Peach          Zen monk Ishô Tokugan (1360-1437; see
 plishments were the practice of Zen, tak-       Blossom Spring of Yuan Chao and Liu               cat. 85). It contains a short preface, Listen-
 ing the tonsure in 1405, and the pursuit of                                                       ing to the Pines Study (Choshdken), poem
                                                 Chen [of China];
 sinological studies through the reading of    How peaceful is the clear day here when not         composed for Attendant (Jisha) Ryukd[]wa
 Confucian texts and Chinese poetry.             even a bird cries!                                . . . , and a postscript, On the third day of
146
the second month of the year Kichù [corres-
ponding to 1433]. These relate for whom
and when the poem was written. The
main body of Ishó's poem reads:
I hear there is a man of high virtue in the
   realm of the west, who lives at Nanmei;
High above the hut soar tall pine trees,
   offering their green canopies;
A lamp casting spots of light behind the
   tiny window must indeed make me long
   to get there.
Sounds of the wind blend with the reading
   voice all night long.
      Japanese scholars have recently ar-
gued that the scroll was produced in Kyoto
on behalf of a certain young monk, At-
tendant Ryuko[ ]wa of Nanmeizan monas-
tery, also known as Jófukuji, in Suó (now
Yamaguchi Prefecture), located on the
western tip of Honshu island. This would
explain the reference in the poem to "the
realm of the west." Suó was governed by
the powerful Ouchi family (see cat. 85),
who also patronized the temple. Indeed,
Ishó was closely associated with Ouchi
Morimi, constable daimyo of Suô. Shôgô
Chójü, whose poem is written above the
right shoulder of the mountain, was from
a warrior family closely allied with the
Ouchi family. Ryükó Shinkei, who wrote
the poem just across from Chójü's, en-
joyed the patronage of the Ouchi family
while in Kyoto, and later went to Suó.
      While "Attendant Ryuko[]wa" re-
mains unidentified, he is assumed to have
been a young Zen monk at Jófukuji, whose
scholarly ambitions were embodied in his
study-retreat, real or imaginary, which be-
came the theme of this scroll. The title of
the painting, as well as that of the poem
Chdshdken (Listening to the Pines Study)
was appropriately chosen for the scholarly
hermitage in this work, for it refers to the
idea of listening to "whispers of pine
winds and sounds of stream waters," a Chi-
nese phrase well known in Japan. The
term "Chôshô," a recurring literary and
pictorial theme and name in China, be-
came a model for the Japanese.
      Originally the scroll had only Isho's
inscription, but through the subsequent
years and presumably as the scroll was
 moved back and forth between Kyoto and
 Suó, four more inscriptions were added. It
 exemplifies the dissemination of the early
 fifteenth-century shosaizu (painting of a
 scholar's study) to the provinces by the
 second quarter of the fifteenth century. Ji-
 kuun Tóren (1391-1471) added the final in-
 scription, written at the upper left in 1458,
 twenty-five years after the first. It reads:
Trek, trek up the precarious path, the road
  through the mountains goes on and on;
The hermit's abode between the
  moss-covered cliff and the deep green
  stream;
Hermitage, after all, is no more than a
  trifling way of life;                          88
                                                      147
Whispers of pine trees may lure you on, but
 don't let leisure turn into lethargy.
     [signed] Chôkonsô (an alternative liter-
ary sobriquet of Jikuun) Tdren invites those
who aspire to retire by his clumsy verse. The
end of the second year ofChdroku (1458).
      The five inscriptions, written at dif-
ferent times over the span of a quarter of a
century, function differently from those of
early fifteenth-century shosaizu (cats. 84,
85) where laudatory poems were written
during a gathering of many like-minded
poet-monks. The inscriptions on this work
form a collection of individual poems,
each a personal response to the scroll and
to the idea of the hermitic practice.
Tôren's poem seems to contain a measure
of irony about the futility of such retire-
ment. Such sentiment reflects a new atti-
tude of reservation toward the practice.
Occurring at the same time, in the mid-
fifteenth century, was the diminution of
patronage of the literary gatherings at Zen
temples, which had been championed by
such men as Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimochi
(1386-1428), and a corresponding increase
in the bureaucratic nature of the activities
of the temples.
     Stylistically, the painting exhibits
some unusual features. The choppy brush-
strokes, each showing marked thinning            89
and thickening, suggest a stylistic model
different from that which is assumed to
have been behind earlier shigajiku exam-
ples. The model may have been a Chinese          men, presumably a host and his guest,            earthquake of 1923. The name Sekiyô, un-
painting or a Korean work done in the Li         converse inside; one of them turns his           usual for a painter, is not recorded in con-
Cheng (ciQ-QOyJ-Guo Xi (c. 1020-1090) tra-       head to catch a view of the lake. A moun-        temporary sources, but two other works
dition. The rocks in the foreground, the         tain with spindly trees along its ridges rises   with this seal are cited in the nineteenth-
pine trees, and the mountain above are           beyond the hut. Behind the mountain's            century reference Koga bikd, under the
rendered by contour lines that consist of a      left shoulder stands a solitary distant peak.    artist Soga Dasoku. Stylistically the Sekiyô
series of twisting brushstrokes that reveal      A square relief seal that reads Sekiyd or        paintings are comparable to the land-
the choppy, nervous movement of the              Akabae (Red Fly), the seal of a painter of       scapes on a set of eight large sliding door
hand. Along with monochromatic ink               the Soga school, is stamped at the lower         panels (fusuma) in the abbot's hdjd (living
washes, reddish browns and blue-greens           left hand corner of the painting.                quarters) of the Shinjuan, a subtemple of
have been extensively used, though much                The painting shares expressive char-       the Daitokuji monastery in Kyoto. Built in
of the original pigment has been lost. YS        acteristics with the Daruma portrait by          1491 to commemorate a Zen monk of
                                                 Bokkei Saiyo (cat. 81), another Soga school      Daitokuji, Ikkyü Sójun (1394-1481), the
87 Landscape                                     painter. Dramatic contrasts of ink tones         Shinjuan contains three sets of sliding
   attributed to Soga Sójó (fl. after c. 1491)   and the abstract rendering of the rock and       door panels installed in three rooms repre-
   hanging scroll; ink on paper                  tree forms distinguish this painting. The        senting Birds and Flowers in a Landscape
   00.2 X 29.5 (233/4 X 115/8)                   jagged rocks are made up of angular forms        Setting, Landscapes of the Four Seasons,
                                                 rendered by the blunt tip of the brush.          and Landscape, all traditionally attributed
   Muromachi period, late i5th century           The abstract shading and texturing of the        to a certain Dasoku. The set Landscapes of
   Fujii Akira Collection, Tokyo                 rocks, as well as the twisting and turning       the Four Seasons is stylistically close to the
A large rock surmounted by three bamboo          zigzag shapes of the branches and trunks         Sekiyô paintings. The third set, Landscape,
trees tilts sharply to the right in the middle   of the pine trees, are far removed from the      has been reattributed to Soga Sôjô in re-
of the foreground at the water's edge. Be-       restrained forms seen in the contempla-          cent years. Scholars in Japan all agree on
tween it and a rocky precipice to the left       tive landscape paintings from the first half     the dates of the Shinjuan panels and ac-
topped with two low pine trees are a path,       of the fifteenth century (cats. 84, 85, 86).     tive years of Soga Sôjô. But uncertainty
a brushwood fence, and a gate with                     Two other ink landscapes carrying the      continues about the identity of Dasoku,
thatched roof. Behind the foreground             seal Sekiyd, now in the collection of the        whether more than one painter bore this
rock, spits of land bordered by water            Gunma Prefectural Museum of Modern               name, his/their dates, whether Soga Da-
                                                 Art, depict autumn and winter landscapes.        soku and Soga Sôjô were the same person,
plants extend into the lake, where an
                                                 These originally belonged to a set of four       the identity of the artist who used the seal
empty boat is moored. Behind the boul-
                                                 paintings on the theme of the Four Sea-          Sekiyd, his dates, and whether he was the
der, steps ascend the mountainside, where
                                                 sons, but the spring and summer land-            same person as Soga Dasoku and/or Soga
a thatched hut on stilts is situated. Two
                                                 scapes were destroyed in the Tokyo               Sôjô.                                       YS
148
90
91
          149
88 Sugawara Michizane in his deified         the robe from the Chinese master. To             tained their own diplomatic relations with
   form as Tenjin crossing to Song China     prove it Tenjin, holding a plum branch,          China and Korea. The economically and
   Sesshü Tóyó (1420-1506)                   showed Enni a Zen pilgrim's satchel, say-        culturally affluent city of Yamaguchi came
   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk     ing it contained the robe. The Tenjin im-        to be called "Little Kyoto." In 1467 Sesshü
     112.3 X 56.5 (441/4 X 22^4)             age based on this story is known as Toíó [or     traveled to Ming China_with a trade mis-
     Muromachi period, 1501                  Toso] Tenjin (Tenjin crossing to Tang [or        sion dispatched by the Ouchi family. The
                                             Song] China. The association of Tenjin           trip, which lasted until 1469, took Sesshü
     Okayama Prefectural Art Museum
                                             with China probably owes much to the             from the port city of Ningbo to Beijing, af-
A lightly bearded man clad in a Chinese      Zen monks' penchant for Chinese poetry,          fording numerous opportunities to see not
scholar's robe is seated on the trunk of a   especially their familiarity with Su             only China's scenic spots, but also many
gnarled pine tree. The tree rises diagonally Dongpo's (1036-1101) poem 'The flight of         paintings, some of which he copied. Ses-
from a flat, uncluttered terrain. Pine and   the plum blossoms." Many portraits of            shü's direct knowledge of the paintings of
plum branches echo the contours of the       Tenjin as a scholar, dressed in Chinese          contemporary Ming artists unknown in Ja-
man's upper body. He faces toward blos-      robes and wearing a cap, carrying a monk's       pan set him apart from other Japanese art-
soming plum branches, which twist and        satchel and holding a plum branch, were          ists of the Muromachi period.
turn and seem about to embrace him. The      painted     and inscribed by poet monks of             After returning to Japan in 1469,
figure looms large against the bare back-    the  early   Muromachi period. Most of the       Sesshü led a peripatetic existence, moving
ground. At the lower right is an inscrip-    extant Tenjin portraits show a figure            between Suó, Bungo (today's Oita Prefec-
tion, Gyônen hachijùni sai Sesshü hitsu      standing upright against a neutral back-         ture), and Kyoto, as well as traveling to
[Brushed by Sesshü, current age eighty-      ground, like a religious icon. In Sesshü's       central and northern Japan. In 1486, he
two], followed by the artist's square relief painting, the informally posed Tenjin has        was back in Suó where he executed the
seal, Tóyó. The painting was executed in     the satchel at waist level (mostly concealed     Landscape of the Four Seasons, a master-
1501 by the foremost ink painter of the sec- by  his sleeves) on a shoulder strap, but        piece in a style that translates the Chinese
ond half of the fifteenth century, Sesshü    does not hold the plum branch. Instead he        academic style of Xia Gui in a dynamic
Tóyó.                                        looks at the plum tree, which, along with        and expressive manner. In 1495 Sesshu
      The figure in the painting is Tenjin   the pine tree, is a part of a credible natural   made a painting in the "broken ink" or ha-
(Heavenly God), the Japanese courtier and    space.                                           boku style of the Chinese painter Yujian of
scholar Sugawara Michizane (845-903)               The style of the painting is remark-       the Southern Song Dynasty, which he
who was deified soon after his tragic death ably close to that of Sesshü's famous pair        gave to his pupil Josui Sóen (dates un-
in exile at Dazaifu in northern Kyushu. A    of screens of birds and flowers (cat. 96).       known) as certification of his having mas-
victim of trumped-up political charges,      The crisp, dynamic lines that define             tered the style. In or shortly after 1501 he
Michizane was stripped of his high gov-      forms, the twisting and turning of the           painted a view of Amanohashidate, an im-
ernment rank and deprived of the civilized   branches,     and the convincing spatial         portant scenic spot on the Japan Sea coast,
life he enjoyed as a talented poet in the    depth find readily recognizable counter-         in a naturalistic style different from his
capital. Before his departure from Kyoto,    parts in the monumental screens.                 previous works. Sesshü died either at Ma-
Michizane composed a poem to a plum                The painter Sesshü Tóyó was born in        suda in Iwami Province (part of present-
tree in his garden, reminding it not to for- Bitchü     Province (part of today's Okayama     day Shimane Prefecture) in 1502 or at
get the arrival of spring after he was gone; Prefecture). Very little is known about Ses-     Unkokuan in Yamaguchi in 1506, the latter
the plum tree followed Michizane, flying     shü's early years. He was a student monk         possibility being more widely accepted.
all the way to Dazaifu. The plum blossom     at Hófukuji in Bitchü and went to the            This Tenjin painting of 1501 is one of Ses-
motif became associated with Michizane,      Shókokuji monastery in Kyoto while he            shü's late works, painted at age eighty-two.
who came to be revered as the god of         was   still young. Around 1451, at age thirty-         Sesshü left many disciples. His style
plum blossoms. He also was worshipped as     two,   Sesshü formally became a disciple of      spread widely in Japan to Kamakura in the
the god of scholarship, calligraphy, and po- the monk Shunrin Shütó (d. 1463) and             east and Satsuma (the western part of to-
etry, especially of renga (linked verse). By eventually became the shika (monk who            day's Kagoshima Prefecture in Kyushu) to
the thirteenth century, Tenjin joined the    screens guests seeking interviews with the       the south. Among the later followers who
ranks of the Buddhist pantheon; he was       abbot) of the monastery. It is assumed that      closely emulated Sesshü's art was Unkoku
believed to be a reincarnation of Bodhi-     at Shókokuji he studied under the painter        Tógan (1547-1618), a warrior's son in the
sattva Kannon (C: Guanyin).                  Tenshó     Shübun (fl. c. i42o-c. 1461), who     service of the Mori, the militant daimyo
      Although the Tenjin cult essentially   was the Controller of the monastery, and         family of Aki Province (part of today's
was a tradition rooted in Japan's courtly    whom Sesshü later acknowledged as his            Hiroshima Prefecture) who overthrew
culture, in time it was absorbed by the       mentor.                                         the Ouchi and took control of the Suó
sinophile culture of the Zen monastic es-           By the midióos, Sesshü left for           territory.                                  YS
tablishment. By the end of the fourteenth    Yamaguchi      in Suó Province (part of
century a fantastic story circulated among   present-day     Yamaguchi Prefecture), and       89 "Huang Zhuping" after Liang Kai
the Zen monks in Japan about Tenjin, in       established his studio. Sesshü's move to           Sesshü Tóyó (1420-1506)
which he appeared in a dream of the           Suó is indicative of the tendency of artists
                                                                                                 hanging scroll; ink on paper
monk Enni Ben'en (Shóichi Kokushi, "Na-      and   poets in the late fifteenth century, a
                                                                                                 30.2 X 30.6 (ll7/8 X 121/6)
tional Master Shóichi," 1202-1280), found-    time of civil disturbance, to move away
                                              from metropolitan centers such as Kyoto            Muromachi period, late i5th century
ing abbot of the Tófukuji monastery who
had just returned from China. Tenjin          to the provinces in search of reliable             Kyoto National Museum
asked the monk to suggest a teacher from      sources of patronage. The Suó region was           Important Cultural Property
whom he could receive instruction in Zen      then   under the control of the powerful
                                              Ouchi daimyo family, whose control ex-          Sesshü Tóyó, an important artistic person-
and be given a robe as certification. Enni                                                    ality of the Muromachi period, made
told Tenjin that he should go to his own      tended as far west as northern Kyushu and
                                              occasionally    east to central Japan. More     copies of Chinese paintings from the Song
teacher, the Chinese Zen master Wuzhun                                                        and Yuan periods after he returned from a
Shifan at Jingshan. Subsequently, Tenjin      important, the Ouchi, exceeding the
                                              power of the Ashikaga bakufu, controlled        journey to China between 1467 and 1469.
again appeared in Enni's dream and said                                                       The intent was to supplement his recent
he had indeed received instruction and        the lucrative China trade and even main-
150
92                                                              92
exposure to the art he had seen in China,             A man under a pine tree, pointing         part of China). In Shandong Zhuqi saw
by studying the earlier Chinese master-          with his outstretched right arm, shouts at     nothing but white rocks. Zhuqi went back
pieces that were already in Japan. This          a pair of rocklike forms on the ground.        to Shandong accompanied by Zhuping,
sketch is one of six original ink sketches       The subject is Huang Zhuping, a legend-        who, by shouting at rocks, turned thou-
extant today. It is signed Sesshü, to the left   ary Daoist of the Han Dynasty, who is          sands of them into sheep.
of a pine tree trunk. The name Liang Kai         turning rocks into sheep. The story of the          At the lower left of the painting is a
is brushed outside the frame at the lower        sage is from an early Chinese collection of    white sheep just transformed, and next to
right, indicating that the picture is a copy     tales of eighty-four Daoist saints and sages   it another with its legs emerging from a
based on a Chinese work, now lost, by            (Shenxian zhuari), compiled by the Daoist      dark rock. Dynamic brushstrokes define
Liang Kai (fl. c. 1195-^ 1224), an accom-        scholar and alchemist Ge Hong (known           the pine tree trunk, branches, terrain and,
plished painter of the conservative Chi-         also as Bao Puzi), who was active 326-334      most expressively, Huang's costume. The
nese Imperial Academy of the Song                AD. Huang Zhuping, at age fifteen, was         kinesthetic quality of the brushstrokes in
dynasty and a highly expressive ink painter      herding sheep when he met a Daoist mas-        this work conveys something of both Ses-
as well. Six other related sketches are now      ter who took him to Mount Jinhua in Zhe-       shù's own artistic style and the spontane-
lost, but are known through seventeenth-         jiang Province. After more than forty          ity associated with Liang Kai's ink
century copies contained in a single             years, Zhuping's older brother Zhuqi           paintings.                                  YS
handscroll by Kano Tsunenobu (1636-              came looking for him, and asked where his
1713), now in the Tokyo National Museum.         sheep were. Zhuping replied that they
                                                 were in Shandong Province (northeastern
                                                                                                                                          151
9o Mount Fuji                                         Although unsigned and without seals, near shore under the darkening sky against
   attributed to Kenkô Shókei                   the painting has been attributed to Kenkô which, like a tall white screen, a range of
   (fl. 1478-1506/1518)                         Shôkei a painter-monk of Kenchôji. He           snow-covered mountains looms. On the
   hanging scroll; ink and color on paper       was sometimes called Kei Shoki, or Kei the roof of the study a sheet of snow inches to-
   66.0 x 30.0 (26 x ii3/4)                     Secretary, from his monastic position of        ward the eaves. Trees atop the cliff above
   Muromachi period, no later than 1490         shoki, whose role it was to keep the official still glisten under the chilling snow.
                                                records of the monastery. The attribution             At the lower left corner is a square in-
   Tokyo National Museum
                                                is not entirety unreasonable, for the artist    taglio seal, which reads Senka, the name of
Mount Fuji stands against a gray sky in the     was closely connected with the inscriber        an artist active during the first half of the
center of the composition. In the right         Shijun who, around 1493, wrote a poem           sixteenth century in the Kamakura region,
foreground is an undulating range of hills;     for the artist about "Hinrakusai" (Joy in       near present-day Tokyo. Very little is
two other ranges recede toward Fuji. Trees      Poverty Study). This was the name of the        known about the painter Senka. The for-
and vegetation dot the crests and valleys       artist's study as well as his artistic pseudo-  mat of the painting is archaistic in that it is
of the two closest ranges. A filmy blue         nym. Early accounts of the artist's career      a shigajiku, a type that by this time had
wash defines the most distant range,            at Kenchôji are not verifiable from con-        lost its vitality in Kyoto, where innovative,
which floats like a wafting band of mist at     temporary sources, but he is traditionally      large-scale painting formats were being ex-
the foot of Fuji. Apart from this blue and      believed to have been a student of Chüan        plored by the Kano artists (cat. 97). This
the faint reddish brown and green on the        Shinkó, another painter-monk at Kenchôji painting lacks the atmospheric spatial re-
other two ranges, the painting is mono-         who was active around the middle of the         cession typical of the earlier Shübun style.
chromatic. The white pigment applied to         fifteenth century. Chüan Shinkó exe-            Despite the small size of the scroll, the
the stylized, three-pinnacled form of           cuted a painting of Mount Fuji in ink, now foreground trees, rocks, bamboo bushes,
Mount Fuji creates visual contrast with         in the collection of Nezu Institute of Fine     and pavilion, and the temple buildings
the surrounding ink-washed sky. The rev-        Arts in Tokyo. In 1478, during a lull after     across the lake are clearly legible. This
erence felt for Mount Fuji is evident in        the Onin civil war (1467-1477), Shôkei          work shows the influence of Ming-period
the frequent depictions of it in Japanese       went to Kyoto to study painting under           Chinese landscape painting, which had
art, from thirteenth-century narrative          Geiami (1431-1485), then a leading painter      been actively studied by Japanese artists
paintings to the dramatic woodblock             in the capital, who was also an artistic con- such as Sesshu Tôyô (cat. 88, 96) and
prints by Hokusai and Hiroshige in the          sultant (ddbdshu) to the Ashikaga shogun        Kenkô Shôkei (cat. 90) since the third
nineteenth century.                             and the curator of the shogunal collection. quarter of the fifteenth century.
      The long inscription, dated to 1490, is   In 1480 Shôkei returned to Kamakura, but              An inscription in three sections occu-
by the Zen monk Shijun Tokuyü (dates un-        in 1493 he was again back in Kyoto. By          pies the upper two-thirds of the scroll. It
known). The first half of the text describes    1499, he had returned to Kamakura where consists of the title of the painting, a pref-
how, for centuries, Fuji has been regarded      he was active through 1506 or 1518. His         ace, and poems typical of the shosaizu
as the sacred mountain of the nation; the       death date is unknown.                          (painting celebrating a scholar's study). At
second half explains that the painting was            In the dotted forms of the vegetation, the very top are three large characters
executed for a certain "sagacious Lord          the schematic tree shapes, and the parallel Setsu-rei-sai (Snow Peak Study), which is
Minamoto, the heir to the shogunal dep-         brushstrokes that describe the ranges of        both the name of the pavilion depicted in
uty in Kamakura." Shijun was the i59th          hills, the style of the painting recalls that   the painting and the title of the painting.
abbot of the Kenchôji monastery in Kama-        of Kenkô Shókei's landscapes, though            These large characters were written by
kura before he wrote the inscription,           many of these are stylistically datable to      Ashikaga Haruuji (d. 1560), a deputy sho-
signed Shijun, the monk Tokuyü, a former        his late years, almost two decades after        gun in the Kanto region (Kantô kubd),
[abbot] ofKenchd. Recent Japanese schol-        this Mount Fuji painting was executed.          whose kaô appears at the lower left. The
arship has astutely established that this       The most convincing evidence for the at-        middle section of the inscription com-
work was painted for the warrior Ashikaga       tribution of this painting to Kenkô Shôkei, prises a long prose preface and a short
Masauji (1466-1531), who "loved the lofti-      however, is the form of the mountain it-        •poem, dated to the autumn of 1538, by the
ness of Mount Fuji, ordered an artist to        self. In its stylization, it recalls a Mount    Zen monk Rinchu Soshô, at one time the
paint it and had it mounted as a hanging        Fuji painted a few decades earlier by           abbot of the Kenchôji Zen monastery in
scroll." Masauji personally sent the scroll     Chüan Shinkó, the artist's earlier mentor       Kamakura. The preface, which was writ-
to Shijun requesting that he write an           at Kenchôji.                                 YS ten in the Chdshdken (Listening to the
inscription.                                                                                    Pines Study) of the abbot's living quarters
      Masauji was a member of a branch          91 Snow Peak Study                              of Kenchôji, gives a brief history of the in-
family of the Ashikaga in the east and the          Senka (fl. i6th century)                    scribing  of the scroll and elaborates on the
grandfather of Haruuji (see cat. 91). He                                                        lofty symbolism of snow and the snowy
                                                    title calligraphy by Ashikaga Haruuji
was based at Koga in Shimôsa Province                                                           landscape depicted in the scroll. In the
                                                    (d. 1560)                                   bottom row are two more poems by Zen
(now Ibaragi Prefecture) during the last            hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
decade of the fifteenth century, when the                                                       monks who were contemporaries of
                                                    97.5 x 17.0 (383/8 x 6?/s)                  Rinchü Soshô:
entire eastern region was embroiled in mil-         Muromachi period, no later than 1538
itary conflicts among several contending                                                        Setsureisai
powers attempting to unify the area. In             Goto Museum, Tokyo
                                                                                                poem and preface
1490, Masauji was twenty-four years old             Important Art Object
and on his way to attaining the post of                                                               No sound was heard in the humble
                                                Two deciduous trees rise atop a rocky           dwelling and no voice came from the blue
deputy shogun (hubo) of the Kanto region,
                                                slope at the lower left, their branches         mountains—a moment of repose—when
which he achieved seven years later, in         hanging over a craggy lakeside embank-
1497. His ambition to unify the region,                                                         my disciple Gyoku, Head of the Kitchen,
                                                ment. A narrow path leads toward the wa-        brought out a scroll, a small one, which he
however, was never realized, and the
                                                ter's edge, where a scholar's study stands      handed to this rustic. As the scroll was un-
armed conflicts went on for another sev-
                                                with shdji open. A gentleman seated inside rolled there were three large characters, setsu
eral decades. In the inscription Shijun ex-
                                                gazes across a lake at a temple gate and a      rei sai [Snow Peak Study] accompanying a
pressed his sincere hope that Masauji           pagoda, which rise above the wafting mist voiceless poem, [that is, a painting]. These
would become the unifier.
                                                at the right. A sailboat heads toward the
152
93                                                                      94
characters are by the brush of the Grand        who divided water into myriad icy flowers.      indeed is his steadfast heart. Here is my
Minister and our Great Patron [Ashikaga         Those who would represent snow were poets       humble poem or, rather, an afterthought:
Haruuji; d. 1560], to which no idle words       and painters of the Tang and Song dynas-
                                                                                                Under the clear sky the chilling white sheet;
should be casually added. That notwith-         ties. Scholar Su [Dongpo] built a hall with a
                                                                                                Incorruptible is the purity of heart that
standing, the request [to have my inscrip-      thatched roof amidst deep snow; he covered
                                                                                                  knows elegant things;
tion] was pressing enough to break my           its walls with a painting of snow and called
                                                                                                May he always put to use [the thought of
reticence. I, being old and lazy, am a man of   the building Snow Hall. Our Buddha
                                                                                                  snow] to cleanse his heart;
few flattering words. Thus, without elabo-      Sakyamuni had reached the Right State of
                                                                                                The picture of the mountains yields white
rating on snow, here I offer a lead poem and    Consciousness atop the snow-covered
                                                                                                  lotus blossoms.
ask the Venerable Master of the Hdsen [the      mountain peak, where he sat and meditated
Hôsen'an subtemple] and his companion to        in order to attain Enlightenment. Our Pa-            The Seventh year ofTenmon [1538]; the
join me with their poems, so that, like bur-    triarch Seppd [Xuefeng or Snow Peak; 822-       Year dwells Under the 2^th Constellation
nishing chipped white jade, theirs would im-    908] had attained the Way atop Ao-shan [in      Hydra; Autumn, the 8th month. Rustic Zen
prove mine.                                     Hunan]. All of these occurred within close      Monk Soshd; written at Chdshdken [Listen-
                                                proximity of snow. All that Buddha              ing to the Pines Study], [followed by a
     Snow, in the diagram of the Book of        Dharma [embraces] z's likened to being          tripod-shape seal]
Changes, is explained as a multitude of         amidst snow. Who is the master of this
Ying elements, easily changeable; it is also                                                         At the lower right is a poem by the
                                                study? Isn't he surely a person of impeccable   monk Teihô Shochu (dates unknown), also
said that snow was made by the Creator          purity and simplicity of heart? Admirable
                                                                                                                                         153
at one time the abbot of Kenchôji and re-        to the age of about eighty-six, produced al-    and Senka. His journeys to Kamakura and
ferred to in the preface as the "Venerable       most all of his most important paintings        Odawara in the 15505 may have taken him
Master of the Hosen." Hosen or Hôsen'an          not in Kyoto, the capital, but in the east-     as well to the Ashikaga Gakkô, or Ashikaga
is the name of a subtemple of the Ken-           ern and northeastern provinces under the        School, the great learning center for sino-
chôji monastery, to which the monk               patronage of various local daimyo. The          logy in Shimotsuke Province (in present-
Shochü is likely to have retired when he         peripatetic Sesson was a truly creative         day Tochigi Prefecture) in the sixteenth
wrote this poem. Very little is known about      painter whose art diverged from the estab-      century. By the 15405, Sesson, still under
this monk. The poem, which directly re-          lished aesthetic norms of fifteenth century     Satake patronage, had probably estab-
sponds to the snow landscape and the             artists such as Shübun and Sesshü, who          lished his reputation as an artist. In 1542 he
study, is in the form of seven-character         used Chinese paintings as their models.         wrote a painting treatise, Setsu monteishi
quatrain:                                        Sesson not only reinterpreted the works of      (Advice to students), in which he articu-
                                                 these artists, but injected his own sense of    lated his theories on style, especially the
One cannot see enough of the solitary peak       thematic eccentricity and graphic expres-       methods of brush work and the techniques
   once the scroll is unrolled;                  siveness. Whether he painted figures, ani-      of discriminating ink tones, as well as on
Craggy and lofty, the mountain soars in the
                                                 mals, or landscapes, Sesson invented            the importance of observing nature and
   ceaseless snow;                               highly personalized forms imbued with a         learning by copying earlier paintings. He
The study's master must surely know the          energy, humor, and passion.                     emphasized the importance of an individ-
   marrow of Du Fu's poetry;                           The facts of Sesson's early biography     ual style that demonstrated the ability to
A view of eternal snow from where the            are unknown, but it is believed that his        transcend the model.
   poetry is born.                               birthplace was near Ota in Hitachi Prov-              The style of these two paintings indi-
[by] Tdkei Tógyo Shóchü                          ince (part of today's Ibaraki Prefecture), a    cates a date earlier than the more per-
[followed by a square relief seal Shdchu]        territory then ruled by the Satake family       sonalized, later landscapes. His bulky
    The poem on the left, also a seven-          residing at Ota Castle. Sesson became a         mountain forms reflect Sesson's response
character quatrain, is by the monk Kyüsei        Zen monk, most likely taking the tonsure        to Chinese Ming landscapes, which were
Sókiku (d. 1567), who also served as abbot       under the auspices of the Satake family. In     known to Sesshü in the 14605. Yet, the
at Kenchôji, probably Shochu's "compan-          the 15505 he is believed to have gone to Ka-    crisp, clearly delineated motifs of the sum-
ion" in the preface:                             makura, the city of important Zen monas-         mer and winter landscapes are more
                                                 teries such as Kenchôji (where Kenkô            closely linked to the style of Kenkô Shôkei,
Snow cleared at dusk hurrying a calendar's       Shôkei had been) and Engakuji. He also          active in Kamakura in the last decade of
  turn;                                          went to Odawara, a castle town and head-         the fifteenth century and early part of the
The precious jade disk, short are winter's       quarters of the regional hegemons, the           sixteenth. In the summer painting, the
   hours reserved for study;                     powerful Hôjô family. Odawara under the          overall composition and the craggy preci-
The book remains half-read when the sun          Hôjô in the sixteenth century was the veri-      pices share an affinity with cat. 93, a land-
  sets over the western quarters.                table cultural center of the east. The Hôjô      scape by the warrior-painter Nagao
A bunch of plum blossoms—more books on           had amassed a sizable collection of art, in-     Kagenaga (1469-1528). The chilling white
  the peak.                                      cluding a number of Chinese paintings of         mountain peaks looming against the noc-
[by] Shdkyoku Ran'unshi Sdkiku                   legendary renown. Among these were               turnal sky in the winter painting recall cat.
[square relief seal Ydshi]                       Southern Song works such as those by             91, the Snow Peak Study by Senka (fl. mid-
                                           YS    Muqi and Yujian that had been in the             sixteenth century and after), also shown
92 Summer landscape; Winter landscape            Ashikaga shogunal collection in the fif-         here. This pair of landscapes probably
   Sesson Shükei (c. 1504-^ 1589)                teenth century. In the 15605, Sesson is be-      dates from the 15505, when the artist was
   pair of hanging scrolls; ink and slight       lieved to have been in Aizu in Iwashiro          in his late forties or early fifties and in Ka-
   color on paper                                Province (part of today's Fukushima Pre-         makura and Odawara.                          YS
                                                 fecture), where he enjoyed the patronage
   each 102.0 x 40.5 (40^4 x 16)
                                                 of Ashina Moriuji (1521-1580), a powerful       93 Landscape
   Muromachi period, mid-loth century
                                                 daimyo to whom he had offered a painting           Nagao Kagenaga (1469-1528)
   Kyoto National Museum                         earlier.                                           hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
                                                       By the mid-^yos, however, the entire         99.0 x 47.5 (39 x 183/4)
Massive rocks crowned with trees, a water-       Kanto had become embroiled in fighting             Muromachi period, early i6th century
fall in the distance, and a cascading stream     among the contending powers of the re-
in the summer scroll at right contrast with      gion. This eventually resulted in the rise of      Private Collection,
snow-covered mountain paths amidst leaf-         Date Masamune (1567-1636), who in 1589             Important Art Object
less trees, icy peaks, and a pale moon in        put an end to the Ashina family power and       This painting of a craggy mountain land-
the winter scroll at left. The artist's square   took over their territory. It is speculated     scape towering above a lake bears the art-
intaglio seal, Sesson, is stamped at the         that at this point the artist decided to re-    ist's square relief seal, Kagenaga, at the
outer edge of each painting, above the           tire to Miharu in Iwaki Province (an area       lower left corner. The artist, Nagao Kage-
mountain peaks. The oddly shaped fore-           that today includes the southeastern part       naga, was a warrior and head of the Nagao
ground rocks and boulders in the summer          of Fukui Prefecture and southern tip of         family who, as shugodai (assistant consta-
scroll, the contrasting dark and light sur-      Miyagi Prefecture), seeking the protection      ble), ruled the region of Ashikaga in the
faces of the rocks and cliffs conveying an       of the local power, the Tamura clan, who        southwestern sector of Shimotsuke Prov-
 eerie, nocturnal atmosphere in the winter       were related by marriage both to the            ince (part of today's Tochigi Prefecture to
 scene, and the diminutive hunched fig-          Ashina and the powerful Date.                   the north of Tokyo). This was the area in
 ures are all characteristic of the work of            Sesson, like Sesshü and Kenkô Shôkei      which the Ashikaga warrior family had
 Sesson Shükei.                                  before him, enjoyed certain freedoms and        originated.
      Sesson Shükei was the last of the ma-      privileges because he was a Zen monk. He               Through its mannered, intense brush-
jor painters to develop the two-hundred-         had studied classical Chinese, and during        work, this painting is related to the picto-
 year-old Japanese ink landscape tradition.      his travels he was permitted to view prized      rial style associated with Kenkô Shôkei (fl.
 Even more remarkable, Sesson, who lived          Chinese paintings and more recent paint-
                                                  ings by the Japanese painters in Kama-
                                                 kura, including works by Kenkô Shôkei
154
mid-fifteenth-early sixteenth century), a
painter-monk of Kenchôji. Shôkei had
studied with Geiami (1431-1485) in Kyoto
between 1478 and 1480 and transmitted his
style to Kamakura. From Kamakura the
style spread in the eastern provinces
through the works of the artists around
Shókei, including Senka, whose Sno\v
Peak Study, also shown here (cat. 91) is
roughly contemporary with Kagenaga's
work. The light blue, clearly outlined
forms of the distant precipices, the short,
angular brushwork defining the jagged
cliff, and the densely textured rock sur-
faces of the tall peaks are some of the com-
mon stylistic features also seen in the
works of Shókei's followers such as Keison
and Kóboku. This style was instrumental
in shaping one of the modes of landscape
painting by Sesson Shükei (c. 1504-^ 1589),
who worked in the northern and eastern
regions of Japan during the second half of
the sixteenth century.
       The Nagao in Ashikaga were a branch
of the main family based at Shirai in
neighboring Kôzuke Province, and served
the powerful Uesugi, the deputy shogun
in the East (Kantd kanrei), who was based
at Kamakura. In addition to political and
military interests, similar cultural interests
bound the Nagao in Ashikaga and the
Uesugi. Throughout the fifteenth century,
the Uesugi, especially Norizane (1410-
 1466) and Noritada (1433-1454), supported
the Ashikaga Gakkô or Ashikaga School,
one of the earliest formal Confucian
 schools in Japan, by donating sinological
books. Some of these evidently had been
 pilfered from the Kanesawa Bunko, or
 Kanesawa Library established by Hôjô
 Sanetoki (1224-1276) in Yokohama. By the
 mid-sixteenth century the school was de-
 scribed by the Jesuit missionary Francis
Xavier in his letters to the headquarters in
 Goa and Rome as "the university in east-
 ern Japan/'
       The Nagao in Ashikaga also had an ar-
 tistic connection with the Kano family,
 also of Shimotsuke. The father of Kano
 Masanobu (1434-1530), the founder of the
 Kano school of painting in Kyoto, had
 married a woman from the Ashikaga Na-
 gao family. Both the father and the son
 therefore had been retainers of the Nagao
 clan. In addition, a seventeenth-century
 account of Nagao Kagenaga written by a
 Kano school painter, Shóun (1637-1702) re-
 ports that Masanobu's son Motonobu
 (1476-1559) had once studied painting un-
 der Kagenaga. The Kano connection with
 the Nagao family can also be illustrated by
 the fact that Kagenaga's son Norinaga
 (1503-1550), a painter in his own right, do-
 nated a landscape painting by Masanobu
 to the Chôrinji temple in Ashikaga. Ma-
 sanobu's painting, executed in a style not
 unlike Geiami's, is still extant. Chôrinji, a
 Zen temple of the Sotó school, was the
 Nagao family's mortuary temple in Ashi-
                                                 95
                                                      155
96
kaga. The temple also owns self-portraits            When Linji was planting pine trees [his      busho), and therefore was an official of the
of three successive generations of the Na-      teacher] Huangbo asked him, You plant so          lower junior rank. As to his artistic activi-
gao warrior-artists, Kagenaga, Norinaga,        many pine trees deep in the mountains, but        ties, the seventeenth-century source Hon-
and Norinaga's son Masanaga (1527-1569).        what are they for? [Lin-];z replied, First, for   chô gashi says that he followed Shübun
Later in his life, Masanaga adopted his         the scenery of the temple gate; second, as a      and Sesshü, and that he studied Song
grandfather's name Kagenaga, thus often         road sign for those who will come here in         painting and used its ideas. About the
causing confusion between the two. This         the future. When finished speaking [Linji]        style of Dôan the same source says that his
landscape painting by Kagenaga, before it       dug at the ground three times with the hoe        brushwork is rough and abbreviated. From
came into the possession of the present         he was carrying on his shoulder, and drew a       various scattered references, we know that
owner, was also at Chórinji.             YS     deep sigh.                                        he actively patronized Buddhism. He con-
                                                                                                  tributed funds to the restoration of the
                                                      The iconographie attributes of this
94 Patriarch Rinzai (c: Linji) planting a                                                         Great Buddha of Tôdaiji at Nara shortly
                                                figure ordinarily would identify him as the
   pine tree                                                                                      after 1567, and he donated a lantern to the
                                                Fifth Zen Patriarch Hongren (601-675)
   Yamada Dôan (d. c. 1573)                                                                       Kasuga Shrine, also in Nara.
                                                who is said to have been a pine planter at
   hanging scroll; ink and color on paper                                                               A number of fine paintings stamped
                                                Potou before being chosen Patriarch. It is
   81.2 x 34.0(32 x 133/8)                                                                        with a rectangular seal identical to the one
                                                difficult to say whether Genyô misinter-
   Muromachi period, mid-loth century                                                             on this painting are now accepted as works
                                                preted the painting or whether Dôan in-
                                                                                                  by Dôan. They are Hotel (C: Budai) in the
      Tokyo University of Arts                  tended it to be Linji. The problem of
                                                                                                  Cleveland Museum, Shdki (C: Zongkui) in
                                                identifying the figure exemplifies how the
An old man clad in ragged cassocks, his                                                           Kenchôji, Kamakura, and Eggplants and
                                                identifying characteristics of one iconic
left shoulder exposed, carries over his right                                                     melons, a pair of hanging scrolls in the
                                                figure were often applied to another.
shoulder a hoe with a young pine sapling                                                          collection of the Museum of Fine Arts,
                                                      Although many questions remain              Boston.                                     YS
tied to its handle. The pale outer garment,      about the identity of Yamada Dôan, it is
which identifies the figure as a Buddhist,       certain that he was a warrior-painter of the
is punctured by two gaping holes, indica-                                                         95 White hawk
                                                 sixteenth century. Three different paint-
ting his indifference to external appear-                                                            Toki Tomikage (Fukei; fl. mid-i6th
                                                 ers with the name Dôan are known in the
ance. He is white-haired and bearded, with                                                           century)
                                                 Yamada family. Extant works purported to
a facial expression that conveys something       be by Dôan carry different kinds of seals,          hanging scroll; ink on paper
of his otherworldliness, not unlike that of      including the rectangular relief stamped            100.7 x 49.5 (397/8 x 19^2)
an aged and ascetic Lohan, a follower of         on this painting. Although no definitive bi-        Muromachi period, mid i6th century
the Buddha Sakyamuni. The artist's rec-          ography of the artist has been established,         Fujii Akira Collection, Tokyo
tangular relief seal, Yamadashi Ddan             our Dôan is widely identified as Dôan I, or         Important Art Object
(Dôan of the Yamada family), is stamped at       Yamada Junchi [or Toshitomo], whose
the lower left. A five-line inscription by a     probable death date was c. 1573. He was          A noble white hawk, its sharp claws firmly
certain as yet unidentified Genyô, whose         ruler of Iwakake Castle in Yamada city,          grasping a plum branch, is silhouetted
 circular seal is stamped at the end of the      Yamato Province (in present-day Nara Pre-        against a wintry sky. Its deadly bill closed,
 last line, incompletely quotes a passage        fecture). He held a second-level position        the bird of prey casts an alert gaze to the
 from the famous collected sayings of the        (taiho) in the department of finance (min-       left. White plum blossoms bud and bloom
 Zen patriarch Linji Yixuan (d. 867):                                                             on the branch. The stately shape of the
156
hawk is rendered in reserve, by saturating          Hawks were favored by warrior-class        Painting) as a painter who emulated the
the background of the paper with gray ink.     painters for their fierceness and fearless-     brush method of Shübun and who showed
Except for the wing and the tail sections,     ness. A hawk overtaking its prey was an         consummate skill in painting hawks. The
the bird's plumage is described in a pale      apt symbol for the martially trained mem-       hawk was a popular subject among the
tone of ink, with careful attention given to   bers of a warrior family. This painting,        Toki painters ever since the family's fifth-
the feather patterns. At the right, on the     however, is unique, as it combines the im-      generation head, Yoritada (d. 1397) first
white part of the branch, is the signature     age of the heroic white hawk and the            painted one. The Toki family was particu-
Mino no kami, Tomikage hitsu (Brushed by       white plum blossoms. The plum blossoms,         larly well known for its family tradition of
Tomikage, Constable of Mino Province),         particularly those rendered in mono-            falconry. The prominent Zen monk of
followed by the square relief seal Toraz-      chrome ink, were, in the Confucian tradi-       Shókokuji, Keijo Shürin (1444-1518), who
kage.                                          tions in China and Japan, symbols of the        inscribed a long eulogy for the commemo-
      Hawk images and scenes of falconry       high-minded purity and integrity of the         rative painting of a tethered horse (see
were painted in Japan as early as the four-    ideal scholar; they represented the spirit of   cat. 82), composed a eulogy for a now-lost
teenth century. During the Muromachi           cultivated men. Thus this painting unifies      hawk painting in which he specifically
period, Chinese paintings of hawks were        the traditions of bun (cultivation of arts)     praises the Toki family's pursuit of the art
avidly collected by the Japanese; for exam-    and bu (martial prowess).                       of falconry:
ple, contemporary documents record a no-            Tomikage, or Fukei, was a member of
table group in the Ashikaga shogunal                                                                 Constable Lord Toki loved hawks all
                                               the recalcitrant Toki family of warriors,       his life. His family preserved a [special]
collection in Kyoto. Although the Chinese      who vied with the central power of the          method of hawk-keeping which always
paintings probably were made by Ming dy-       Ashikaga government through their pre-          worked. [According to it] falconers of Japan
nasty painters, in Japan they were associ-     eminent control over Mino Province (to-
ated with earlier Chinese painters                                                             should put a hawk in a cage only after it is
                                               day's Gifu Prefecture in central Japan).        fed a female pheasant captured in its east-
renowned for their hawk paintings, such        Various members of the Toki family held         ward flight on the eighth day of the fourth
as the artistic Emperor Hui Zong (1082-        the position of constable (shugo) from the      month. Earlier, Lord [Toki] acquired a fabu-
1135) of the Northern Song dynasty, whose      middle of the fourteenth century through        lous hawk which he loved very much. One
paintings of birds were noted for their de-    the middle of the sixteenth century, when
tailed realism. In Japan, hawks were                                                           day he was about to go hunting with the
                                               the eleventh-generation head, Yoriyoshi         bird perched on his arm when a female
painted on large screens and sliding door      (or Raigei; d. 1583), was driven out of the
panels as well as on smaller hanging                                                           pheasant was seen over the garden. It flew
                                               territory by one of his vassals, terminating    in circles and descended to the ground. Lord
scrolls. Each format required a different      the family hegemony over the territory.
type of depiction, and each was executed                                                       [Toki] ordered a certain Sadayasu of the Ta-
                                               The Toki family members were astute war-        jimi family to fetch a dog and go after the
 in a variety of mediums—ink, color, or ink    riors as well as cultivated advocates of po-    pheasant. Sadayasu caught it with no less
and color together: a hawk in the wilder-      etry and arts. Tobun (active 15205), Yoritaka   bravery than that of [the hero] Zz Lu [of
 ness going after a pheasant; a hawk teth-     (dates unknown), and Yoriyoshi are some         China's antiquity]. Then the pheasant was
 ered to a perch (a vestige of falconry        of the other known artistic personalities of    fed to the hawk. Sure enough, that was the
 practiced among the warriors); or a hawk      the Toki clan. The Toki family genealogy,       eighth day of the fourth month. So pleased
 perched freely on a tree branch. Tomi-        however, does not record Tomikage,              was Lord [Toki] that he asked a painter to
 kage's hawk belongs to this third type.       though he is cited in the seventeenth-
                                               century Honchdgashi (History of Japanese
                                                                                                                                       157
97
pdíní f/ie picture of the hawk and had me      96 Flowers and Birds                         across the foreground toward a lake. Both
write an inscription....                          attributed to Sesshü Tóyó (1420-1506)     screens emphasize the tactile forms in
                                                  pair of six-fold screens; ink and color   their lower registers, which sharply con-
     Who this Lord Toki was is a matter of
                                                  on paper                                  trast with the uncluttered space of the
conjecture. If he was of exactly the same
                                                  each 179.0 x 365.5 (70^2 x 1437/10)       middle and far distance.
generation as the monk Shürin, Toki Ma-
                                                  Muromachi period, c. 1483                      Sesshü Tóyó, to whom these screens
safusa (1467-1519), the ninth head of the
                                                                                            are attributed, was a pivotal figure in the
family, might have been the falconer.             Kosaka Zentarô Collection, Tokyo          development of Japanese ink painting, es-
Other Toki family members known as                Important Cultural Property               pecially of landscapes. Although these
painters of hawks include Toki Yoritaka
                                               On the right screen is a summer scene        screens are unsigned, they are the best in
(dates unknown) and the eleventh figure-
                                               with a pair of cranes near a waterfall; on   artistic quality and the earliest in date
head of the Toki family and Constable of                                                    among some two dozen sets of screens of
Mino, Yoriyoshi (d. 1583), who during the      the left screen, a winter scene of egrets
                                               and mandarin ducks in a snowy landscape.     this subject attributed to Sesshü. This pair
family's downfall in the 15405 escaped to
                                               Rocks, a gnarled pine tree, a crane, and a   was once owned by the Masuda family in
Kai Province (now Yamanashi Prefecture)
                                               waterfall are all crowded into the lower     Shimane Prefecture, descendants of Ma-
to seek protection under the warrior
                                               right of the summer screen; another crane    suda Kanetaka (d. 1485), a local military
Takeda Shingen (1521-1573). In a portrait
                                               at the center is framed by overhanging       steward (jito) who ruled the territory of
also included here, Shingen is depicted
                                               pine branches. In the winter screen, dis-    Masuda in Iwami Province (part of today's
with a hawk (cat. 17).                    YS
                                               tant snowy hills stand against a darkened    Shimane Prefecture); the Masuda territory
                                               sky; the lower left-hand corner is filled    lay immediately to the north of Suó, the
                                               with snow-covered rocks and an old plum      territory under the Ouchi's control during
                                               tree that extends its twisting branches      the fifteenth century. Sesshü painted a
158
portrait of Kanetaka before 1479, presum-         contemporary China. Sesshu, however,           97 Flowers and Birds of the Four
ably when the artist visited the warrior's        dramatized spatial expression in terms of         Seasons
domain during his peripatetic years after         its lateral expansion in the monumental           Kano Motonobu (1476-1559)
he returned from Ming China in 1469. Ac-          screens. For example, the corner mass             set of four hanging scrolls; ink and
cording to Masuda family tradition,               contrasts with the void at the center, an         slight color on paper
Sesshü presented these screens to the             example of a compositional formula he in-         each h. 177.5 x w. 118.0 (697/8 x 46 Vz)
family when Kanetaka's grandson Mune-             herited from his mentor Shübun (fl. c.            Muromachi period, 1543
kane (fl. 1512-1544) was installed as the ter-    1420-^ 1461), and which would be carried
ritorial steward in 1483.                         on by Kano Masanobu (1434—1530) and his           Reiun'in, Kyoto
      These screens, which show Sesshü's          sonMotonobu(i47Ó-i559).                   YS      Important Cultural Property
characteristic handling of solid forms and                                                       These four hanging scrolls, which com-
space in a monumental format, are consis-                                                        pose a set, were originally mounted on
tent with the style of his Landscape of the                                                      sliding doors. They were part of a series,
four seasons (Tokyo National Museum),                                                            depicting flowers and birds of the four sea-
painted while he was in China between                                                            sons, which decorated the central cham-
1467 and 1469. The descriptive, dynamic                                                          ber (shitchu) of the abbot's residential
forms of the pine tree and its branches as                                                       quarters (hdjd) of Reiun'in in Kyoto. The
well as the plum branches find parallels in                                                      residential section of a Muromachi-period
cat. 88, made in 1501. The style also shares                                                     Zen temple was usually designed on a rec-
features with works by Ming Academic                                                             tangular grid, facing a garden to the south,
painters such as Lü Ji (fl. c. 1497 and later),                                                  and divided into six rooms: the shitchu,
indicating that Sesshü closely observed                                                          the largest and most formal room, in the
the style of bird-and-flower paintings in
                                                                                                                                          159
98
center front; a chapel, at center rear; and      kazu, a high-ranking warrior, was put to    the modes of the Song Chinese painters
adjoining rooms, the jdkan and gekan, on         death following an unsuccessful rebellion   Xia Gui, Yujian, Muqi, and Ma Yuan as
either side. At Reiun'in the shitchü had         against his master, Hosokawa Masamoto       well as in the style of the Japanese painter
twelve sliding doors in all. Eight wide pan-     (1466-1507). The nun Seihan studied Zen     Sôami, a senior contemporary of Mo-
els, four on the east side and four on the       with Daikyü Sókyü (1468-1549), three        tonobu. The set shown here, executed in
west side, depicted summer and spring,           times abbot of Myóshinji, and asked him     soft brushwork and muted ink tones, re-
and four narrow panels on the north side         to oversee the subtemple as its resident    flects the Muqi mode. The tradition of
depicted fall and winter scenes (shown           priest. In 1543 Daikyü purchased a monks'   basing pictorial designs on Chinese proto-
here). All of the forty-nine paintings deco-     dormitory at Toganoo, west of Kyoto, and    types had already been firmly established
rating the walls and doors of the /zo/5, were    moved it to Reiun'in as its residential     by the time of Motonobu. In 1485, for in-
remounted as hanging scrolls in 1683. ^n         quarters. At Reiun'in, the painter Kano     stance, Motonobu's father Masanobu
1693,tne entrre building was restored, and       Motonobu (1476-1559), who then was re-      (1434-1530) had decorated the sliding door
still exists.                                    ceiving Zen training under Daikyü,          panels for the private chapel of the retired
       Reiun'in, established in 1526 as a sub-   painted sliding door panels and walls of    Ashikaga shogun Yoshimasa (1436-1490;
temple within Myóshinji, was founded by          four rooms of the building, including the   cat. 6) and used several Chinese paintings
the nun Seihan (d. 1534), who was widowed        shitchù. The paintings depicted land-       as models.
in 1504 when her husband, Yakushiji Moto-        scapes with figures, moonlight, snow, and        The Reiun'in paintings show more
                                                 flowers and birds. These were executed in
160
than one hand, and it is believed that the    monumental screen paintings and sliding        98 Miho no Matsubara
decoration campaign involved Motonobu         door panels for warriors, Buddhist tem-           set of six hanging scrolls
and his entire workshop of assistants and     ples, and the court. Motonobu's screens           ink and color on paper
apprentices. Most of the artists in the       were also sent to China as official gifts         each of two outer scrolls 154.2 x 54.7
workshop, which was the most prolific         from the Japanese government to the               (603/4x217/8)
group working in Kyoto at that time, were     Ming court.                                       each of four inner scrolls 154.2 x 59.0
family members. This assured continuity             Motonobu's art drew not only on ink         (00 3/4 X 23 V4)
and growth, along the family line. The        painting, but also on colorful Yamato-e           Muromachi period, mid-loth century
Kano school was founded by Masanobu           (cat. 120). The principal motifs are placed
during the closing decades of the fifteenth   toward the front of the composition, thus         Egawa Art Museum, Hyógo Prefecture
century, and lasted some four hundred         minimizing spatial depth and creating an          Important Cultural Property
years. By the late eighteenth century nine    illusion of slow but steady lateral move-
branch family studios were operating in                                                      This set of six hanging scrolls, which origi-
                                              ment in space. Motonobu's style of paint-
Kyoto and Edo (present-day Tokyo). Under                                                     nally decorated a six-fold screen, presents
                                              ing flowers and birds became a standard
Motonobu's astute leadership and man-                                                        a panoramic bird's-eye view of Miho no
                                              formula employed by several succeeding
agement it became the most sought-after                                                      Matsubara (Pine Grove at Miho), a fa-
                                              generations of Kano painters.             YS
professional painters' group, producing                                                      mous, scenic spot on Suruga Bay, in Shi-
                                                                                             zuoka Prefecture. The view includes a
                                                                                             long stretch of sandbar with a pine grove
                                                                                                                                      161
that extends through the middle sections'
of the first four scrolls from the right, and
a Buddhist temple said to be Seikenji, in
the bottom section of the last scroll on the
left. Behind the pine grove stretches the
mist-filled Suruga Bay, which merges with
the sky above the horizon.
      Since the Heian period, meisho, or fa-
mous sites, have been used as both literary
and pictorial themes. The earliest extant
view of Miho no Matsubara dates from the
late thirteenth century. Because most
views of this site would include Mount
Fuji either alongside the pine grove or be-
hind it, it is generally thought that this
work originally must have been accompa-
nied by another screen, now lost, repre-
senting the sacred mountain.
      The painting is unsigned and without
seals, but has traditionally been attributed
to Nôami (1397-1471), a distinguished renga
(linked verse) poet, connoisseur of art, ad-
visor to the Ashikaga shogunate in cultural
affairs, and painter. Only one painting, a
White-Robed Kannon (private collection,
Japan), is firmly accepted as by Nóami. De-
spite its evocative ink washes and gener-
ally soft brushwork, reflecting the style
associated with the Ami school of painters
around Nôami, his son Geiami (1431-1485),
and grandson Sóami (d. 1525), this work
cannot be attributed to Nôami on either
stylistic or documentary grounds. How-
ever, Sóami's remarkable ink painting
Eight Views of Xiao and Xiang, 1513, on
sliding door panels at Daisen'in in Kyoto,
is the stylistic source of this view of Miho
no Matsubara. Seikenji, a walled Buddhist
temple complex, is visible in the lower left
corner, buried in thick mist and sur-
rounded by-trees; it has been borrowed
from Sôami's Evening Bells from a Temple
in Mist, one of the Eight Views mentioned
above. The scalloped forms of the floating
distant clouds, painted in gold, also have
a precedent in the Daisen'in panels.
The painting thus must postdate Sóami;
a mid-sixteenth-century date is a likely
possibility.                                YS
99 Budai
   Zhiweng Ruojing (fl. mid-i3th century)
   hanging scroll; ink on paper
      91.8 X 29.0 (301/8 X 113/8)
      Southern Song, c. 1256-1263
      Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
      Important Cultural Property
Budai (J: Hotei) is a semi-legendary figure
from the pantheon of Zen Buddhist saints
and sages. The artist of this work is Zhi-
weng Ruojing, whose two seals appear at
the lower left. Although unrecorded in
Chinese painting history, Zhiweng is
known in Japan through a handful of
paintings of Zen Buddhist subjects dated
in the mid-thirteenth century. In this
painting Budai is depicted without a back-       99
162
JOO
ground, in abbreviated lines of ink with        Shaking your brain and turning your head,        Ashikaga shogunate. This painting was
varying thickness and tonality. In the tradi-   You are getting old and senile in front of the   later examined and approved by the Edo
tion of mdryoga (wang-liang-hua in Chi-            Jeweled Pavilion.                             connoisseur and painter Kano Tan'yü
nese), or "apparition painting," some of        After Sudhana is gone,                           (1602-1674), wno l e ft ms seal on the box in
the pale ink lines seem to vanish, creating     Do you know if the grass is still green or       which the painting is stored.              MR
a figure that appears to float on the paper.       not?
     The inscription, by Yanqi Guangwen
(1189-1263), a Chinese Chan (J: Zen)            Yanqi became abbot of Jingshan in 1256
monk and abbot of the monastery of Jing-        and remained there until his death. Thus
shan in Hangzhou, was requested by a            the painting can be dated between 1256
Zen monk, a certain Chan-liao, who can-         and 1263. Zhiweng's works were brought
not be identified:                              to Japan from China during the Muro-
                                                machi period, a time when many Chinese
Having walked far and wide,                     paintings were brought over by Japanese
Having been running back and forth,             Zen pilgrims and avidly collected by the
                                                                                                                                         163
101                                                              102
loo Birds in a plum tree                        paintings, though not condoned today,            famous artist of the Southern Song Paint-
    attributed to Ma Lin (fl. c. 1250-1260)     was practiced by the Ashikaga shoguns. A         ing Academy, Ma Lin is described in Chi-
    hanging scroll; ink and color on silk       well-known instance is the handscroll The        nese accounts as a painter less gifted than
    27.6 x 28.0(107/8 x 11)                     Eight Views of Xiao and Xiang in the col-        his father. Extant works by Ma Lin are
    Southern Song, mid-i3th century             lection of the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa;        few. A landscape painting entitled Land-
                                                each of the eight views was cut and              scape at sunset in the Nezu Institute of
    Goto Museum, Tokyo
                                                mounted as a separate hanging scroll.            Fine Arts, Tokyo, signed Chen Ma Lin (His
    Important Cultural Property                                                                  majesty's servant Ma Lin), is perhaps the
                                                     This painting is stamped at the upper
                                                left with a square intaglio seal, Zakkashitsu-   finest work by him.                       YS
This intimate view of two small birds           in, which has been identified as the collec-
perched in a plum tree forms a pair with        tion seal of the sixth Ashikaga shogun,
another painting of two sparrows in a tree,     Yoshinori (1394-1441). Thirteen other Chi-
now in a private collection. The two are        nese paintings now dispersed in various
assumed to have been cut from a larger          Japanese collections have this seal.
painting and made into smaller, unobtru-             Ma Lin, to whom this painting is at-
sive images suitable for viewing at tea         tributed, was active in the reigns of the
gatherings or for a space in a private study.   emperors Ning Zong (r. 1195-1224) and Li
Cutting up or cropping imported Chinese         Zong (r. 1224-1264). A son of Ma Yuan, the
164
                                                                                               102 Snow landscape
                                                                                                   Sun Junze (fl. mid-i4th century)
                                                                                                   hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
                                                                                                   126.O X 56.1 (495/8 X 22*/8)
                                                                                                   Yuan, mid-i4th century
                                                                                                   Tokyo National Museum
                                                                                                   Important Art Object
                                                                                                                                           165
J04
of sliding door paintings at Shosenken, a      104 The Battle of Sekigahara                     gahara. Fragmentary views of the village,
subtemple of Shókokuji, used them as               attributed to Tosa Mitsuyoshi                desolate rice fields and a few farm houses,
models for his work.                     YS        (1539-1613)                                  now occupied by troops, can be seen in
                                                   pair of eight-fold screens; ink, color,      panels two, three, and four from the right.
103 Scholars viewing paintings                     and gold-leaf on paper                       In the upper area of the screen leyasu's
    hanging scroll; ink and color on silk          each 194.0 x 594.0 (763/8 x 2334/5)          troops march along Nakasendo Highway
    118.5x58.4(465/8x23)                           Edo period, no later than 1611 or 1612       (panels two through six) to join his camp at
    late Song-early Yuan                                                                        Akasaka, where the coalition of the east-
                                                   Private Collection
    late i3th-early i4th century                                                                ern army welcomes his arrival (panels five
    Egawa Art Museum,                           When Toyotomi Hideyoshi died in 1598,           through eight). Among the troops in the
                                                the nation's political leadership was left to   upper portion of panel four is the gray-
    Hyógo Prefecture
                                                a Council of Five Elders (Gotaird) and a        bearded leyasu, well-protected by his men.
Playing the koto (a stringed instrument),       Five-Man Council of Commissioners (Go-          He rides a white horse, and wears black ar-
playing chess and practicing and enjoying       bugyd). From these two councils emerged         mor and a white_headband. Panels one
calligraphy and painting were essential         two rival leaders, Ishida Mitsunari (1560-      and two depict Ogaki Castle, the garrison
pursuits for the cultivated person in the       1600), a commissioner who had been a            headquarters of the western army, two
Song Dynasty, and these four activities,        confidant and a favored vassal of Hide-         miles west of Akamatsu. Skirmishes are
called qin qi shu hua in Chinese, were of-      yoshi, and who championed the cause of          taking place in front of the entrance to the
ten a theme of Southern Song painting.          the hegemony of the Toyotomi; and Toku-         castle, where some of the over-zealous
Many Japanese artists also employed this        gawa leyasu (1543-1616), warlord and some-      troops of the eastern army had been lured
theme from the Muromachi period on.             time ally of Hideyoshi, who had been            away from Akamatsu and were thoroughly
      Originally one of a set of four qin qi    consolidating his military power and his        beaten by the western army on the eve of
shu hua hanging scrolls, this work, on the      landholdings in the east, and maneuvering       the battle.
theme of painting, is the only one remain-      through grants of fiefs and marriage alli-             The left screen depicts Sekigahara
ing. It was handed down in the Asano fam- ances to create a daimyo coalition loyal to           from the south. With leyasu's men close at
ily of daimyo of Aki Province (part of          himself.                                        their heels (panels one through three), the
present-day Hiroshima Prefecture). This               The commissioner Mitsunari, who           defeated troops of Mitsunari's army flee
painting, in the style of Ma Yuan (fl. c.       also had formed an alliance with daimyo          from their burning camps (panels two
HQO-C. 1225), the famous Southern Song          loyal to the Toyotomi, attempted to             through three) toward Ibukiyama (Mount
academic painter, dates to the late South-      strengthen his own position by making            Ibuki; panels five through eight), which
ern Song or early Yuan Dynasty. In the          Toyotomi Hideyori, the young son of Hi-          lies to the northeast of Ogaki Castle. Some
 Muromachi period there was a particular        deyoshi, his cause celebre. The struggle be-     are engaged in sword-to-sword combat,
 interest in the Southern Song style, and       tween Mitsunari and leyasu culminated in         others in spear and sword combat. In the
 this work was already well known in Japan. the most famous battle in Japanese his-              lower sections of panels four through six,
 In the screen painting by the Muromachi         tory, the Battle of Sekigahara in Gifu, on      riflemen aim at the fleeing soldiers. These
 painter Sesshü Tóyó (1420-1506) of              the fifteenth day of the ninth month of         riflemen belong to the twenty-thousand-
 Flowers and Birds (cat. 96; see also cats.      1600. Mitsunari's troops, totalling approxi-    man force led by the turncoat Kobaya-
 88, 89), there are plum branches very simi- mately 82,000 men, comprised the western            kawa, who began the battle supporting
 lar to those in this painting. Furthermore,     army; the eastern army, or leyasu's alli-       Mitsunari and ended it, probably by prear-
 the man at the left in the work exhibited       ance, consisted of about 75,000 men. le-        rangement, on the side of leyasu. In other
 here recalls a figure in Three Teachings        yasu emerged victorious from the battle to      scenes in this screen, ranking warriors of
 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) by the            decide the rule of the realm. Mitsunari         the western army are about to commit sep-
 lesser-known Sessô Tôyô (fl. c. 1460-^          fled, but later was captured and executed       puku, or self-inflicted disembowelment.
 1488), who was possibly a disciple of           in Kyoto.                                             This pair of screens is the largest and
  Sesshü or perhaps even the same per-                The right-hand screen depicts events        most detailed pictorial treatment of the
 son.                                        WA of the day before the final battle from a         Battle of Sekigahara, containing more
                                                 vantage point north of the village of Seki-
166
than two thousand figures. Although the         of leyasu's victory at Sekigahara, the battle   in the Tokyo National Museum, shows a
right and left screens are not continuous,      also was a contest between old and new          horse stable and may be seen as a precur-
they represent the temporal sequence of         weapons. A study by the late George San-        sor of horse stable screens like this work.
events at Sekigahara. Many of the pasted-       som provides the following statistics on        This set of screens is stylistically attributed
down rectangular cartouches (nineteen on        the army of 3,000 men dispatched by Date        to the Kano studio, although to no specific
the right screen and eight on the left) erro-   Masamune (1567-1636), daimyo of Sendai,         artist. The stylized silhouettes of the
neously identify places, and the specific       to aid leyasu: 420 were cavalry men, 1,200      horses recall a painting of a single horse,
identities of troops, the garrison camps of     carried firearms (matchlock guns), 850 car-     datable to no later than 1521 (cat. 82). Judg-
individual daimyo, and the individual per-      ried spears, and 200 carried bows. Clearly,     ing from the number of surviving works,
sons engaged in combat cannot be estab-         by 1600 the most effective weapons were         this type of screen painting of horses in a
lished with certainty. The painting and         firearms, followed by spears, bows, and         stable was popular throughout the six-
written accounts also disagree on particu-      last, swords, the least effective.        YS    teenth century among upper-class war-
lars such as leyasu's outfit. According to                                                      riors. These screens inform us how horses,
one historical record, leyasu rode into the     105 Horse stable                                important properties of the warrior class,
final battle wearing a European-style cui-          pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and   were kept in a residential setting.          YS
rass (nanbando), mounted on a white stal-           gold leaf on paper
lion. Yet he appears here among the                 each 149.5 x 355-5 (587/8 x 140)            106 Training horses and horse stable
victorious eastern troops (center of panel          Muromachi period, c. 1560                       pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and
one, left screen) wearing indigenous black                                                          gold leaf on paper
armor and a helmet with a large hornlike            Tokyo National Museum
                                                    Important Cultural Property                     each 154.0 x 355.0 (6o5/s x 1393/4)
kuwagata. (leyasu also appears in panel                                                             Edo period, early iyth century
four of the right screen.)
                                                These screens depict six well-bred and               Taga Taisha, Shiga Prefecture
      These screens are attributed to Tosa
                                                well-groomed horses tethered in six stable           Important Cultural Property
Mitsuyoshi (1539-1613) on the basis of
                                                compartments, each corresponding to one
style, and are known as the Tsugaru bydbu
                                                of the three inner panels of the screens.       In the right screen three horses are being
(screens) because they were transmitted in
                                                The stable, seen from the back, is set in a     tried out by the trainers; another horse,
the Tsugaru family, the castellans of Hiro-
                                                well-kept garden with exotic pitted rocks       held by three grooms, nervously awaits its
saki Castle in Aomori Prefecture. The
                                                and blue ponds with cranes and white her-       turn. Two others, tethered to posts, anx-
screens were part of a trousseau taken to
                                                ons; a pine and a cherry tree flank the         iously rub the ground with their fore-
the family by Tokugawa leyasu's adopted
                                                gable ends of the building. A group of          hooves. From a room in a sizable mansion,
daughter, Matehime, when she became
                                                courtiers, warriors, and monks relax play-      the scene is observed by a man, perhaps a
the bride of Tsugaru Nobuhira (1586-1631),
                                                ing the games of go, shdgi, and sugoroku        daimyo or a high-ranking warrior, who
in 1611 or 1612. According to a Tsugaru
                                                (double six) in a totami-matted seating         leans against an armrest, relaxed, and at-
clan document, leyasu owned four screens
                                                area. Saddles and stirrups rest on racks,       tended by boy servants. On the veranda of
depicting Sekigahara, of which Matehime
                                                and a monkey—believed to keep evil spir-        the adjoining room are other spectators. In
took the two shown here. The composi-
                                                its away from the horses—toddles toward         the back of the room, his back turned to-
tion of the original set of four screens may
                                                a young attendant who is carrying a tea-        ward the garden, is a tea master preparing
have been continuous, showing the scenes
                                                bowl on a stand. Grooms, one of them            tea. A young attendant bringing a bowl of
from the beginning of the battle to the
                                                stealing a nap, are in a corridor that sepa-    tea to the spectators is distracted by the
aftermath, but because Matehime proba-
                                                rates the front from the rear of the stable.    excitement in the garden.
bly picked the first and third screens to
                                                     The tradition of painting horses in a           In the left screen a stable is shown
 form a new pair, there are gaps in the nar-
                                                stable was first seen in handscroll form as     with six horses in compartments, each cor-
 rative. The place names contained in
                                                early as the Kamakura period, in a depic-       responding to one panel. Unlike the Tokyo
 pasted-down cartouches mentioned above
                                                tion of veterinary surgeons and medicinal       National Museum screens of the same
 may in fact correspond to places in the
                                                herbs before a stable. A late fifteenth-        subject (cat. 105), this view does not in-
 missing screens.
                                                century narrative scroll, Seikdji engi emaki,   clude any animating genre scenes. This
      Apart from the political significance
                                                                                                work represents a second type of stable
                                                                                                                                          167
 105
106
170
171
107
screen current in the seventeenth century, 107 Dog-chasing event                                 archery form, the way they handled their
focused solely on the horses. The front of           attributed to Kano Sanraku (1559-1635)      horses, and their success in hitting a dog.
the stable is marked by a row of curtainlike         pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and   Other men were responsible for releasing
pieces of cloth, dyed dark blue in the lower         gold on paper                               the dog within the ring, handling the dogs
half. These are noren that hang above the            each 152.0 x 348.5 (597/8 x 137*/$)         to be used later in the event, and record-
entrance to each stable. The horses, all             Momoyama period,                            ing the scores from their post within the
well groomed, are tied by two reins, the             late i6th-early iyth century                nikkijo, a roofed enclosure at one end of
ends of which are fastened to metal rings                                                        the playing field. Important spectators also
imbedded in posts. A thick, braided rope             Tokiwayama Bunko,                           sat in the nikkijo, while others would
with a fluted pattern hangs from above               Kanagawa Prefecture                         watch from outside the fenced precinct.
and goes around each horse's belly (save             Important Cultural Property                      The earliest textual reference to
the horse in panel seven). This is a hará-                                                       inuoumono known is found in the Azuma
                                                The rise and maturation of the Japanese
hake, used to prevent the horse from lying                                                       kagami, a historical compliation of the late
                                                warrior class were accompanied by the de-
on its belly and from violent movements.                                                         thirteenth century comprising both pri-
                                                velopment of activities reflecting the con-
The rope's ends (here invisible) are tied to                                                     vate and shogunal records. It describes an
                                                cern with military skill and social conduct
two horn-shaped projections on the lateral                                                       event that took place in the south garden
                                                befitting a warrior. Among the sports con-
beam. Gold clouds cover the right half of                                                        of the shogun's residence, with the young
                                                tests that incorporated mounted archery
the roof, the left half of the veranda, and a                                                    lord in attendance. A number of documen-
                                                were yabusame, kasakage, and inuoumono,
part of the totomi-matted space. Behind                                                          tary references to inuoumono are known
                                                illustrated here. In yabusame and kasakage
the stable grow disproportionately large                                                         from the ensuing Muromachi period and,
                                                archers on galloping horses shot at immo-
bamboo trees, a decorative device.                                                               despite an imperial edict in 1350 that tem-
                                                bile and inanimate targets. In inuoumono,
       The right screen shows stylistic ele-                                                     porarily banned it, texts were written on
                                                the targets were live dogs.
ments that are close to the work of Kano                                                         this popular sport. Different schools es-
                                                      Inuoumono consisted of two distinct
Mitsunobu (1565-1608) around 1600, espe-                                                         poused different methods for conducting
                                                phases of activity, nawa no inu, the "dog
cially in the tree motifs and their spatial                                                      inuoumono. One event in 1489 included
                                                inside the rope," and soio no inu, the "dog
handling. These screens, therefore, may                                                          the participation of thirty-six archers in
                                                outside the rope." In nawa no inu, a group
date from the first decade of the seven-                                                         three teams of twelve, which seems to
                                                of mounted archers waited just outside a
teenth century. Mitsunobu was already an                                                         have been standard, and more than one
                                                large circle marked by a thick rope. At the
important artist of the Kano school as                                                           hundred and fifty dogs. A decrease in doc-
                                                center of the circle was a smaller circle of
early as 1581 when he and his father,                                                            umentary evidence of inuoumono from
                                                sand. A dog was released inside the sand
 Eitoku, were employed by Oda Nobunaga                                                           the end of the Muromachi period through
                                                ring, and as it crossed over the rope
 to decorate the interiors of his Azuchi Cas-                                                    the early Edo period probably reflects a
                                                boundary, the archers would try to hit it
 tle. It was in this same year that Nobunaga                                                     decline in its popularity, though in the
                                                with blunt large-headed arrows. When the
 held a grand dressage of his several hun-                                                       middle Edo period a revival in interest
                                                dog passed into the area outside the circle,
 dred horses, which was viewed by the em-                                                        seems to have occurred. For example, a
                                                the contest would shift to the soio no inu
 peror Ogimachi. These screens, especially                                                       grand event was organized by the Shi-
                                                phase, in which the mounted archers
 the one on the right, no doubt reflect                                                          mazu family on the seventh day of the
                                                chased the dog and attempted to strike it
 memories of that great event on a modest                                                        fourth month of 1646.
                                                with the blunt arrows. These proceedings
 scale.                                      YS                                                        The earliest depictions of inuoumono,
                                                were closely observed by the kenmi, a
                                                judge who rated the contestants on their
172
aside from illustrations in texts from the     are divided equally into three teams of sev-    108 Cherry blossom viewing and falconry
Muromachi periods, date from the end of        enteen; one group dismounted at the top,            attributed to Unkoku Togan
the Muromachi period. The event usually        one at the bottom, and one on horseback             (1547-1618)
was painted in a lively and straightforward    around the rope circle. Great attention is          pair of six-fold screens; ink and color
manner, as one component of a larger pic-      given to the robes of the attending figures;        on paper
ture. Eventually, the theme was treated on     those of the mounted participants are de-           each 157.0 x 345.5 (6i4/5 x 136)
a grander scale, expanded to fill the broad    picted with sleeves billowing from ex-              Momoyama period, late loth century
expanse afforded by a pair of six-fold         tended arms to achieve maximum
                                                                                                   Sekai Kyüseikyó (MOA Art Museum),
screens as well as fusuma (sliding door)       decorative effect against the gold back-
                                               ground.                                             Shizuoka Prefecture
panels. More than a dozen Momoyama-
and Edo-period inuoumono screens, in                The composition is contrived to                Important Cultural Property
pairs and singly, are known today.             achieve a contrast of action and inaction.      Seasonal images from spring and winter
      The screens shown here are generally     The two aspects of the event, nawa no inu       decorate this pair of screens. The spring
regarded as the oldest extant inuoumono        and soto no inu, are clearly divided, one to    scene of cherry blossom viewing is painted
screens, and are considered by many to be      each six-panel screen. The artist has em-       in a polychromatic style, while the winter
the finest. It has been argued on stylistic    phasized a highly charged stillness in the      scene of falconry is depicted in subdued
grounds that this set was painted by Kano      nawa no inu scene. The dog is yet to be re-     tones. In the spring screen, women and
Sanraku, an artist active during the Mo-       leased and the participants wait expec-         children enter into a festive dance as their
moyama and early Edo periods, when the         tantly atop their horses who paw the            palanquin and luggage bearers relax. The
practice of inuoumono had waned. A pas-        ground with energetic anticipation. In          colorfully dressed women and children are
sage in the late seventeenth-century art       the soto no inu scene, the potential for ac-    gathered in what appears to be a temple
historical text, the Honchd gashi, relates     tivity is given full play, as the mounted       compound on a hill, in an area separated
that Sanraku first painted inuoumono af-       archers and attendants converge on the          from the temple buildings by green cur-
ter hearing how it had been practiced          fleeing dog in a galloping wedge of             tains hung between cedar trees. Under the
 from an old man named Sasaki Genyu.           movement.                                 AMW   shade of a giant pine tree, the luggage
This confirms that Sanraku's inuoumono                                                         bearers squat by the palanquins and talk
paintings were produced after the actual                                                       among themselves; one prepares tobacco
practice of inuoumono had waned in                                                             leaves for his long pipe. The scene is illu-
popularity.                                                                                    minated by sunlight filtering through the
      In this painting many of the conven-                                                     golden spring mist. In the winter screen,
tions of inuoumono are portrayed. The                                                           samurai and their attendants are engaged
 nawd no inu area is carefully depicted with                                                    in hunting. The hunters intently pursue
 a large circle of rope bordered with a ring                                                    pheasants that are being chased and at-
 of sand in which the mounted archers                                                           tacked by hawks and dogs in a desolate
 wait, and an inner circle of sand. On the                                                      winter field. A steep, overhanging cliff and
 left-hand screen, in the nikkijo is the man                                                    rustic, thatched-roofed houses behind a
 responsible for recording the events                                                           brushwood fence fill the last two panels at
 poised with ink and brush at hand. On the                                                      the left.
 right-hand screen, fifty-one participants                                                           Although the artist is not identified
                                                                                                by a signature or seal, these screens have
                                                                                                                                        173
JOS
J09
174
175
110
been attributed to Unkoku Tôgan (1547-                 Art historical sources compiled in the   109 Scenes from the Tale of the Heike
1618), a third-generation follower of Sesshü     seventeenth century and later also note            attributed to Yano Saburôhyôbei
Tôyô (1420-1506). Stylistic features associ-     that before Tôgan inherited Sesshü's artis-        Yoshishige
ated with Tôgan are the manner of depict-
ing the jagged rock outcroppings, the
                                                 tic tradition, he had studied painting un-
                                                 der Kano Shôei (1519-1592), or his more
                                                                                                    (fi. 1632-1653)
                                                                                                    pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and
linear textures of the rocky terrains occu-      famous son Eitoku (1543-1590). This con-           gold leaf on paper
pying the landscape setting in the left          nection is supported by stylistic evidence         each 174.7 x 375-° (683/4 x 1473/5)
screen, and the faces of the people de-          found in some of Togan's works. Shôei              Edo period, first half ryth century
picted in both screens (cat. 119).               and Eitoku, and the painters who worked
      What is known of Togan's life comes        in their studios, were the pioneers of the         Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
from fragmentary contemporary writings           colorful Momoyama style of painting.               Important Art Object
by the artist himself and from later but         Elsewhere Tôgan is recorded as a practi-
                                                                                                The conflicts between the two warrior
more complete accounts compiled by his           tioner of tea and a participant in renga
                                                                                                families of the late twelfth century, the
descendants. One reliable biography says         (linked verse) gatherings. In 1611, Tôgan
                                                                                                Minamoto (Genji) and Taira (Heike), were
that Unkoku Tôgan, whose earlier name            was given the rank of hokkyd (Bridge of
                                                                                                shaped into a major epic battle narrative,
was Hará Chibei, was born in 1547 as the         the Law), the lowest of the three honorific
                                                                                                the Tale of the Heike, during the early thir-
second son of a warrior, one Hará Naoie, a       ranks (the others are hdgen or Eye of the      teenth century. The Tale's themes of rise
retainer of a minor daimyo of Nokomi             Law, and hôin or Seal of the Law) given
                                                                                                and fall of the mighty, of duty and compas-
Castle in the northern Kyushu province of        by the Imperial court to clerics and gifted
                                                                                                sion, of the sublime and the earthly, are
Hizen. After his father's death in 1584 in       artists.
                                                                                                cast in an essentially Buddhist view that
the Battle of Arima, the artist became a re-           This pair of screens can be said to
                                                                                                the affairs of this world are transient and
tainer of the powerful daimyo Mori Teru-         show both of Togan's styles: the spring
                                                                                                volatile. Thus the Tale has inspired poetry,
moto (1553-1625), with an annual stipend of      screen displays the buoyant, colorful mode
                                                                                                No librettos, and paintings throughout the
200 koku. In 1593, the artist copied the         typical of the Momoyama-period genre
                                                                                                medieval period and well into the Edo
Landscape of the Four Seasons, a long            style related to the Kano tradition, and the   period.
handscroll by Sesshü and a treasure of the       winter screen shows Togan's conservative
                                                                                                     Two episodes from the Tale are shown
Mori family. The same source says that           and archaistic mode reflecting Togan's
                                                                                                here. The right screen depicts the Battle
Terumoto was so impressed by the copy            debt to the Sesshü tradition.             YS
                                                                                                of Uji, south of Kyoto (site of the famous
that the artist was allowed to use as his ar-                                                   Buddhist temple of Byôdôin), on the twen-
 tistic name Unkoku, after the name of Ses-                                                     tieth day of the first lunary month of 1184.
 shü's studio, and to adopt the character to                                                    At the Battle of Uji the Genji troops,
 of Tôyô as his own, and also that on this                                                      60,000 strong and led by Minamoto Yori-
 occasion Tôgan took the tonsure. A colo-                                                       tomo, surprised the army of his own
 phon brushed by Tôgan at the time the                                                          cousin Yoshinaka. Yoshinaka's victorious
 copy was made, and which accompanies                                                           campaigns against the Heike had aroused
 the original by Sesshü, says that Terumoto
                                                                                                 Yoritomo's suspicion, and hence the at-
 gave the scroll to the artist in token of To-                                                   tack. Yoshinaka's garrisons removed
 gan's succeeding to Sesshü's artistic tradi-
                                                                                                 bridges and positioned themselves on the
 tion and that the artist was also given
                                                                                                 northern shore of the Uji River, which the
  Sesshü's studio, Unkokuken.
                                                                                                 Genji army hesitated to cross. Then, from
                                                                                                 a corner of Byôdôin, two high-ranking war-
176
riors of the Genji clan, Sasaki Shiro Taka-      chored a little offshore. The warrior wore ar-    no chance of escaping from the Genji.
tsuna and Kajiwara Genta Kagesue,                mor laced with light green silk cords over a      Since you must die now, let it be my hand
emerged and raced each other on horse-           twilled silk battle robe decorated with an        rather than by the hand of another, for I will
back across the churning water. Each             embroidered design of cranes. On his head         see that prayers for your better fortune in
hoped to be the first to reach the other         was a gold-horned helmet. He carried a            the next world are performed.
shore in order to launch the attack on           sword in a gold-studded sheath and a bow          (Translated in Kitagawa and Tsuchida 1975, vol.
Yoshinaka's garrisons. Both warriors were        bound with red lacquered rattan. His quiver       2, 561-562.)
mounted on horses that had been personal         held a set of black and white feathered ar-            When the youth was beheaded,
gifts from Yoritomo, in recognition of their     rows, the center of each feather bearing a        Naozane found a flute in a brocade pouch
valor. Sasaki rode a dark chestnut horse         black mark. He rode a dappled gray horse          tucked around the youth's body. The
named Ikezuki and Kajiwara a black horse         outfitted with a gold-studded saddle. He was      youth was soon identified as Atsumori, an
named Surusumi, both Yoritomo's most             swimming at a distance of five or six tan         outstanding flute player, only seventeen
coveted horses. The two warriors plunged         [that is, more than 100 feet] when Nobu-          years of age, and a son of Tsunemori, the
into the river, Kajiwara with a slight head      zane roared at him: You out there! I believe      chief of the department of construction at
start, but Sasaki, by clever trickery, outdis-   you are a great general. It is cowardly to turn   the Imperial Palace. The flute was the fa-
tanced Kajiwara.                                 your back on your enemy. Come back!               mous flute named Saeda (Small Branch),
      In the screen the two horses trot to-             Naozane beckoned to him with his fan.      originally owned by Emperor Toba (r.
ward the water's edge. Between the gold          Thus challenged, the warrior turned his           1107-1123). Kumagae, deeply disturbed by
clouds a section of the ruined Uji Bridge is     horse around. When he reached the beach,          the event, later took the tonsure and spent
visible. Kajiwara's black horse braved the       Naozane rode alongside, grappled with him,        the remainder of his life as a Buddhist
churning water first, eighteen feet ahead        and wrestled him to the ground. As                evangelist.
of Sasaki who from behind shouted that           Naozane pressed down his opponent and re-              The screens are traditionally at-
Kajiwara's horse's girths needed tighten-        moved his helmet to cut off his head, he          tributed to a minor painter, Yano Saburô-
ing. While the gullible Kajiwara, in mid-        saw before him the fair-complexioned face         hyôbei Yoshishige, who served Hosokawa
stream, attended to this problem, Sasaki         of a boy no more than sixteen or seventeen.       Sansai (1563-1646) at Kokura, Kyushu, and
overtook him and reached the opposite            Looking at this face, he recalled his son,        his son Tadatoshi (1586-1641), daimyo of
shore first.                                     Naoie. The youth was so handsome and in-          Higo Province (now Kumamoto Prefec-
      The left screen depicts an episode         nocent that Naozane, unnerved, was unable         ture). The painting shows technical mas-
soon after the battle at Ichinotani, Harima      to find a place to strike with the blade of his   tery reminiscent of the professional Kano
Province (part of Hyôgo Prefecture, near         sword.... He thought to himself: The              studio tradition, which far exceed our ex-
Kobe), which occurred one month after            slaughter of one courtier cannot conclu-          pectations of a provincial painter.      YS
the Uji River episode. The Genji defeated        sively effect this war. Even when I saw that
the Heike at Ichinotani, and the Heike sur-       my son, Naoie, was slightly wounded, I           no Maps of the world and of Japan
vivors fled the shore toward the fleets.         could not help feeling misery. How much              pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and
One of the ablest ranking warriors of the         more painful it would be if'this young war-         gold leaf on paper
Genji troops, Kumagae Nobuzane, pur-              n'or's father heard that his son had been           each 163.8 x 379.6 (64^2 x 149^2)
sued them. The painting depicts the sub-          killed. I must spare him ! Looking over his
                                                                                                      Edo period, after 1632
sequent events, described in the Tale.            shoulder, he saw a group of his comrades
       As he was riding to the beach, he         galloping toward them. He suppressed his             Jótokuji, Fukui Prefecture
 caught sight of a fine-looking warrior urging    tears and said: Though I wish to spare your         Important Cultural Property
 his horse into the sea toward a boat an-         life, a band of my fellow warriors is ap-
                                                  proaching, and there are so many others          This striking pair of screens, one a map of
                                                  throughout the countryside that you have         the world and the other a map of Japan, re-
                                                                                                                                              177
Ill
112
 178
179
113
veals how the Japanese perceived the            panel five. Eastern Europe and Asia           Guinea, which is rendered like an iceberg
shape and space of the world outside their      stretch toward the right. Japan, a tiny clus- bobbing in the south Pacific, on panel
own during the early decades of the seven-      ter of strangely shaped pink islands—a        two. These names represent Japanese or-
teenth century. The elliptically shaped         miniature of the fully blown version in the thography approximating the Latinized
map of the world, like a view of the earth      other screen—is at the upper right of the     place names in Portuguese or Spanish,
from outer space, is isolated by the gold       map, rendered larger than its relative size, agreeing with the fact that the map shows
surface into which the map is set. A            but nonetheless dwarfed by the vastness       the Portuguese and Spanish trade routes
tripod-in-circle seal of the painter Kano       of the rest of the world.                     in red lines issuing from two ports of the
Eitoku (1543-1590) is stamped on the lower            The inordinately large land masses      Iberian peninsula, Lisbon in Portugal and
section of the gold ground of panel six.        near the polar regions in the map of the      Sanlúcar de Barrameda in Spain.
The attribution to Eitoku is not accepted.      world indicate that this map is based gen-          North America, including Canada,
     Of some two dozen examples of maps         erally on a cartographic projection devised has three inscriptions on the fourth panel.
surviving from the seventeenth century,         by the Flemish mathematician and geogra- Below the left tip of the shortest of three
this work is one of the earliest produced by    pher Gerhardus Mercator (1512-1594),          green mountain ranges is Furorita for Flor-
Japanese artists. Although the map of the       whose navigational map was published in       ida, which actually lies considerably far-
world was undoubtedly inspired by Euro-         1569 and refined in 1590 by an English ge-    ther south. Amerika is inscribed to the left
pean prototypes, no corresponding model         ographer, Edward Wright, but was not in       of the middle mountain range, identifying
has been found in Japan. Since Portu-           general currency until about 1630. In this    the entire continent. And most signifi-
guese traders and the Jesuits were already      Japanese version, to maintain visual har-     cantly, Nowafuransa is inscribed at the up-
in Japan by the 1540$, we may speculate         mony, the regions of the South Pole,          per right of the land mass, for "New
that European maps were familiar to the         which would have filled the lower areas of France," an earlier name for Canada in
Japanese. The Jesuits report that No-           the map, are mostly painted over by the       currency after around 1632 when, after
bunaga owned a globe in 1580 and hung a         blue of the ocean.                            sporadic control by the British during the
map of the world in his room in 1581.                Both maps are inscribed with place       Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), the region's
     In the map of the world, oceans are        names. Indeed, an inscription on the map      predominantly French settlement was re-
painted in dark blue and the strangely          of the world has been cited as evidence for stored to France by the treaty of Saint-
shaped land masses in ocher, browns, pink,      the earliest possible date of 1592. The in-   Germain-en-Laye. The name New France
and white, creating impressive coloristic       scription, written on the right edge of       continued to be used until 1763, when the
effects. In the map of Japan, the island na-    panel two in hiragana (Japanese syllabic      territory was ceded to Great Britain. If the
tion is surrounded by blue seas with care-      letters), reads Orankd, which is the Japa-     inscriptions were written at the time the
fully drawn schematic wave patterns and         nese reading of the Chinese name of a no- map was produced, then the map post-
by wafting gold clouds that, like the islands   madic tribe, reported for the first time by a dates 1632.
themselves, float on the seas.                  Japanese warrior and close vassal of Hide-          The names of provinces (kuni) are in-
     These maps are both informative and        yoshi, Katô Kiyomasa (1562-1611), when he scribed on the screen depicting the islands
decorative. The map of the world is berib-      led a northern expedition during the Ko-       of Japan. The snow-capped sacred moun-
boned by the equator, a decorative straight     rean campaign in 1592. The tribe was           tain, Mount Fuji, marks the center of
band of alternating black and orange. The       known to the Jesuits by 1594. The name is      Honshu, while a range of green mountains
tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are lines       used in this map for an area northeast of      runs along the center of the northeastern
of gold, as are the latitudinal parallels       Korea.                                         section of the island.
drawn across the two polar regions. Four              Except for the names of provinces in          It has been asserted that this type of
continental land masses—Europe, Africa,         China and Southeast Asian countries,           map of Japan could have been produced as
and North and South America—and the             which are written in Chinese characters,       early as 1592. The date is based on the con-
 Atlantic Ocean are on the third and fourth     the rest are in hiragana: Inkiresu for En-     voy route drawn in red between the north-
 panels, the center of the screen, while        gland, Furansa for France; Hatagonun for       western tip of Kyushu and the Korean
 what must be Mexico and Alaska are on          Patagonia, the southernmost of South           peninsula, on panels five and six. This
                                                America; and Nowakineya for New
180
route was used by Hideyoshi's army before       figures, twenty-eight cities are depicted,       112 Four equestrians in combat
and during his Korean expedition of 1592.       from top to bottom, right to left: Goa,              four-fold screen; color and gold leaf on
This date, too, is problematic. The shapes      Paris, Prague, Calcutta, Mexico City,                paper
of the islands, as conceptual as the land       Aden, Frankfurt, Sofala, Venice, Amster-             166.0 x 338.0 (653/8 x 133)
masses of Europe, are also based on a Eu-       dam, Cologne, Cuzco, Rome, Ormuz,                    Momoyama period, early i7th century
ropean model, possibly the Dutch cartog-        Bantam, Mozambique, Istanbul, London,
                                                                                                     Kobe City Museum of Nanban Art,
rapher William Blaeu's map of Asia of           Genoa, Hamburg, Seville, Antwerp, Stock-
1635. The strangely shortened Honshu is-                                                             Hyôgo Prefecture
                                                holm, Moscow, Lisbon, Dantzig, Bergen,
land and the abstract shapes of the islands                                                          Important Cultural Property
                                                and Alexandria. A map of Portugal, in
of Shikoku and Kyushu are in fact closer        place of cities, occupies part of the first      European trade with Japan in the six-
to a map of Japan published by the Jesuits      and second panels from the right. The de-        teenth century brought with it more than
in the 16405 than to any European prece-        pictions of these cities and figures are de-     Chinese silks and other foreign goods
dents that the Japanese might have seen         rived primarily from a map of the world by       bought with Japanese silver. With the mer-
in the sixteenth century. The earliest pos-     Willem Blaeu (1571-1638), published in           chants came Catholic missionaries, and
sible date for this type of map, therefore,     1606-1607. The rulers °f England and             the propagation of the new faith required
would be the 1630$ or 16405, later than the     China represented in Blaeu's map are             sacred images for instruction and devo-
proposed Momoyama-period date by al-            missing in the Imperial screen, however;         tion. Japanese interest in Western painting
most half a century.                      YS    the view of Rome comes from Vita Beati           did not, however, focus only on devotional
                                                patris Ignatii Loyolae, a biography of Saint     images. Instructed by Jesuit artists, Japa-
111 Twenty-eight cities and myriad              Ignatius published in Antwerp in 1610.           nese painters began to explore techniques
    countries                                   The map of Portugal can be traced to             and materials by copying the European art
    pair of eight-fold screens, ink and color   Theatrum Orbis Terrarum by Abraham Or-           made available to them. Although the sub-
    on paper                                    telius (1527-1598), first published in 1570      ject is foreign, the martial theme and lav-
    each 194.8 x 516.3                          and reprinted four more times by 1612.           ish coloring of this work are in keeping
    Momoyama or Edo period, iyth                      On the two outer panels of the other       with the tastes of a Momoyama-period dai-
    century                                     screen are pairs of men and women from           myo.
                                                forty-two countries, in native dress, and on            The screen consists of two facing
    Imperial Household Collection               the six panels in between, a map of the          pairs of equestrian rulers of Christian and
                                                world; these depictions are close to the         Muslim nations. The figures have been
In the Momoyama period, folding screens
                                                1606-1607 Blaeu map. In the Blaeu map,           tentatively identified as (from right to left)
showing maps of the entire world or de-
                                                however, scenes from only thirty countries       a Tartar ruler, a Russian czar, a Turkish sul-
tailed representations of particular distant
                                                are included, though couples from forty-         tan, and the Holy Roman emperor Ru-
places were made to satisfy a fascination
                                                two countries can be seen in another map         dolph II. With only minor deviations, four
with an outside world that until then had
                                                by Blaeu, in which the world is divided be-      figures correspond to the third (from
been unknown.
                                                tween two circles, published either in 1619      right), fourth, seventh, and eighth rulers
      This set is the largest among such ex-
                                                or around 1645. In the lower part of the         depicted in the upper portion of one of
tant screens. Along the top of each panel
                                                fourth panel of this screen is a framed in-      the pair of screens in the Imperial House-
of one screen are eight mounted figures in
                                                set containing an allegorical representa-        hold (cat. 111). Models for these figures
four opposing pairs. They have been iden-
                                                tion of the Four Continents: Europe (a           were drawn from different, unrelated
tified as, from the right, the rulers of Per-
                                                 seated woman) is flanked on the left by the     sources, such as the small prints of Twelve
sia, Abyssinia, Tartary, Moscow, France
                                                New World (two figures wearing feathered         Roman Emperors, c. 1590, by Adriaen Col-
(Henry IV), Spain (Philip II), Turkey, and
                                                headdresses) and on the right by Asia (two       laert (c. 1560-1618), and the figures of
the Holy Roman Empire (Rudolf II). The
                                                 figures with a camel) and Africa (a figure      rulers on a map of the world by Willem
third and fourth, seventh and eighth fig-
                                                 with a crocodile). In another framed inset,     Blaeu (1571-1638), which was brought from
ures appear also, only minutely altered, in
                                                 at the bottom of the sixth panel, are canni-    Holland and known in Japan during the
catalogue 112. In vertical rows beneath the
                                                bals from Brazil.                           AY    first decade of the seventeenth century.
                                                                                                                                           181
114
115
182
183
116
     This painting, now mounted as a             tween the figurai groupings. A hint of          del containing a three-nail design, a
four-fold screen, was originally part of a set   professional training in the Kano-school        symbol of Christ's Passion; a confessional
of eight sliding-door panels. The remain-        style is evident in the red peonies in the      with a circular map of the world on its
ing four have been mounted as an eight-          foreground and the mountains in the             outer wall; and a smaller building, proba-
fold screen, now in a private collection.        background, both frequently depicted by         bly an oratory, its roof surmounted by a
These works were reportedly in the Aizu-         artists of the Kano school.                     gold cross-shaped finial. From the gate is-
Wakamatsu Castle, the home of Leon                    The themes depicted derive from the        sues a party of missionaries to greet the
Gamo Ujisato (1556-1595), a Christian dai-       Catholic missions in Japan. The musicians       traders, who, led by the elegantly dressed
myo, and his son Gamo Hideyuki (1583-            in extravagant dress and the attendants at      captain under a red parasol, proceed from
1612), and remained there until 1644, when       the small Temple of Love in the right-hand      the left. The two parties meet at the cen-
they changed hands and were kept by the          screen are clearly related to the theme of      ter of the screen.
Matsudaira family until the Meiji Restora-       profane love. Christian symbolism is evi-            In the left screen a galleon with a high
tion in the nineteenth century.           MR     dent in the wine press in panel six of the      prow and stern sails into the harbor, dwarf-
                                                 same screen, signifying the Sacrifice. Jesu-    ing a small boat on its starboard side,
113 European musicians                           its not only taught Japanese artists how to     which is unloading cargo to the shore. The
    pair of six-fold screens; color and gold     paint using Western techniques, but also        blue water contrasts with the white spray
    on paper                                     tried to impart something of their Chris-       of waves, as do the fanciful colors of the
    each 102.5 x 308.0 (403/8 x 121 l /^)        tian message through what seemed to be          crews' costumes with the gold clouds.
    Momoyama period, early iyth century          secular themes. The daimyo who commis-               An early genre painting, this work is
                                                 sioned works such as these were largely         attributed to Kano Mitsunobu, who, in
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         Christian converts or at least supporters of    1593, was called from Kyoto to Nagoya in
      Important Cultural Property                commerce and communication with Euro-           northern Kyushu to decorate the castle
                                                 peans.                                     MR   headquarters Hideyoshi had built during
This work is one of many extant paintings
of Western genre scenes. Interest in Euro-                                                       his Korean expedition of 1592-1593. Mi-
pean dress, lifestyle, and landscape, as il-     114 Arrival of the southern barbarians          tsunobu reportedly observed the Portu-
lustrated in imported copies of European             attributed to Kano Mitsunobu                guese in Kyushu; thus the details such as
engravings, explains the great appeal of             (1565-1608)                                 the costumes in this work are believed to
these screens in Momoyama and Edo Ja-                pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and   have been based on life.                   YS
pan. The brilliant colors and gold would             gold leaf on paper
                                                     each 164.0 x 365.0 (64 V* x 1433/4)         115 Sights in and around Kyoto
have catered to the extravagant tastes of
the Momoyama-period daimyo.                          Momoyama period, c. 1593                        pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and
     In the right screen two women are                                                               gold leaf on paper
                                                     Nanban Bunkakan, Osaka
playing the viol and the harp to ardent lis-                                                         each 160.5 x 323-5 (63 Vs x 1273/3)
teners. Other figures in the foreground are      Portuguese traders were the earliest Euro-          Edo period, after 1620
immersed in conversation! The sea, dotted        peans to come to Japan, followed by the             Osaka Municipal Museum, Osaka
with ships, stretches behind the main fig-       Jesuits in the 15405. The foreigners were
ures. The left screen is less centered, with     called nanbanjin, or "southern barbari-         Sights in and around Kyoto (Rakuchu raku-
pairs of men conversing in the foreground        ans/' and the art that deals with them is       gai) as a subject originated in urban land-
and an expanse of water to the left. In          called nanban art. This pair of screens, the    scape paintings of Kyoto done in the
both screens distant figures and buildings       earliest-known example of this type, de-        14705. The earliest extant screens, how-
in the mountainous landscape create              picts the arrival of Portuguese traders in      ever, postdate the first quarter of the six-
small, isolated scenes. Details such as the      Nagasaki.                                       teenth century and were painted by
European dress and musical instruments                 In the right screen, behind a row of      Kano-school painters: by Motonobu in the
 are well executed; however, the artist was      shops and partially hidden by gold clouds,      1530$; by Motonobu's grandson, Eitoku, in
 not adept in the Western technique of per-      is a view of the Catholic mission situated      the 15605; and by Eitoku's son, Mitsunobu,
 spective, contributing to a lack of unity be-   high on a hill. Included are a tatami-          in the 15805. A forerunner of genre paint-
                                                 matted chapel, its altar marked by a roun-      ing, their focus shifts from a view of the
186
city with the changing seasons and              ace to wed the emperor Go-Mizunoo,                in relief with gofun and then painted over
monthly events to one that highlights spe- which took place on the eighteenth day of              with gold. The richly textured result is in
cific sites, architecture, both public and      the sixth month of 1620.                     YS   keeping with the extravagant tastes typical
private, and the individual activities of citi-                                                   of the Momoyama period.                   MR
zens of this fast-growing city. This trend       116 Amusements at Higashiyama
toward thematic changes became even                   pair of six-fold screens, ink, color and    117 Matsushima
more marked during the first quarter of               gold leaf on paper                              pair of eight-fold screens; ink, color,
the seventeenth century, the period to                each 84.0 x 276.0                               gold, and gold leaf on paper
which this set of screens belongs.                    Edo period, iyth century                        each 185.0 x 488.6 (727/8 x 1923/3)
      This pair of screens depicts Kyoto                                                              Edo period, late ryth century
shortly after 1620. In the right screen, di-          Kozu Kobunka Kaikan, Kyoto
vided by the Kamo River, is the area along                                                            FukuokaArt Museum,
Higashiyama, or Eastern Hills, seen from         Higashiyama, the eastern section of                  Fukuoka Prefecture
the west. The view includes Toyokuni             Kyoto, remains today a popular spot for
                                                 visitors on pleasure trips and pilgrims to       Transmitted in the Kuroda family of Fu-
Jinja, which enshrines Toyotomi Hide-
                                                 the shrines and temples. This small-scale        kuoka, the daimyo of a domain in north-
yoshi, in the upper portion of panel one;
                                                                                                  ern Kyushu, these screens depict the
the colossal Buddha Hall of Hôkôji, the fo- continuous composition gives the viewer a
                                                 miniaturized look into various scenes in         scenic cove of Matsushima, a part of Sen-
cus of this screen, on panel two; Yasaka
                                                 the  Higashiyama area, focusing on spring        dai Bay on the Pacific coast of today's
Jinja, or Gion Shrine, on panels three and
                                                 cherry-blossom viewing. Unlike many              Miyagi Prefecture in northern Honshu.
four; Yoshidayama, a hillock in the north-
                                                 other Higashiyama compositions, in this          The bay at Matsushima, with its widest
eastern part of the city, on panels five and
                                                 version the Yasaka Jinja appears on the          span of a little over ten kilometers (eight
six; and the Shinto sanctuary of Kamo
                                                                                                  miles), is a meisho ("famous place" or
Jinja on panel six. Two large bridges, Sanjó left-hand screen, with the temple of Kiyo-
                                                 mizu on the right-hand screen at the very        "place with a name") of long standing in
and Gojô Ohashi, span the river. Town
                                                 top.  Between these two stretches a long         Japanese history. It attained national
blocks stretch northward along the river's
                                                 avenue filled with travelers and merrymak-       prominence in the Edo period as one of
west bank, with floats and processions of
                                                 ers. Vendors of food and various wares           the three most beautiful sites of Japan (Ni-
the Gion Festival depicted along a main
                                                 throng the road. Interesting scenes in-          hon sankei); the two others are Amano-
street. On panel six is the precinct of the
                                                 clude the banquet being held under the           hashidate on the Japan Sea coast, and
Imperial Palace, only partially visible.
                                                 cherry trees at the far right, where dancers     Itsukushima, renowned for a Shinto shrine
      The left screen presents the western
                                                 perform. In the left screen groups of            of the same name, on the Inland Sea. Vis-
part of the city bordered by two rivers: the
                                                 women stroll in colorful kimono, while           iting Matsushima in the fifth month of
Horikawa, which runs north and south, is
                                                 nearby samurai admire them.                      1689 on his famous journey to the north,
depicted at the bottom; the Oigawa,
                                                       Because among the figures in these         poet Matsuo Bashó (1644-1694) remarked
which meanders southward to become the
                                                 screens warriors predominate, it is be-          that Matsushima was the most beautiful
Katsura River, is on panels four and five.
                                                                                                  spot in Japan, comparable to Dongting
The port town of Yodo, where the Katsura lieved to have been commissioned by a
                                                 daimyo. In the left screen, members of the       Lake and West Lake of China, and that its
River ends and the Yodo River begins its
                                                 warrior class rest in tearooms outside the       churning waves at high tide were as dra-
flow southwest toward Osaka, is depicted
                                                  shrine's gate. Some warriors engaged in         matic as the Hangzhou bore on the Qian-
on panel six. The focus of this screen is
                                                  archery practice are shown in the middle        tang River.
Nijô Castle, completed shortly after 1603,
                                                  of the right screen. The lively style of the         The sheer geographic wonder of the
the Kyoto headquarters for the garrisons
                                                  figures and the lavish use of color suggest     site alone invites awe. Over 260 fantasti-
of the shogun Tokugawa leyasu. From its
                                                  that it is a work of the Kano school. Bril-     cally shaped rocky islets, large and small
gate issues a procession, observed by war-
                                                  liant green, red, blue, and yellow pigments     and crowned with pine trees, are scattered
riors along its path, which has been inter-
                                                                                                  around the cove. (Matsushima means
 preted to be the procession of Kazuko, the enhance a beautifully decorative surface
                                                  dominated by gold. The clouds that weave        "pine islands.") The scenes represented in
 daughter of the second shogun, Tokugawa
                                                  in and out of the trees are first patterned     these screens are viewed from the ocean
 Hidetada, on her way to the Imperial Pal-
                                                                                                  side. The focus of the right screen is the
                                                                                                                                            187
117
precinct of the Rinzai Zen monastery of          tails, with elastic distortion of the rock             Architectural elements reflect the To-
Zuiganji, located behind the town of Ma-         forms and expressive brush lines that con-       kugawa hegemony. The focal point of the
tsushima that lies in the center of the arc      tour the islets. This ink-painting style is      screens is Edo Castle, on the two right-
of the shore. One of the Main Provincial         likely to have been inspired by Sesson           hand panels of the left-hand screen, con-
Monasteries (shosan), Zuiganji was re-           Shükei (c. 1504-1589) who was active in          sisting of a multi-storied donjon and
stored in 1604 under the patronage of an         northern Japan one hundred years earlier.        numerous subsidiary buildings encircled
enlightened local daimyo, Date Masa-             What is new in this late-seventeenth-            by two moats. The castle is flanked by two
mune (1567-1636), lord of the domain of          century work is the merging of genre             great temple complexes, both prominent
Sendai. In the left screen the focus is the      scenes with views of actual topography—          Buddhist institutions closely associated
precinct of the local Shinto sanctuary of        an approach totally different from the           with the bakufu, Zôjôji on the left-hand
Shiogama Jinja, which enshrines a salt de-       more abstract and conceptual views of            screen, and Kan'eiji on the right-hand
ity, and the nearby fishing town of              Matsushima painted by Sotatsu (fl. 1602-         screen. Directly above Edo Castle are the
Shiogama at the south end of the shore.          1639) and his later follower Ogata Kôrin         residences of the gosanke, the three Toku-
Shiogama literally means saltpan; in the         (1658-1716).                                YS   gawa branch families from the provinces
yard of one of the houses, four saltpans are                                                      of Owari, Mito, and Kii. Across the moat
prominently displayed. The two screens                                                            from the castle are daimyo residences built
                                                 118 Scenes of Edo
together thus take in the whole view of                                                           under the sankin kdtai system. lemitsu for-
the shore of Matsushima, from northeast              ink, color, and gold leaf on paper
                                                                                                  malized the system in 1634, requiring dai-
to southwest.                                        two six-panel screens, each 162.5 x
                                                                                                  myo to maintain a domicile in Edo and
      The water of the bay is painted in             344.0 (64 x 1352/5)                          alternate a period of residence in their do-
deep blue, and the schematic mists that              Edo period, after 1641                       mains with a period in Edo; their families
float over it are rendered in gold and sprin-        National Museum of Japanese History,         lived continuously in Edo as hostages. Car-
kled with flakes of gold leaf. The view con-         Chiba Prefecture                             touches identify the various residences, in-
tains as many boats, as islets: cargo ships                                                       cluding those of the Matsudaira, li, and
and fishing boats with full sails are return-    This pair of six-fold screens illustrates se-    Nabeshima families.
ing to the shore; others, like the large plea-   lected aspects of the city of Edo (present-             lemitsu is known to have loved hunt-
sure boats, are moving out to sea. There is      day Tokyo) in the mid-seventeenth cen-           ing and military events, many of which are
a veritable regatta of ships, barges, boats,     tury. Visual weight is overwhelmingly            depicted in the screens. A boar hunt can
dinghies, and skiffs, the details of which       given to the architectural symbols and           be seen on the right-hand screen, and to
are startlingly exact. Places on shore and       leisure-time activities of lemitsu (1604-         its right, a scene of muchi uchi, in which
 islets in the bay, as well as sites of local    1651), the third Tokugawa shogun. The six         warriors do battle with bamboo weapons,
 shrines and temple buildings, are identi-       panels of the left-hand screen present a          lemitsu seems to be present as a spectator
 fied and named individually by some             relatively contiguous panorama of the city,       in many of these scenes, though his face is
eighty small rectangular paper cartouches        from a high vantage point to the east, fac-       not shown. Below Mt. Fuji on the left-
 pasted directly on the panels.                  ing west; occasionally, more distant views,       hand screen is another scene of muchi
       The depiction of the towns of Mat-        such as that of Mount Fuji in the upper           uchi. A red chair, facing away from the
 sushima and Shiogama is not unlike those        left corner, are included. The three left-        viewer and surrounded by retainers carry-
 in cats. 115 and 118, representing micro-       hand panels of the right screen, seen from        ing lances, is most certainly that of the
 cosms of urban human activities in all          a high western vantage point turned to-           shogun. A passage at the top of the adjoin-
 their specificity. Technically and stylisti-    ward the east, continue this broad sweep          ing panel illustrates a scene of pheasant
 cally, the painting represents the com-         of the city. The three panels at the right,       hunting, and seated at the most advanta-
 bined traditions of yamato-e of the Tosa         though, clearly break with the continuous        geous viewing point is a figure, probably
 school, in its coloring and miniature de-       view and incorporate scenes of the north-         lemitsu, surrounded by retainers; his feet
                                                  ern outskirts of Edo.
188
are spread imperiously apart and he is            hill topped by sparse trees. In the fifth        AD on the tiled walls of a tomb interior. In
shielded by a red umbrella. The burgeon-          panel of the right-hand screen the moon          Japan the story apparently was known by
ing merchant class, though not completely         (or sun?) rises in a darkened sky. In the        the eighth century, since it is referred to in
ignored, is of relatively minor importance        foreground of the second panel of two            a poem in the Man'ydshu anthology. The
in this painting.                                 men under gnarled pine trees discuss a           subject was familiar to erudite courtiers of
      Almost five thousand figures appear         handscroll held by the man on the right.         the Heian period, and became a theme for
in this set of screens and, not surprisingly,     In the sixth panel, another man with a           painters during the Muromachi period. An
the artist has employed a formulaic ap-           cane followed by two young attendants            early example of a painting of the Seven
proach in drawing their individual fea-           walks past a bamboo grove.                       Sages is the now-lost hanging scroll by Ga-
tures. Nonetheless, their movements are                 In the left screen two men converse        kuó Zókyü (fl. c. 1482-1515). During the
skillfully rendered. Meandering, stylized         in front of a stone bridge over a mountain       second half of the sixteenth century, art-
gold clouds form a low relief frame around        brook. On the other side a twisting tree ex-     ists such as Kaihó Yüshó (1533-1615) and
the individual scenes, helping to define          tends like a canopy from a huge precipice.       Hasegawa Tóhaku (1539-1610) in Kyoto,
each one while simultaneously unifying            Beneath the cliff is a rustic retreat with a     Keison (dates unknown) in Kamakura, and
them and linking them to Edo Castle, the          thatched roof, its finial visible through a      Sesson Shúkei (c. 1504-^ 1589) in north-
center from which they radiate. Embed-            large, pitted hole in the rock. Inside the       eastern Japan began to paint monumental
ded within the gold clouds are roundels           hut, two men sitting at a Chinese chess ta-      sliding door panels and screens with this
filled with butterflies in low relief, in pairs   ble are distracted by a waterfall in the         subject.
and singly. As this was a crest used by           background. An attendant sits outside the              Unkoku Tôgan (cat. 108) painted the
many daimyo during this period, it may            hut, his back turned toward the two              Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove on slid-
have been an indication of the status of          scholars. The artist's square intaglio seal,     ing door panels at the Obaiin subtemple of
the patron of these screens.                      Tdgan, is stamped on the upper outer edge        Daitokuji monastery. The dates of these
      The date of the screens probably is no      of each screen.                                  panels are now thought to be c. 1595-1596.
earlier than 1641, when the Shiba Toshógü               The screens represent the Seven            At Obaiin the figures are considerably
(the red-roofed building in the upper-right       Sages of the Bamboo Grove, a semilegend-          more monumental and the landscape set-
corner of the Zôjôji temple complex) was          ary group of Chinese scholars (Shan Tao, }i      ting eliminated. On the reverse of the
built. The precise dating is still a matter of    (or Xi) Kang, Yuan Ji, Wang Kong, Liu             Obaiin panels, however, Togan painted a
debate.                                   AMW     Ling, Yuan Xian, and Xiang Xiu) who peri-         panoramic landscape that is stylistically
                                                  odically retreated from the mundane               more developed than the landscape in the
                                                  world to the seclusion of a bamboo grove          Eisei Bunko screens. Here the figures are
119 Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove               during the political and military tumult of       situated in a carefully depicted landscape
    Unkoku Togan (1547-1618)                      the mid-third century. There the sages            setting, and the rocks and tree forms are
    pair of six-fold screens; ink and slight       freely pursued a life of réclusion, drinking     crisply contoured and given texture dabs
    color on paper                                 wine, listening to qin (Chinese zither), and     in an orderly manner. The artist is self-
    each 156.3 x 359.6 (oí1/* x iqi1/*)           holding qing tan ("pure talk," that is, philo-    consciously formulizing the brushwork
    Momoyama period, late i6th century             sophical discussions). They also danced,         modes that originated in the works of Ses-
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                             sang, and disported themelves as the spirit      shü Tóyó (1420-1506). It may be assumed
                                                   moved them. The idea of the gentleman-           that Tôgan executed these screens earlier
A mountain landscape setting links this            scholar retreating to the wild to enjoy a        than the Obaiin sliding door panels.       YS
pair of screens of seven Chinese scholars          respite from Confucian decorum and the
engaged in a variety of activities. In the         constraints of duty, and then returning to
right screen an empty valley separates the         duty, refreshed in spirit, formed an almost
foreground terrain from a distant rocky            archetypal theme in Chinese art. It had
                                                   appeared as early as the mid-fifth century
                                                                                                                                             189
118
119
192
193
120
121
196
197
      122
123
198
199
124
izo Flowers and Birds of the Four               placed in the outer lower corners of the       122 Autumn flowers and grasses
    Seasons                                     screens. The combined style of yamato-e             attributed to Kano Eitoku (1543-1590)
    Studio of Kano Motonobu (1476-1559)         and kanga is a specialty of Kano Mo-                pair of two-fold screens; ink, color, and
    pair of six-fold screens; ink, color, and   tonobu and his studio. A recent study has           gold leaf on paper
    gold leaf on paper                          firmly attributed this work to Motonobu's           each 175.0 x 198.4 (70 x 793/8)
    each 158.2 x 355.6 (62 v^ x 140)            studio and dated it to the first half of the        Momoyama period, i6th century
    Muromachi period, first half of i6th        sixteenth century. It is a precursor of the
                                                                                                    Imperial Household Collection
    century                                     Imperial Household screens from the late
                                                sixteenth century (cat. 122).               YS This set of screens originally formed part
    Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
                                                                                               of a series of sliding-door panels on the
This extraordinary pair of screens in gold      121 Pine and cherry trees                      theme of autumn flowers and grasses or
and colors represents flowers, birds, and           sliding door panels, ink, color and        flowers of the four seasons. The screens,
insects of the four seasons. Set in a lan-          gold leaf on paper                         probably owned by the Hachijo no Miya
guorously spreading space, their world              each 184.0 x 138.0 (72^2 x 543/8)          family, are not contiguous, indicating that
takes the form of an idealized garden—a             Momoyama period, c. 1615                   they were not adjoining in the original se-
paradise—sprawling from right to left. Al-                                                     quence of panels.
though the two screens are not continu-             Myôrenji, Kyoto                                  In the center of the right screen rise
ous, seasonal progression is indicated.             Important Cultural Property                tall blades of pampas grass, chrysanthe-
Spring and summer flowers dominate the          Cherry trees blossoming deep in the             mums, fujibakama (purple trousers), and
right screen, while autumn and winter           mountains, unknown to anyone, and pine          bellflowers. The weathered rocks typical
flowers are depicted on the left screen.        trees are heavily painted on a gold back-       of Kano painting are at the bottom, and at
The cascade feeding into the pond is asso-      ground. The style employed to describe          the top, a glimpse of distant mountains
ciated with spring and summer, while the        the rocks and trees indicates that this is      through the clouds. On the left screen are
snow-capped mounds announce winter.             the work of an artist of the school founded     more rocks, a range of distant hills, and
An encylopedic array of some twenty-four        by Hasegawa Tohaku (1539-1610).                 chrysanthemums and ivy turning red in
different flowers and grasses and thirty-             The bold composition, with branches       the autumn chill. Beyond the hills are dis-
one birds native to Japan populates this        extending beyond the frames of the four         tant snow-covered peaks.
garden, which is more like a man-made           sliding door panels, would suggest that this         Although this painting has tradition-
palace garden or the interior of an aviary      work dates from the mid-Momoyama pe-            ally been attributed to Kano Eitoku, writ-
than a natural landscape.                       riod. The history of Myôrenji indicates         ten evidence documenting the making of
      The screens are known as kinbydbu,        that the painting may be properly placed        new sliding door paintings for the recon-
or "gold screens," a term that was in cur-      toward the end of the period, though. The       struction of the Hachijo no Miya resi-
rency from around 1440. Decorative in            temple was moved to its present location       dence in 1599 suggests that the artist
function, these screens were in great de-        in 1587, and rebuilt during the Keichó era     might have been Eitoku's younger
mand in Japan, and they were exported to         (1596-1615), with construction completed       brother, Sóshü (1551-1601). The gold clouds
Ming China in the sixteenth century.             in the fifth month of 1615. These paintings    and gold ground and the elegance of the
They were also used by the shogunal fam-         probably date from the time of the Keichó      composition are typical of Sóshü's man-
ily at funeral services because of the para-     reconstruction, probably around 1615,          ner. In terms of technique and style, how-
 disal associations evoked by them.              when the generation of younger artists         ever, an argument can be made for
      This work is executed in yamato-e, the     who succeeded Tôhaku were active. MS           attributing the paintings to Eitoku's son
 indigenous mode of painting character-                                                         Mitsunobu (c. 1565-1608).                 AY
 ized by details rendered in opaque colors
 and conceptualized forms. But there are
 features of the Chinese kanga mode of
 painting, as in the descriptive forms of
 flowers and tactile shapes of the rocks
200
123 Dragons and clouds                          father was a retainer for Asai Nagamasa          sonal allusions include the plum blossoms
    pair of six-fold screens, ink on paper      (1545-1573), the last great daimyo of the        of early spring and distant snowy moun-
    Kaihó Yüshó (1533-1615)                     Asai family. As a child Yüshó was sent to        tains. Such close juxtaposition of different
    each 149.5 x 337.5 (587/8 x 1324/5)         live at Tófukuji, an important Zen temple        seasons was commonly found in landscape
    Momoyama period,                            in Kyoto. He later became a lay priest and       paintings. Yüshó created patterns by con-
    late loth-early iyth century                served the abbot of the temple. Yüshó's          trasting areas of dark and light with gener-
                                                talent as a painter was recognized by the        ous ink washes. The high level of skill and
    Kitano Tenmangü, Kyoto
                                                priests at Tófukuji, who encouraged him          sense of unity in this work suggest that it is
    Important Cultural Property                 to study the painting of Kano Motonobu           a later work by Yüshó.                   MR
In East Asian art, dragons often appear as      (1476-1559). Later Yüshó turned to the
protectors of Buddhism or as rain deities.      works of Chinese monochrome ink paint-           125 Pine and hawk
In this painting, however, the dragon is a      ers of the Song and Yuan dynasties, partic-
                                                                                                     Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674)
symbol of heroic kingship, embodying the        ularly that of Liang Kai (fl. c. 1195-^ 1224).
                                                                                                     set of four sliding doors; ink, color, and
spirit of the Momoyama period. In con-          After mastering the techniques of mono-
                                                                                                     gold leaf on paper
trast to Chinese dragon paintings, these        chrome ink painting he began also to paint
                                                in the highly colored, lavish Momoyama               each 207.0 x 159.5 (8^/2 x 623/4)
dragons are a trifle antic as well as awe-                                                           Edo period, 1626
some.                                           decorative style, and eventually achieved
     Typically in East Asia, the dragon was     an interesting synthesis of various styles.          Kyoto City
paired with the tiger as cosmological sym-      Among his patrons were Toyotomi Hide-                Important Cultural Property
bols of East and West, water and metal, re-     yoshi (1537-1598) and Emperor Go-Yozei
                                                (1571-1617). His most famous paintings are       This set of four sliding doors is from the
spectively. On a pair of paintings in
                                                the large-scale works at Kenninji and the        Fourth Chamber of the building that con-
Daitokuji by the Song painterMuqi is
                                                screens at Myóshinji.                            tains the Ohiroma (Audience Room) of the
the inscription, When the dragon rises,
                                                      Yüshó's residency at Tófukuji was for-     Ninomaru Palace precinct at Kyoto's Nijó
clouds appear and When the tiger roars,
                                                tuitous, not just for the opportunity to         Castle. The interior measures about
wind blasts. In the Daitokuji paintings the
                                                 study painting, but because he was not re-      twenty-one feet wide, forty feet long, and
dragon coaxing the rain from the clouds
                                                 quired to participate in the fighting be-       thirteen and a half feet high. The chamber
and the tiger calling forth the wind form a
                                                 tween the Asai clan and Oda Nobunaga,           was used as the guards' quarters, next to
metaphor for the enlightened emperor
                                                 which led to Nagamasa's suicide at Odani        the audience room proper, the most for-
seeking an equally enlightened minister.
                                                 Castle in 1573, following his defeat.           mal room of Nijó Castle, and is thus also
      Kaihó Yüshó also executed a pair of
                                                      This work follows the compositional        known as Yari no ma (Chamber of the
paintings with the dragon and tiger,
                                                 conventions of Muromachi-period screen          Lances). It is enclosed by sliding doors,
though he more often depicted a pair of
                                                 paintings, characterized by the concentra-      intercolumnar wall panels, and friezes
dragons, as seen here.                     MS
                                                 tion of the foreground mass at the far sides    above, all gold-leafed and decorated with
                                                 of the screens. The center is an open ex-       paintings of massive pine trees and hawks.
124 Landscape of the Four Seasons                panse of water and mist. The painting is        The four panels shown here, with a design
    Kaihó Yüshó (1533-1615)                      Yüshó's interpretation of scenes from the       of a monumental pine tree and a hawk in
    pair of eight-fold screens, ink and          famous Chinese poetic theme, Eight              front of a waterfall, were installed at the
    color on paper                               Views of the Xiao and Xiang Rivers. This        south end of the chamber, facing north.
    each iii.o x 368.0 (44^2 x 147 v^)           combination of poetic themes with sea-               Nijó Castle was begun in 1601 and
    Momoyama period, early ryth century          sonal allusions was a popular device in Jap-    completed in 1603. It was originally built as
    Sekai Kyúseikyó (MOA Art Museum),            anese screen painting. Two scenes from          the garrison quarters for Tokugawa leyasu
                                                 the Eight Views are the Mountain Market         (1543-1616), the first Tokugawa shogun,
    Shizuoka Prefecture
                                                 scene on the left screen, and the Wild          who used it during his residency in Kyoto.
    Important Cultural Property
                                                 Geese Descending onto a Sandbar, faintly        After leyasu's death in 1616 the buildings
Kaihó Yüshó was born in Omi Province             visible to the left of the right screen. Sea-    went through several rebuilding and refur-
(present-day Shiga Prefecture), where his                                                        bishing phases, the most notable being a
                                                                                                                                           201
 125
1624 rebuilding campaign in preparation          fifteen, Tan'yü was appointed painter-in-        126 Exemplary emperors
for the 1626 visit of Emperor Go-Mizunoo         service to the Tokugawa shogunate (goyd              Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674)
(1596-1680; cat. 19). The Ninomaru Palace        eshi) in Edo. In 1619, assisting his cousin          set of four sliding door panels; ink,
dates from this period. Thereafter much          Kano Sadanobu, Tan'yü played a leading               color, and gold-leaf on paper
of Nijó Castle was extensively renovated;        role in the decoration of the newly refur-           each 192.0 x 140.5 (755/8 x 55^4)
and in the course of this work some build-       bished Empress' Quarters at the Imperial             Edo period, 1634
ings were removed from the site.                 Palace in Kyoto. Two years later Tan'yü
                                                                                                      Nagóya City, Aichi Prefecture
     The interiors of the Ninomaru Palace        was given a sizeable tract of land in the
                                                                                                      Important Cultural Property
precinct, consisting of three architectural      Kajibashi district in Edo (present-day To-
blocks, were decorated in 1626 by a team         kyo), which became his home and studio.          This set of four sliding door panels origi-
of painters of the Kano school, headed by        In 1623, at age twenty-one, he began the         nally was installed in the Jórakuden or
the twenty-four-year-old Kano Tan'yü             decoration of the sliding doors at Osaka         "Guest house" built in 1634 as an annex to
(1602-1674). Over the years, the paintings       Castle. The Ninomaru decoration cam-             the main complex of Nagoya Castle, the
have been damaged and extensively re-            paign followed soon after, from 1624             headquarters of the Matsudaira, the dai-
painted, especially in their details, but the    to 1626, and marked the beginning of             myo of Owari Province (now Aichi Prefec-
overall composition has retained the style       Tan'yü's rise to preeminence among mid-          ture) and a branch family of the Tokugawa.
of the young Tan'yü, who was inspired by         seventeenth-century Japanese painters.           The construction of the Jórakuden (liter-
the heroically monumental style associ-                The commanding form of the pine            ally "building for a journey to the capital")
ated with his grandfather Kano Eitoku            tree and the hawk, symbol of endurance,          started in the fifth month of 1633 and con-
 (1543-1590).                                    fortitude, and martial prowess (cats. 95,        tinued through the first six months of
      At the age of ten, accompanied by his      129), may be a pictorial expression of the       1634. The intention was to provide lodging
 father, Kano Takanobu (1571-1618; cat. 18),     political power at the top of the social hier-   for the third Tokugawa shogun, lemitsu
 the talented Tan'yü was granted an audi-        archy, proclaiming the new era of Japan          (1604-1651), and his entourage on their trip
 ence with shogun Tokugawa leyasu at             that had just been inaugurated under the         to Kyoto in the seventh month of that
 Sunpu (currently Shizuoka City) in 1612.        effective rule of the shogunate and the          year. Along with numerous other buildings
 This event signalled the advent of the          daimyo.                                     YS   that constituted the Nagoya Castle com-
 Kano school's monopoly over official                                                             plex, the Jórakuden survived well into the
 painting commissions from the shogunate                                                          twentieth century. On 14 May 1945, the
 as well as the imperial court, and including                                                     entire castle structure, including more
 the daimyo. Five years later, in 1617, at age
202
than 144 painted doors and wall paintings,       bad deeds of Chinese emperors. Through          right, and the evocative landscape at the
was destroyed by aerial bombardment.             the efforts of Toyotomi Hideyori (1593-         left are executed in Tan'yü's typical ink
More than 662 moveable sliding door              1615), a son of Hideyoshi (1537-1598), a Jap-   painting style. Tan'yü was thirty-two years
paintings, painted wooden doors, and ceil-       anese edition appeared in 1606. Painters        old when he executed this work, some
ing panels had previously been evacuated,        began to take up the theme, basing their        seven years after his work at Nijo Castle
and thus escaped destruction. The doors          compositions on the printed versions.           (cat. 125).                               YS
shown here originally were installed in a        Kano Sanraku's (1559-1635) ink paintings
southwestern room, the First Chamber             pasted onto a pair of six-fold screens (pri-
(Ichi no ma), of the Jôrakuden, as part of a                                                     127 Bamboo grove, leopards, and a tiger
                                                 vate collection, Japan) are the earliest ex-
sequence painted by Kano Tan'yü (1602-           tant Japanese example of painted                    set of four sliding door panels, ink,
1674; illustrating a Chinese theme, Exem-        translations of the Exemplary Emperors              color, and gold leaf on paper
plary Emperors (Teikan, or literally             theme.                                              each 185.0 x 140.0
"Mirrors of Emperors"). These panels                   The sliding doors shown here illus-           Edo period, c. 1614
were on the east side of the chamber,            trate the Han-Dynasty Emperor Xuan Di               Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture
facing west.                                     (r. 73-49 BC) generously rewarding provin-          Important Cultural Property
      The theme of the Exemplary Emper-          cial civil magistrates, so that they would be
ors, with its characteristic Confucian, di-      encouraged to stay on in their posts and        The four sliding door panels shown here
dactic overtone, was introduced from             effectively and benevolently administer         once separated two chambers of the for-
China sometime during the third quarter          the affairs of the populace. The emperor,       mal omote shoin nucleus of the main
of the sixteenth century through a               seated on the throne, entertains two kneel-     building (honmaru) of Nagoya Castle, one
woodblock-printed book, Illustrated tales of     ing magistrates by offering food on large       on the west side, the other on the east side
Exemplary Emperors (Di jian tu shuo),            plates carried by chamberlains. Apart from      facing the entrance (genkan). The hon-
compiled in 1572 and presented to the Wan        the red throne and the green robes of           maru was built for a branch family of the
Li emperor (r. 1573-1620) in the following       three figures—the emperor, one of the           Tokugawa, the Matsudaira of Owari Prov-
year by Zhang Juzheng (1525-1582), a             chamberlains, and one of the                    ince (now Aichi Prefecture). It was com-
scholar and senior Grand Secretary of the        magistrates—the overall monochromatic           pleted in 1614. Its interior decoration
Ming court. It contained a total of 117 illus-   composition contrasts with the extensive        included more than one thousand paint-
trated didactic tales, of which 81 depicted      application of gold flakes and paint used to    ings mounted on the walls and on sliding
 the good deeds and the remaining 36 the          produce an atmospheric effect. The surg-       doors. In 1945 the Nagoya Castle complex
                                                  ing pine tree, the bulky rock at the lower     was destroyed by aerial bombing. Fortu-
                                                                                                                                         203
  126
nately, the movable paintings such as the               The theme of the tiger, often paired     128 Reeds and geese
sliding doors had been evacuated, and 662          with the dragon, appeared in ink paintings        Miyamoto Musashi (1584-1645)
works survived the bombing. All are regis-         throughout the Muromachi period. Al-              pair of six-fold screens; ink on paper
tered as Important Cultural Properties.            though the theme was Chinese and Daoist           each 155.5 x 361.5 (6il/4 x 1423/8)
The First Room (ichinoma) and the Sec-             in origin—the forces that cause clouds and        Edo period, after 1640
ond Room (ninoma) were decorated with              winds to rise—the Japanese fascination
twenty paintings of tigers, leopards, and          with the subject was largely inspired by          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
bamboo on gold-leaf grounds mounted on             the famous Tiger paired with the Dragon           Important Cultural Property
the sliding doors and intercolumnar walls.         by the Chinese painter Muqi of the late       Unsigned and without the artist's seals,
This set of paintings is from the smaller          Southern Song, once in the shogunal col-      this pair of screens can be attributed to
ichinoma and is among the eighteen ex-             lection. In the sixteenth century a Kano      Miyamoto Musashi, or Niten, his artistic
tant works from those rooms.                       school painter, perhaps Shóei (1519-1592),    sobriquet. Musashi, perhaps the greatest
      Two different hands are identifiable         made a monumental ink painting of a tiger     swordsman of his time, was known for his
in the two rooms. The artist of the                and a leopard to decorate the walls of        invincible martial art using two swords.
ichinoma is the more experienced of the            chambers adjacent to the chapel at Jukôin,    Born in Harima (part of today's Hyógo
two, possibly Kano Kôi (d. 1636). He was           a subtemple of Daitokuji. To portray the      Prefecture) in 1584 (or 1582), he was a
the mentor of the much younger but more            animals against a gold-leaf ground in a       youth during the turbulent years that saw
famous Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674), to whom            large public space, was new in the seven-     warfare ravaging the countryside and the
 is ascribed a set of twenty sliding door pan-     teenth century. Here the tigers, and no       appearance of the military hegemons, in-
 els of tigers, leopards, and bamboo in the        less the leopards, are no longer an embodi-   cluding Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Toku-
smaller residential quarters at Nanzenji,          ment of the mysterious force of the uni-      gawa leyasu. In 1600 Musashi fought on
executed around 1637 or 1638. The style of         verse that causes the wind to rise, but       the losing side of the Western Army at the
the Nanzenji sliding doors compares                down-to-earth, tactile symbols of the war-    Battle of Sekigahara (cat. 104) and became
closely to that of this set, and thus its attri-   rior class.                              YS   a masterless samurai, or rdnin. He spent
bution to Kói may be accepted. The artist                                                        the next thirty-seven years as a wanderer.
of the ninoma remains unidentified.                                                              He is said to have won over sixty duels
                                                                                                 during these peripatetic years, including
204
one in 1610 with Sasaki Kojirô, another fa- Reitóin and Zengoan, subtemples of Ken-          by Takuan Sôhô (1573-1645), himself a
mous swordsman, at Kokura, in northern      ninji in Kyoto, datable to the late sixteenth    painter and calligrapher of note as well as
Kyushu, the domain of the Hosokawa. In      century. The stylistic affinity between          a Zen monk, written on folding screens
1637 Musashi joined the Tokugawa garri-     Yüshó and Musashi is more than acciden-          listed in the nineteenth-century art histori-
sons to chastise the Christian daimyo of    tal: Yushô was a warrior turned painter.         cal reference book Koga bikd. There also
Shimabara, also in Kyushu. His art of the   The brushstrokes of Yüshó, and especially        exists a family lineage and history in the
swords recognized, he was offered the po- of Musashi, as in these screens, are               artist's own hand, now at Hóryúji.
sition of sword instructor to serve Hoso-   charged with decisiveness, speed, and                  Soga Chokuan specialized in paint-
kawa Tadatoshi (1586-1641), son of Sansai   spontaneity not unlike the traces of a           ings of chickens and even more of hawks,
and the daimyo of Kumamoto. This pair       sword swung in space.                       YS   which were especially favored by military
of screens, which has long been in the Ho-                                                   leaders in the Muromachi period. Cho-
sokawa family, was reportedly commis-                                                        kuan's conservative style, characterized by
sioned by Tadatoshi, which may explain      129 Plum trees and pair of hawks
                                                                                             formalized brushwork and hardened
the absence of Musashi's signature or seals      Soga Nichokuan (fl. mid-iyth century)        forms, satisfied this demand. Although Ni-
as a sign of humility.                           pair of six-fold screens, ink and color     chokuan carried on his father's subject
     Where Musashi studied painting is           on paper                                     matter and style, he eventually developed
unknown. It is likely that he was self-          156.2 x 363.0 (6il/2 x 143)                 his own eccentric forms while absorbing
taught, as were other warrior painters,          Edo period, mid-iyth century                 the current style of Edo-period ink paint-
such as Ashikaga Yoshimochi of the Muro-         Takamori Shigeru Collection,                 ing. The work shown here reflects this
machi period. Over twenty-five ink paint-        Kumamoto Prefecture                          transformation.                          WA
ings of various subjects by Musashi exist,
many of them stamped with his seals, in-    Soga Nichokuan was the son of Soga Cho-
cluding Bodhidharma and other Zen-          kuan, an artist active during the Momo-
inspired themes. This pair, by far the best yama period in the port city of Sakai
work by Musashi, shows that he was di-      (south of present-day Osaka). Although Ni-
rectly inspired by the style of Kaiho       chokuan's dates are unknown, there is evi-
Yusho's (1533-1615) sliding-door panels at  dence that he was active in 1656. The
                                            evidence is in the form of an inscription
                                                                                                                                      205
 127
J28
206
207
129
130
208
209
130 Bush clover and deer
    attributed to Sakuma Sakyô
      (1581-1657)
      pair of four-fold screens; ink, color,
      and gold leaf on paper
      159 X 346.8 (02l/2 X 136 1/2)
      Edo period, 1628
      Sendai City Museum,
      Miyagi Prefecture
      Important Art Object
This pair of four-fold screens is from a set
of twelve sliding door panels probably in-
stalled in a chamber of Wakabayashi Cas-
tle, completed in 1628, in southeastern
Sendai. The castle was built as a private
residence for Date Masamune (1567-1636),
daimyo of Sendai, so that he could spend
his later years in privacy, away from Sen-
dai Castle where he administered affairs of
government. The panels, now remounted
as three folding screens, depict autumn
themes of chrysanthemums, bush clover,
and deer. (The chrysanthemum screen is
not included in the exhibition.)
      Opaque green, blue, and brown mo-
tifs are painted against a brilliant surface
of gold-leafed clouds, a longstanding stylis-
tic feature of yamato-e. According to the
Date clan record, this work is attributed to
Sakuma Sakyó (1581-1657), formerly of
Kyoto, a leading artist of the clan's paint-
ing bureau (edokoro). While still in his
teens, Sakyô reportedly assisted the Kyoto
painter Kano Mitsunobu (1565-1608),
known for the wall and sliding door paint-
ings that he executed in the richly colored
yamato-e style, and who worked at
Fushimi Castle from 1594 on. At that time
Date Masamune, then a vassal of Toyo-
tomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) and in 1596, a
supervisor of the castle construction, rec-
ognized Sakyô's talent.
       Very little is known about Sakyô and
other artists who worked under the pa-
tronage of seventeenth-century provincial
daimyo. The date when Sakyô entered
Masamune's employ is a matter of conjec-
 ture, but it could have been 1601 or 1602,
 when Masamune was visiting Fushimi.
 The Date clan document records that Sa-
kyô was a member of a team of lacquer art-
 ists and builders employed for large-scale
 refurbishing and reconstruction cam-
paigns for the domain's public buildings.
 Sakyô worked at Osaki Hachiman Jinja,
the Date clan shrine, in 1607; the Rinzai
 Zen temple of Zuiganji at Matsushima
 (cat. 117) in 1609; the Audience Hall at Sen-
 dai Castle in 1610; and Wakabayashi Castle
 in 1628.
       Sakyô, also called Kano Sakyô, appar-
 ently headed a workshop, though it had
 far fewer members than the major schools
 in Edo and Kyoto. The names of Sakyô's
 son Gentoku, a disciple by the name of
 Kurôta, and a certain Kano Sadakichi, are
 recorded. Stylistically, while this painting
                                                 131
210
      reflects the fashionable mode of Kano
      Mitsunobu's painting in Kyoto around
      1600, the clarity of the composition and
      the open handling of space make Sakyô's
      work unique among seventeenth-century
      screens of the Edo period.
            Date Masamune himself brushed the
      inscriptions in cursive writing on the pan-
      els. They are poems chosen from various
      poetic anthologies, including the Ko-
      kinshü and Shin kokinshü; two are Zen-
      related sayings, one by the Chinese
      scholar and poet Su Dongpo (1036-1101) on
      panel four of the right screen, the other at
      the top of panel three of the left screen,
      referring to an answer in verse form made
      by the great Chinese Chan (Zen) patriarch
      Maozu Daoyi (709-788) to a question put
      to him by Layman Pang (c. 740-808). Se-
      lected translations follow:
      [right screen, third panel]
      0 cord of life!
      Threading through the jewel of my soul,
      If you will break, break now:
      1 shall weaken if this life continues,
      Unable to bear such fearful strain
      (translated in Brower and Miner 1975, 301).
                                                    211
 hohodemi no Mikoto, who, having lost a           ince (part of today's Osaka Prefecture),       were subsequently removed and mounted
 fishhook he had borrowed from his                served Oda Nobunaga, against whom he           as individual hanging scrolls, now dis-
 brother, goes to the palace of the sea in or-    later rebelled. The consequence of the re-     persed in various collections. One of Mata-
 der to look for it. There he marries Toyo-       bellion was annihilation of the family by      bei's seals in square intaglio, Hekishdguzu,
 tama no Mikoto, who is the princess of           execution. Matabei, still an infant, was       is stamped at the lower left. The box t^hat
 the sea god. When his return home is im-         smuggled out by a wet nurse to escape the      holds this painting is accompanied by a
 minent, the princess asks Mikoto to build        tragedy and was raised until he was about      transcript of an oral history of the Kanaya
 a hut on the beach, where she will be de-        fifteen years old in Kyoto, reportedly un-     bydbu, which says that the screens were
 livered on the day when the wind is rough        der the protection of the Buddhist sanctu-     given to the wealthy Kanaya family of Fu-
 and waves churn high. Mikoto had hardly          ary of Honganji. He is said to have studied    kui as a gift after about 1624 by Matsudaira
 completed thatching of the roof of the hut       painting with Kano Naizen (1580-1616), an      Naomasa, a younger brother of Tadanao
 with cormorant feathers when the prin-           artist of considerable repute in genre         and the castellan of Ono Castle in Echi-
 cess went into labor. The princess, turning      painting, which was emerging as a major        zen Province, as a token of gratitude for
 into a serpent, is seen by Mikoto and then       art form in Kyoto. Little is known about       his childhood custody by the family. The
 vanishes with the newborn wrapped in             Matabei's life until he was forty years old,   painting accordingly can be dated to no
 rushes. In the painting the infant is on the     when, around 1617, he went to Echizen          later than 1624.
 beach, and the stunned Mikoto, his back          Province (Fukui Prefecture), where he was            Executed in a disciplined mode of
 to the viewer, stands in front of the hut,       to remain for twenty years. He established     painting known as hakubyd, or plain draw-
 whose roof is incompletely thatched.             a reputation as a versatile painter that        ing, which became fashionable as an ar-
       A more elaborate narrative painting        reached as far as Kyoto. In 1637, he was        chaistic mode within the conservative
 of this theme dating from the late twelfth       summoned to Edo to produce trousseau            Tosa school from the late sixteenth cen-
 century was in the collection of Tan'yü's        articles for a daughter of the third Toku-      tury to the early decades of the seven-
 patron, the third shogun, Tokugawa               gawa shogun, lemitsu. He died in Edo            teenth, the painting depicts a scene of
 lemitsu (1604-1651). A set of two                thirteen years later.                           elegant court ladies viewing chrysanthe-
 handscrolls, originally owned by a Shinto              This painting was done during Mata-       mums from the rear of their carriage. The
  shrine in Wakasa province (in present-day       bei's mature years in Fukui, between            exact narrative origin of the subject is yet
  Fukui Prefecture), was presented to             about 1624 and 1633. The inscription by         unidentified. This work employs the tradi-
  lemitsu as a gift from Sakai Tadakatsu          the Zen monk Zenshitsu Sóshü (1572-             tion ofyamato-e in its preoccupation with
  (1587-1662), the daimyo of Wakasa, but not       1640), at one time an abbot of Daitokuji,      precision and refinement in rendition,
  before being copied by Kano Daigaku (fl.         reads:                                         markedly contrasting with Matabei's ink
  1659), who, like Tan'yü, worked for the sho-                                                    painting of Hotei (cat. 132). The oblong-
                                                  Carrying a bag and a cane you appear            shaped faces of the court ladies, with full
  gunate. Tan'yü must surely have seen the
                                                    even more enlightened',                       cheeks, are a signature feature of Mata-
  twelfth-century version or its copy by
                                                  Why do you beg with a grin on your mouth?       bei's style, readily noticed in many of his
  Daigaku, from which this synoptic version
                                                  Instead of wandering, lost in the                works.                                     YS
  came into being. On the lower right is the
                                                    realm of the humans.
  artist's signature, Tan'yù hdgen hitsu
                                                  The better it mil be the sooner                 134 Poet Saigyô viewing the moon
  (Brushed by Tan'yü, the Eye of the Law),
                                                    you go back to the Tushita Heaven.
  followed by two of his seals: a large circu-                                                         Iwasa Katsumochi (1578-1650)
                                                                                               YS
  lar relief seal, Hdgen Tan'yù; and a small                                                           hanging scroll; ink on paper
  square relief seal, Tan'yù. The painting                                                             101.3 x 33-° (397/8 x 13)
  postdates 1638, when Tan'yü received the        133 Court ladies viewing                             Edo period, c. 1637
. title "Eye of the Law."                    YS        chrysanthemums
                                                                                                       Gunma Prefectural Museum of
                                                       Iwasa Katsumochi (1578-1650)
                                                                                                       Modern Art, Gunma Prefecture
                                                       hanging scroll; ink and slight color on
132 Hotei                                              paper                                      Saigyó (1118-1190) was a member of the
                                                       132.0 X 55.0(52 X 215/8)                   aristocratic Fujiwara family with a promis-
    Iwasa Katsumochi (1578-1650)
    hanging scroll; ink on paper                       Edo period, c. 1623-1624                   ing career at court. In 1140, for reasons
    101.3 x 33.6 (397/s) x 13 V4)                      Yamatane Art Museum, Tokyo                 that are not clear, he gave up his success-
    Edo period, c. 1624-1633                           Important Art Object                       ful life and took the tonsure, retiring to a
                                                                                                  humble hut in the outskirts of Kyoto and
    Tokyo National Museum                         A warrior's son, the artist Iwasa Katsu-        taking up the life of a recluse, wanderer,
                                                  mochi, popularly known as Matabei (cats.        and poet. He traveled extensively around
A plump, grinning dwarf of a man carrying         132,134), spent twenty years between
a cane and a bag is Hotei, an eccentric fig-                                                      the country, going as far north as the prov-
                                                  about 1617 and 1637 in Echizen (Fukui Pre- ince of Mutsu (part of today's Iwate Pre-
ure familiar in Zen Buddhism as a reincar-        fecture), at the invitation of its ruler, Mat-
nation of the Buddha Maitreya (cat. 80). In                                                       fecture); Mount Yoshino and Mount
                                                  sudaira Tadanao, a grandson of Tokugawa         Kumano are two of the many places that
China and Japan, Hotei represents spiri-          leyasu. Matabei, when he went to Fukui,
tual freedom from the conventions and                                                             he celebrated in poems composed on site.
                                                  must have already established a reputation Some ninety-four poems by Saigyô are in-
rules of the world. Executed in pale ink          as a major artist in Kyoto, where he had
and rendered in spontaneous brushwork,                                                            cluded in the Shin kokinshù, the imperial
                                                  spent his earlier years. During his sojourn     anthology of waka compiled by Saigyô's
the figure stands against a neutral ground.       in Fukui, Matabei produced an enormous younger contemporary, Fujiwara Teika.
On the lower right are stamped two seals:         number of paintings, both of Japanese and
one a small square relief seal, Ddun; the                                                               In this painting by Iwasa Katsumochi,
                                                  Chinese subjects and in versatile styles.       or Matabei (cats. 132,133), the itinerant
other, a large circular relief seal, Katsu-             This painting was originally pasted on Saigyô, clad in monk's garb and holding a
mochi. The artist, Iwasa Katsumochi, is           a pair of six-fold screens, known as the Ka- cane and a straw hat, is viewing the moon,
better known as Matabei.                          naya bydbuf along with eleven others of
      Matabei was born into a warrior's                                                           half hidden by a cloud. The style of this
                                                  various themes and styles, and kept in the painting differs from the Hotei (cat. 132) in
 family. His father, Araki Murashige, the         Kanaya family of Fukui. All the paintings
 castellan of Itami Castle in Settsu Prov-                                                        its descriptive features. The contours and
                                                                                                  folds of the cassock worn by Saigyô are de-
212
133   134
            213
scribed with deliberation, as is the book          month represents a kusudama, suspended           137 Studies of lizards, tortoises, and
box he carries on his back. Executed in            with a vermilion and gold rope, trailing             insects
ink, the painting shows Matabei's stylistic        threads of five different colors and fes-            Satake Shozan (1748-1785)
versatility. At the lower left is a large circu-   tooned with blue irises, pink azaleas, white         album; ink and color on paper
lar relief seal of the artist, Katsumochi.         camellias, and morning glories. The paint-           34.0 x 28.3 (133/8 x ul/s)
This work can be dated stylistically to            ing for the ninth month shows a red                  Edo period, 2nd half of i8th century
about 1637, when Matabei was still in              woven basket containing Japanese pears,
Echizen (Fukui Prefecture), just before he         pomegranates, roses, and orchids. Each               Private collection
set out on his journey to Edo. The inscrip-        painting is inscribed with Kien's own Chi-           Important Art Object
tion, assumed to be by Matabei, tran-              nese poem, signed and sealed by the artist,     Two other similar albums are included in
scribes Saigyó's famous poem about                 conveying appropriate thoughts on the           this collection, and all three were trea-
viewing the moon:                                  corresponding lunar month.                AY
                                                                                                   sured by their creator, Satake Shozan (cat.
      "When we see the moon . . . " were our                                                       136). One album includes Shozan's 1778
         parting words                              136 Iris and knife                             treatises Gaho kdryd (Summary of the laws
         on those future thoughts of each                Satake Shozan (1748-1785)                 of painting) and Gato rikai (Understanding
         other;                                          hanging scroll; ink and color on silk     painting). Shozan wrote admiringly about
      I wonder if the sleeves of those Î left at                                                   western painting, explaining the laws of
                                                         112.5x 4°-° (44 x/4 x 153//4)             perspective,     shading, and various pig-
         home                                            Edo period, 2nd half of i8th century
         are wet with tears tonight.                                                               ments. He also included illustrations of
                                                 YS      Private collection                        painting techniques, foreign copper-plate
                                                         Important Art Object                      prints, and floral studies. Another album
135 Flowers and plants of the first, fifth,         During the second half of the eighteenth       contains studies of birds. The album ex-
     and ninth months                               century there was a renewed interest in        hibited   here consists primarily of studies
     Yanagisawa Kien (1704-1758)                    the Western mode of image-making among         of  insects.
     three hanging scrolls; ink and color on        the Japanese, not simply as an artistic              In the album shown here, in addition
      silk                                          practice, but also as a practical science. In- to  reptiles  and amphibians, almost 300
      each 99.0 x 41.0                              spiration came from books of anatomy,          types of insects are depicted, including
     Edo period, i8th century                       botany, medicine, and zoology, brought by caterpillars, butterflies, moths, and dragon-
                                                    the Dutch, from which Rangaku (Dutch           flies. The drawings were not necessarily all
      Imperial Household Collection                                                                executed by Shozan himself; on stylistic
                                                    studies) soon emerged as a new branch of
Yanagisawa Kien, who served the clan that learning. Sugita Genpaku (1733-1817) and                 grounds, many of the works can be at-
ruled the Kôriyama domain in Yamato                 Hiraga Gennai (1728-1779) were two of the      tributed   to Shozan's retainer Odano
Province (present-day Nara Prefecture),             champions of this new tradition: the           Naotake (1749-1780), an artist trained in
was known as a man of cultured pursuits             former was a medical doctor serving the        western-style painting.
and many talents. In particular, he ex-             Obama clan (in today's Fukui Prefecture),            In eighteenth-century Japan, interest
celled since his youth at painting flower-          who translated Tafel Anatomía (1734) and       in  natural  history was on the rise, and
and-bird subjects. Unsatisfied with the             published the first Japanese book of anat-     many    albums     of studies were produced.
works of the Kano school, he copied Yuan            omy; and the latter was a natural scientist    The   studies   in  this album, however, were
and Ming paintings and studied with                 and expert on herbal medicine. Genpaku's       not  drawn    from   live models. Almost half of
Yoshida Shüsetsu of the Nagasaki school.            anatomy book, published in 1774, was illus-    the  insects   depicted   are copied from col-
His works generally combine descriptive             trated by a student of Gennai, a samurai       lections   of studies   compiled  by Hosokawa
drawing and rich colors, though he also ex- from the domain of Akita in northern Ja-               Shigekata, such as the one shown here,
ecuted finger paintings and monochrome              pan. Gennai himself was called to Akita in Studies of Insects (cat. 139); it is possible
ink paintings of bamboo. Along with Gion            1773 for a geological survey of the domain     that other drawings in the album are also
Nankai (1677-1751) and Sakaki Hyakusen              that produced copper, where he laid the        copied from other works.
(1697-1752), he is one of the pioneers of           foundation for Akita ranga, the school of            Whether or not these studies are from
 Japanese literati painting, or bunjinga.           Western-style painting based in Akita. The     life does   not affect their value as art ob-
        The theme of this set of three scrolls,     school flourished under the patronage of       jects. Each    is carefully drawn and conveys
 one of his finest works, is related to the                                                        a  fascination    with the forms and substance
                                                    the daimyo of Akita, Satake Shozan, the
 first, fifth, and ninth months of the lunar        artist of this painting. Shozan's theories on  of  nature.  At   times, the artist seems to
 calendar, considered to be months of mis-          Western-style painting are contained in        have   attempted      to make associations be-
 fortune. Traditionally, on the seventh day         two treatises he wrote in 1778, Gaho kdryd tween disparate things; for example, the
 of the first month one ate a rice gruel with (Summary of the laws of painting) and                beehive illustrated here resembles some
 seven herbs for good health during the             Gato rikai (Understanding paintings).          deep-sea fish. These studies differ from
 coming year. On the fifth day of the fifth              This painting is signed Minamoto          Shigekata's counterparts; for Shozan, the
 month one hung a kusudama (medicine                Yoshiatsu, Shozan's personal name follow-      exterior   forms are objects of fascination.
 pouch) in one's home. On the ninth day of ing the ancestral origin of his family,                 The studies in Shozan's albums served as
 the ninth month one drank a special sake           Minamoto. A circular relief seal below         source material for his full-fledged
 to avoid illness.                                  the signature is in the roman alphabet,        western-style paintings and those of other
        The painting for the first month de-        Zwarr Wit.                                  YS artists in the Akita domain.                  SY
 picts a footed hexagonal celadon vase or-
 namented with a floral scroll. A miniature
 plum tree and two other plants, known in
 Japanese as fukujusd (literally, "Long Life
 Plant," a kind of ranunculus often used as
 a New Year's decoration) and shirabachi,
  grow in the vase. The painting for the fifth
214
135
      215
      137
136
216
137
      217
138
218
138
      138 Studies of insects, amphibians, and              Masuyama Sessai in his private life
          fish                                       was a student of Chinese herbal medicine
          Masuyama Sessai (1754-1819)                and a painter of considerable talent in-
          four albums; ink and color on paper        spired by Chinese Ming and Qing paint-
          each 21.8 x 29.9 (Ss/s x ii3/4)            ings. He was interested in natural history,
          Edo period, 1808                           a field first explored by Hiraga Gennai
                                                     (1728-1779), also a student of herbal medi-
          Tokyo National Museum
                                                     cine, and by Satake Shozan (cats. 136,137),
      Contained in these four albums are pages       the daimyo of the domain of Akita in the
      of finished studies of insects, amphibians,    north and one the harbingers of Western-
      fish, and other small creatures that inhabit   style painting. Sessai was especially impor-
      the natural world, pages of which ten are      tant as a patron of such artists as Kimura
      illustrated here. These discerning studies     Kenkado (1736-1802) and Kuwayama
      were made by Masuyama Sessai, the artis-        Gyokushu (1746-1799), who painted in the
      tic daimyo of the domain of Nagashima in        style of Chinese scholar-amateurs.       YS
      Ise Province (part of Mie Prefecture).
      Each study is inscribed meticulously, re-
      cording the name of each species and
      where, when, and by whom it was col-
      lected. Some insects are viewed from
      three angles. The finished works are
      grouped and mounted according to the
      months in which they were collected, and
      the four albums are divided according to
      the four seasons, butterflies of the spring
       in album one; dragonflies of the summer
       in album two, and so forth.
                                                                                                    219
      139
220
 139
139 Studies of animals and insects           vated an herbal garden. In private life, he     captured and sketched. These sketches
    attributed to Hosokawa Shigekata         was a poet, calligrapher, and, in particular,   were made between 1756 and 1785. Three
    (1720-1785)                              an artist known for his carefully drawn         leaves are illustrated here. Pages of the
    two albums; ink and color on paper       studies of the natural world. Like his con-     smaller album are filled with studies of in-
    animal album 22.0 x 30.0 (8s/s x ii3/4); temporaries Masuyama Sessai, daimyo of          sects, thirty-seven species in all, each
    insect album 27.3 x 20.4 (103/4 x 8)     a domain in Ise (cat. 138), and Satake Sho-     showing different stages of growth.       YS
    Edo period, 1756-1785                    zan, daimyo of the Akita domain in north-
                                             ern Honshu (cats. 136,137), Shigekata left
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                       albums of studies of animals, insects, and
                                             plants. Ten such albums are kept in the
Hosokawa Shigekata, an eighteenth-           Eisei Bunko, two of which are shown in
century daimyo of Higo Province (today's this exhibition.
Kumamoto Prefecture), is credited with            The larger album contains studies of
enlightened and humanitarian policies        animal species. The illustrations have
during his thirty-nine-year rule. In 1754 he been cut from either a booklet or a
established two schools within the Kuma- handscroll and pasted on the album's
moto Castle precinct, one for martial arts leaves, which are dyed reddish brown with
and one for Confucian studies. He abol-      persimmon juice. Each work is accompa-
ished harsh corporal punishment for crim- nied by an inscription, either written di-
inals and instituted a humane penal code. rectly on the work or on an attached piece
He founded a medical school and culti-       of paper, identifying the species and giving
                                             the date and place where it was seen or
                                                                                                                                     221
140
222
J4J
140 Album of assorted paintings                 ist is likely to have selected the paintings      141 Birds in fruit trees
    Sakai Hôitsu (1761-1828)                    to be assembled into the present album.               Bian Wenjin (fl. 1403-1435)
    album; ink and color on silk or paper              Hôitsu was born in Edo into the fam-           pair of hanging scrolls; ink and color
    each 25.1 x 20.0 (97/8 x 77/3)              ily of Sakai Tadamochi, the daimyo of Hi-             on silk
    Edo period, before 1797                     meji Castle in Harima Province (today's               each 31.0 x 31.5 (12 ^ x 123/3)
      Seikadó Bunko, Tokyo                      Hyôgo Prefecture), whose ancestor Tada-               Ming, ist quarter of 15th century
                                                taka was the patron of Ogata Kôrin (1658-
                                                                                                      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
This accordion-type album contains              1716) in Edo. The various styles in this
seventy-two individual paintings of various     album reflect Hôitsu's artistic background.       In the Edo period small, intimate Chinese
subjects, in different mediums on either        He was taught by Kano Takanobu (cat. 18);         paintings executed in color, rather than
silk or paper, mounted on both the front         Utagawa Toyoharu (1735-1814), the ukiyo-e        large, imperious ones, were often used to
and back of the paper, thirty-six to each        artist; and So Shiseki (1712-1786), the real-    decorate the tokonoma. This pair of small
side. The covers are elaborately made,           ist of the Nagasaki school in Edo. The his-      paintings of birds perched in fruit trees ex-
with the corners capped by a silver open-        torical significance of these works is           emplify the taste.
work design of pine, bamboo, and plum.           evident in the nine paintings ( four illus-           Two seals are stamped on both paint-
In the center of the front cover is pasted a     trated here) that emulate the style of Itô       ings: one an unidentifiable square intaglio,
paper label that reads Tekagami (Mirrors of      Jakuchu (1716-1800), a decorative naturalis-     and the other a square relief, Bian Wenjin
calligraphy), which usually designates           tic artist of Kyoto.                             shi. The signature Daizhao Longxi Bian
model examples of calligraphy. The al-                 The album is contained in two boxes.       Jingzhao xie (Painter in attendance Bian
bum, however, is a collection of paintings,      On the back of the lid of the outer box is a     Jingzho of Longxi painted this) accompa-
and has been rightly called zatsugachd, or       dedicatory inscription, dated the third          nies the two seals of the painting on the
"album of assorted paintings," by the            month, spring of the year corresponding          right. Jingzhao is a personal name of Bian
present owner. The paintings serve as a re-      to 1893, by Sakai Dôitsu (1845-1913), the        Wenjin, a painter and a member of the
sponse by the artist Sakai Hôitsu to the         fourth-generation head of Hôitsu's studio,       Painting Academy of the Ming court, who,
various painting styles current in his time.     Ukaan, and the son of Suzuki Kiitsu              as a painter in attendance, served three
Seven different seals are used throughout        (1796-1858), the immediate pupil of              emperors in succession. The style of callig-
the album, and occasionally the artist's sig-    Hôitsu. The back of the lid of the inner         raphy of the inscription is close to another,
nature accompanies a seal. The seal Tôka-        box is inscribed and signed by Hôitsu            identically phrased inscription on a paint-
kuin in (seal of Tôkakuin) on the painting       himself.                                    YS   ing in a Japanese collection, which is
Beetle and corn illustrated here may give                                                         widely accepted as a major work of Bian.
the earliest possible date to this group of                                                       The second seal, however, is different
paintings. Tôkakuin is an ecclesiastical ti-                                                      from the accepted version.
tle earned by Hôitsu when he took the                                                                  An outstanding naturalist painter in
tonsure in 1797, a date after which the art-                                                      the Song academic style, Bian earned a
                                                                                                                                           223
142
224
143
reputation for paintings of flowers, fruits,     Ming academic tradition established by            ing both the Muromachi and Edo periods.
and birds that are as beautiful and charm-       the court painter Lü Ji (fl. c. 1497 and af-      During the latter period Turnip was known
ing as they are carefully detailed and life-     ter), whose influence in Japan can be seen        by another title, Kyakurai ichimi (Guest ar-
like. Bian is considered the last of the         in the screens of Sesshu Tôyô (1420-1506)         rives, shares one taste), which comes from
painters who followed the tradition of the       of the late fifteenth century and Kano Mo-        an inscription on a famous ink painting
Song academic style before the emergence         tonobu (1476-1559) of the sixteenth cen-          coveted by the Edo tea adepts entitled
of another academy painter, Lü Ji of the         tury. Strictly, however, Li Yihe's paintings      Vegetable, by the great Chinese artist
late fifteenth century-early sixteenth,          hardly reflect the kinesthetic contour lines      Muqi(fl. mid-i3th century).
whose monumental style is reflected in           or the tactile forms of the Lü Ji tradition.           Tan'yü's companion pieces are signed
the triptych by Li Yihe in this exhibition       The forms are evenly flat, and the overall        Tan'yu sai, the artistic sobriquet given him
(cat. 142).                                 YS   compositions more decorative. Monumen-            in 1635 by the Zen monk aesthete Kôgetsu
                                                 tal hanging scrolls of flowers and birds like     Sógan (1574-1643) of Daitokuji, followed by
142 Flowers and birds                            this triptych would have graced the walls         an oblong relief seal, To or Fuji, referring
    Li Yihe (?)                                  of a large alcove of a daimyo's residence in      to the Fujiwara clan from which Tan'yü
    hanging scrolls, triptych; ink and color     the eighteenth and nineteenth centu-              claimed his family descent. This triptych
    on silk                                      ries.                                        YS   can thus be dated to after 1635. The trip-
    each 128.1 x 62.5 (503/8 x 245/3)                                                              tych, an embellishment for tea, may have
                                                 143 Turnip                                        been formed during the 16408 when
    Ming, late iyth century (?)
                                                     attributed to Hu Tinghui (fl. ist             Tan'yü was deeply involved with tea
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                             quarter of i4th century)                      adepts of Daitokuji such as Kôgetsu him-
                                                     hanging scroll; ink and color on silk         self and the warrior aesthete Sakuma
This triptych, consisting of three large
                                                     21.9x20.7 (8 5/8x8 ^8)                         Sanekatsu (also known as Shôgen; 1570-
paintings of flowers and birds, has been                                                            1642), whose portrait, inscribed by Kô-
transmitted since the eighteenth century             Yuan, i4th century
                                                                                                    getsu, was painted by Tan'yü around 1641
in the Hosokawa daimyo family of Higo                Ueyama Ikuichi collection, Nara                or 1642 (cat. 37).                         YS
(today's Kumamoto Prefecture). It was                Prefecture
painted by an elusive artist, Li Yihe of
Shanhan (in Fujian Province), as signed on           Lotus root with eggplants/Melon
the upper left of the center scroll. Al-             Kano Tan'yü (1602-1674)
though Li Yihe is unrecorded in Chinese              pair of hanging scrolls; ink and color
sources, he has been identified as either a          on silk
Ming Dynasty Chinese painter or, as in               each 21.9 x 20.7 (85/s x 8x/8)
the nineteenth-century Japanese art-                 Edo period, after 1635
historical source Koga bikd, as a Korean             Ueyama Ikuichi collection, Nara
painter of the Yi Dynasty. Paintings bear-
                                                     Prefecture
ing the signature of the artist have been
 known in Japan since the seventeenth cen-       These three works form a triptych assem-
 tury. The painter and connoisseur Kano          bled by Kano Tan'yü, the artist of the two
 Tan'yü (1602-1674) reportedly made a            flanking paintings. The center painting,
 sketch of a painting by this artist.            Turnip, is said to be by the Chinese artist
      In subject matter and general style,       Hu Tinghui, an early Yuan Dynasty
 these paintings are related to the Chinese      painter. The square relief seal at the upper
                                                 right cannot be identified; it may be a col-
                                                 lector's seal. Hu Tinghui's works were
                                                 among Chinese paintings in the Ashikaga
                                                 shogunal collections, and were valued dur-
                                                                                                                                            225
      144
226
145
                                                                                                  227
ARMS AND
  ARMOR
       229
      146 Oyoroi armor                                  black-lacquered iron. A large, flaring, five-
          iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal      tier lamellar shikoro, or neck guard, is sus-
          cuirass h. 33.3 (13 Vs)                       pended from the bottom of the bowl, its
          Kamakura period,                              upper four tiers folded back sharply at the
          late i3th-early i4th century                  front to form the fukikaeshi. The peak at
                                                        the front of the helmet provides a base
          Kushibiki Hachimangü,
                                                        for the great hornlike projection, the
          Aomori Prefecture                             kuwagata.
          National Treasure                                    This set of armor is unusual in its lav-
      Ôyoroi (literally "great armor") was the          ish use of high-relief gilt metal decoration.
      loose-fitting defensive armor of mounted          The motif of the chrysanthemum appears
      archers that was developed late in the            throughout on many of the constituent
      Heian period. This set from the Kamakura parts of the armor. Reflecting a tendency
      period, remarkable for its abundant and            toward realism in the Kamakura period,
      highly accomplished decoration, repre-             the perfectly formed flowers are modeled
      sents the finest efforts of the metal-             with close attention to fine detail, viewed
      working and armor-making traditions of             from the front, side, and back, in carefully
      that time.                                         orchestrated    clusters. The overall extrava-
             Typical of Oyoroi, it is constructed        gance   of this set is apparent in the kyùbi
      chiefly of leather and iron lames bound to- no ita and the munaita, generally only
      gether to form horizontal tiers. The lamel- wrapped with a piece of ornamental
      lar tiers are covered with lacquer to lend         leather, which are here covered with the
      strength and rigidity and then laced to-           chrysanthemum metalwork. The dsode
      gether vertically, with distinctive, thick,        provide a surface for a more expansive
      red silk lacing in this example, to create         treatment of the motif, as the chrysanthe-
      large sections. These sections are then            mums branch up and outward from a
       joined with smaller, solid iron or leather        bamboo     fence toward stylized clouds at
       parts.                                            the  top.  The  hole at the top of the helmet,
              The conventions followed in compos- the tehen no ana, is encircled with the gilt-
       ing this set are standard for dyoroi armor.        metal interweave. Four plates radiating
       The upper part of the cuirass consists of a        from  the tehen no ana along the four cardi-
       small solid iron munaita, or chest plate,          nal axes to the base of the helmet bowl are
       and the tateage, two lamellar tiers in the         encrusted with the gilt chrysanthemum
       front and three tiers in the back. The             metalwork, as are other parts of the hel-
       lower part of the cuirass, a four-tiered ka-       met such as the fukikaeshi and the base of
       bukidd, protects the front, back, and left         the  kuwagata.                            AMW
       side of the lower part of the torso. The
       right side of the body is protected by a          147 Oyoroi armor
       completely separate section called the                  iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal
       waidate. The kusazuri, a protective skirt               cuirass h. 33.3 (13 Vs)
       suspended from the cuirass, is divided ver-             Nanbokuchó period, i4th century
       tically into four large sections of five tiers          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
       each; the right section, a part of the                  Important Cultural Property
       waidate, is separate from the other three
       sections. The dsode, or large upper-arm            According to Hosokawa family tradition,
        guards, are seven tiers each. Two smaller         this set of dyoroi, the oldest armor in the
        independent protective plates hang down           Hosokawa collection, was worn in a 1358
        from the shoulders, one over each side of         battle in Kyoto by Hosokawa Yoriari (1332-
        the chest: on the right, the sendan no ita        1391), the founder of the family. Much of
        made of three lamellar tiers, and on the          the original assemblage that protects the
        left, the kyùbi no ita of one solid iron plate. body has survived: the cuirass and its pen-
              A tsurubashiri of soft leather covers       dant kusazuri (protective skirt), including
        the lamellar tiers of the front of the cuirass the entire waidate (right side guard), and
        to provide a smooth surface for drawing            the kyübi no ita, which is suspended from
        the bow. It is stencil-dyed with a design of      the left shoulder over the chest. The
        shishi, mythical lionlike creatures, on a         lacquer-coated tiers are made from iron
        background of peonies. The peony is tradi- and leather lames. The front of the cuirass
        tionally associated with refinement and            was originally covered by a tsurubashiri,
        the shishi with valor, both qualities to           now lost, of soft deerskin with stenciled
        which the members of the warrior class as- designs. The two expansive ôsode (large
        pired. The two motifs often appeared to-           upper-arm guards) are replacements dating
        gether on armor, particularly in the               from the sixteenth century and the sendan
        Kamakura and Muromachi periods.                    no ita, which would have been suspended
              The helmet, typical of those worn as         from the right shoulder over the chest, is
        part of a set of Oyoroi during this period, is missing.
        of the hoshi kabuto type, literally "star hel-          The hoshi kabuto (star helmet) is
         met," a reference to the hundreds of rivets made of narrow trapezoidal iron plates
         that punctuate its surface. The helmet
        bowl is made from trapezoidal plates of
230
146
      231
      147
232
148
      233
fixed with rows of neatly assembled rivets. four-tier section fits around the body. Sus-            three curved plates of iron. Although the
The rim band is pierced to receive studs          pended from the shoulders is a pair of            construction of the armor as a whole is
that fasten the peak in front and the shi-        gyôyô, made of iron plate wrapped in              basically standard for the Muromachi pe-
koro (neck guard), made of five lacquered         stencil-dyed leather, which protects the          riod, the fukikaeshi of the helmet stands
lamellar tiers joined with white and red          cords that fasten the shoulder straps to the      up more than is typical and the monochro-
silk lacings, along the sides and back. The       front of the cuirass. A kusazuri, the pro-        matic use of light aqua lacing is unusual.
peak is ornamented with a high-relief de-         tective skirt, hangs from the cuirass in                A number of decorative techniques
sign of gilt chrysanthemums, on which the eight small sections of five lamellar tiers.              often used by armorers are employed, in-
now-lost kuwagata was mounted. At the             Dividing the kusazuri into a larger number        cluding openwork, high relief, iro-e (the
top of the helmet, the tehen no ana open-         of smaller sections made ddmaru more              application of gold or silver onto a back-
ing is circumscribed by the hachimanza, a         flexible than oyoroi. The pair of dsode have      ground of another metal for color con-
multi-layer gilt metal ring. The front of the seven lamellar tiers each. The lack of a              trast), and nanako (in which the metal is
helmet has three spatulate ornaments              tsurubashiri, the sheet of leather that cov-      given a raised-dot surface). The shakudd
known as shinodare. The four upper tiers          ers the lamellar-tiered front of the cuirass      leaves and branches that hold clusters of
of the neck-guard extend forward and fold in oyoroi armor, reflects the shift away                  chrysanthemums on several parts of the
back to form fukikaeshi, the helmet's pair        from the use of the bow and arrow.                armor are executed in openwork. Nanako
of flaps. Each of these flaps, covered with             Several colors of silk lacing are used to   can be found on the toggles that fasten the
dyed leather with stenciled designs of            join the lamellar tiers together. The lacing      shoulder straps to the front of the cuirass.
shishi and peonies (cat. 146) is decorated        pattern of the central portion of the ar-         The iro-e technique is used in combina-
with a single, large, gilt chrysanthemum,         mor, the cuirass and the kusazuri, is re-         tion with high relief to emphasize the writ-
also found on the kyùbi no ita. The right-        flected in the lacing of the dsode. The           ing on the plaque of the helmet, which
hand flap of the shikoro has lost several of      uppermost tiers of the central portion are        reads Hachiman Daibosatsu (the Great
its lacquered lames, the vivid reminder of        joined by red, white, and red lacings. Be-        Bodhisattva Hachiman), the patron god of
a sword blow during a fierce battle.           YS low are rows of green lacing, and then tiers      the warrior. Iro-e, sometimes with high re-
                                                  joined with red and white; at the very bot-       lief and sometimes alone, is also used in a
148 Ddmaru armor                                  tom is a cross-stitched section of red. To        number of places throughout the armor to
      iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal    accommodate this sequence in the seven-           describe a mon, or family crest, that in-
     cuirass h. 29.5 (ii5/s)                      tiered dsode, only one lacing of green in         cludes a chrysanthemum and a horizontal
     Muromachi period,                            the middle is needed.                             stroke signifying the Japanese numeral
      first half loth century                           The lacquered helmet is of the suji ka-     one. This mon was used by the Nasu, a
                                                  buto, or "ridged helmet," type; here the          warrior family of Shimotsuke Province
      Kagoshima Jingü,                            ridges are covered with gilt metal. Its           (present-day Tochigi Prefecture). Indeed,
      Kagoshima Prefecture                        shape, called akoda after a kind of oblong        in the Shuko jisshu, an illustrated
      Important Cultural Property                 gourd, was especially popular in the Muro-        nineteenth-century compendium of fa-
                                                  machi period. Attached to the helmet              mous antiquarian objects, this same set of
Ddmaru is a type of armor characterized
                                                  bowl is a shikoro, or neck guard, of three        armor is listed as a possession of the Nasu
by a continuous sheathlike cuirass that is
                                                  lamellar tiers, the upper two turned back         clan.                                   AMW
wrapped around the body of the wearer
                                                  at the front to form the fukikaeshi. The
and fastened at the right side. It is thought
                                                  front of the helmet holds an elaborate gilt       150 Haramaki armor
to have been developed as the armor of
                                                  openwork section of chrysanthemums, the               iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal
the common foot soldier roughly during
                                                  base for the gilt-metal hornlike projection,          cuirass h. 30.3 (nv/s)
the same period as dyoroi, from about the
                                                  the kuwagata, which flanks a central                  Muromachi period,
middle of the Heian period. During the
                                                  sword-shaped projection.                              first half loth century
fourteenth century, however, as combat
                                                        A shrine legend records that this ar-
tactics shifted the emphasis from                                                                       National Museum of Japanese
                                                  mor was used by Shimazu Takahisa (1514-
mounted archers to formations of foot sol-                                                              History, Chiba Prefecture
                                                  1571), ruler of a large domain in southern
diers wielding the halberd and the long                                                                 Important Cultural Property
                                                  Kyushu, whose son Yoshihiro (1535-1619)
sword, higher-ranking warriors began to
                                                  was responsible for starting the first Sa-        This set of armor is of the haramaki type,
prefer the more manageable ddmaru to the
                                                  tsuma ware kilns (cat. 252). The Kagoshima        in which the cuirass is wrapped around
bulky dyoroi, adding a helmet and pair of
                                                  Jingü owns another set of ddmaru similar          the front and fastened at the back. The
dsode (large upper-arm guards). This set of
                                                  to this one except in the colors of the lac-      close-fitting haramaki originally was the ar-
unusually well-preserved dômaru has sur-
                                                  ings used to join the tiers together. AMW         mor of the common foot soldier. In re-
vived the centuries with its helmet and
dsode intact.                                                                                       sponse to changes in military technique
       The construction of this set is abso-      149 Ddmaru armor                                  that required more mobility than the cum-
lutely standard for the Muromachi period.               iron, leather, lacquer, silk, shakudd,      bersome dyoroi armor allowed, high-
Small protective parts of solid iron                    gold                                        ranking warriors began to wear the more
wrapped in stencil-dyed leather edge the                cuirass h. 29.0(113/8)                      flexible haramaki with a helmet and pair of
top of the cuirass. Each of the tiers be-               Muromachi period, loth century              dsode (large upper-arm guards). It is
 neath is composed primarily of small                   Kozu Kobunka Kaikan,                        thought that these warriors adopted hara-
 leather lames that are tied together and               Kyoto Prefecture                            maki somewhat later than ddmaru, during
 coated with lacquer. These horizontal tiers            Important Cultural Property                 the fifteenth century, and their patronage
are then laced together vertically. To pro-                                                         encouraged the production of high-quality
 tect important parts of the body, iron            Like cat. 148, this set of ddmaru is well pre-   haramaki; this set is a well-preserved exam-
 lames are interspersed with the leather           served: the original akoda-shaped suji ka-       ple from the sixteenth century.
 ones in some portions of the lamellar tiers. buto helmet, the pair of dsode (large                       The cuirass, the kusazuri (protective
 The upper lamellar part of the front of the upper-arm guards), and the cuirass, includ-            skirt), and the dsode are constructed of
 cuirass is a two-tier section, while that the     ing the kusazuri (protective skirt), are in-     thickly lacquered tiers of small lames. The
 back is a three-tier section; below this, a       tact. In addition, it has retained a set of
                                                   suneate (shin guards), each made from
234
149
      235 .
             J50
cuirass and top two rows of the kusazuri       of white and then cross-stitchings of red.     151 Haramaki armor
and the top three rows of the ôsode are        As was common in the earlier oyoroi, mul-          iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal
made of alternating leather and iron lames     ticolored lacing borders many of the parts.        cuirass h. 26.1 (lo1/^
to protect vital areas; the remaining tiers    The metalwork of gilt chrysanthemums               Muromachi period,
are made completely of leather lames.          and the leather stencil-dyed with shishi on        first half loth century
Typical of haramaki, the five-tiered kusa-     a background of peonies are similar to
                                                                                                  National Museum of Japanese History,
zuri is divided into seven sections, as com-   those in cat. 146, though on a much-
pared with the four sections in óyoroí, and    reduced scale.                                     Chiba Prefecture
the eight sections common in dômaru.                 Although partially repaired in the Edo       Important Cultural Property
     The tiers have been joined together       period, this set of armor is complete in its   In its general construction, size, and in
with lacings of different colors, as in cat.   constituent parts and represents a classic     most of the details, this set of haramaki is
148. The lacing pattern of the central por-    example of Muromachi-period haramaki.          similar to cat. 150. Differences between
tion of the set, consisting of the cuirass     It is said to have been used by Hosokawa       the two include the color of the lacing of
and the pendant kusazuri, is echoed by         Yorimoto (1343-1397), and was passed           some of the tiers and the slightly more nar-
that of the ôsode. On both, the upper tiers    down through generations of the Na-            row form of the cuirass. This set is also ex-
are bound by, in descending order, white,      beshima family, daimyo of a domain in Hi-      tremely well preserved, though some of
red, and then white lacings. Below are         zen Province in Kyushu. The Nabeshima          the lacing is damaged and a few of the
tiers joined together with indigo-dyed         were closely involved with the develop-        small pieces of gilt metalwork are mis-
leather thongs. At the bottom are lacings      ment of the ceramic industry in their fief,    sing.                                   AMW
                                               including Karatsu ware (cats. 248, 249) and
                                               Nabeshima ware (cats. 258, 259).       AMW
236
              15J
152 Haramaki armor                             kuyd mon, the crest of the Hosokawa fam-        153 Tdsei gusoku armor
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal   ily, a design of one large circle surrounded        iron, leather, lacquer, silk, wool,
    cuirass h. 32.0 (12 l/z)                   by eight smaller circles. The kote (armored         shakudd, silver leaf, bear fur,
    Momoyama period, late loth century,        sleeves), whose gloves are also decorated           gold leaf, wood
    with later additions                       with the kuyd mon, as well as the haidate           cuirass h. 32.5 (123/4)
                                               (protective apron) and suneate (shin                Momoyama period, late i6th century
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         guards), were added when the set was
                                               handed down to Hosokawa Tsunatoshi                  Sendai City Museum,
An example of haramaki, literally "belly
                                               (1643-1714).                               YS       Miyagi Prefecture
wrapper" this set of armor was worn by
Hosokawa Yüsai (Fujitaka, 1534-1610). The                                                          Important Cultural Property
upper-arm guards are flared in shape, a                                                        Tdsei gusoku, literally "modern equip-
type known as hirosode, and are contem-                                                        ment," was innovative in materials and
porary with the cuirass. The helmet, also                                                      construction. It was first produced during
probably of contemporary date but possi-                                                       the latter half of the sixteenth century. Re-
bly a later addition, is of the suji kabuto                                                    sponding to the needs of battle techniques
type, constructed from iron plates with                                                        that employed large groups of foot sol-
standing ridges. The sword-shaped decora-                                                      diers, tdsei gusoku was made to maximize
tive element at the front was originally                                                       the potential of the warrior to move easily
flanked right and left by the horn-shaped                                                      in battle as well as to give the wearer a dis-
elements of a kuwagata, now missing. The                                                       tinctive appearance. Originally owned
base of the kuwagata is marked with the
                                                                                                                                         237
      "152*
238
153
      239
      by the warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi                runs both horizontally and vertically to
      (1537-1598), this set is a representative        form a gridlike pattern. The shins are en-
      Momoyama-period example. The exten-              cased in suneate of five silver-leafed verti-
      sive use of silver leaf, white satin, red        cal iron splints. Both the haidate and
      woolen cloth, and white silk lacing gives it     suneate are grounded on the same white
      an overall striking visual effect, and details   figured satin used in the kote.         AMW
      are rendered in maki-e lacquer. Hideyoshi
      is recorded to have given the set in 1590 to
                                                       154 Tdsei gusoku armor
      Date Masamune (1567-1636), daimyo of
                                                           iron, leather, lacquer, silk
      Sendai, and it was passed down through
      subsequent generations of the Date                   cuirass h. 36.5(143/8)
       family.                                             Momoyama period, late i6th century
            The tôsei gusoku cuirass took one of a         Kunózan Tóshógü,
      number of new forms: it was often divided            Shizuoka Prefecture
      into two (nimaidô) or five (gomaidd) hinged          Important Cultural Property
      sections; it could be made of large sheets
      of iron, or tiers of lames or long horizontal    This set of tôsei gusoku, said to have been
      panels. The tiers in this set are made of        worn by Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616) dur-
      large, notched silver-leafed leather lames.      ing his great triumph at the Battle of Seki-
      Typical of tdsei gusoku, the total number        gahara in 1600 (cat. 104), was treasured as a
      of tiers is greater by two than that of ear-     symbol of Tokugawa dynastic power. Ac-
      lier armor, and the system of lacing the         cording to shrine records, leyasu had the
      tiers together is greatly simplified. Reflect-   armor made after a dream in which he saw
      ing a debt to the earlier ddmctru type of ar-    Daikokuten, a god associated with wealth
      mor, though, the bottom portion of this          and war. In Japanese the helmet shape is
      cuirass is a continuous tiered section that      described as being in the style of a head-
      is tied on the right. The kusazuri, made         dress traditionally worn by Daikokuten in
      from five silver-leafed lamellar tiers, is di-   sculptural and pictorial representations.
      vided into seven sections.                       The armor became known as the "dream-
            Helmets of the tdsei gusoku were of-       inspired form" and served as the model for
      ten fashioned in a wide range of idiosyn-        many copies made by succeeding genera-
      cratic forms. Here, the helmet is made           tions of Tokugawa rulers, of which cat. 155
      from sheets of iron, covered on the out-         is one example. Following leyasu's death,
      side with bear fur. A pair of gold-leafed        the armor was transferred to Kunozan
      wood fan-shaped appendages are attached          Tôshôgû, a mortuary shrine dedicated to
      to the front and back. The small shikoro,        leyasu, in Shizuoka Prefecture. In 1647, it
      the neck guard suspended along the sides         was moved to a storage site within the Edo
      and back of the rim of the helmet, consists      Castle precinct and, in 1882, was returned
      of two silver-leafed tiers, one a long hori-     to Kunózan Tóshógü where it remains
      zontal iron plate and the other a horizon-       today.
      tal plate divided into three sections. The             The set is constructed from lamellar
      top tier is bent up at the front to form         tiers. It is distinguished as an early and
      small fukikaeshi. A mask, the hohoate, is        well-documented example of tôsei gusoku
      beaten from a sheet of iron into the shape       and by the overall high quality of its work-
      of the lower jaw, lacquered red and at-          manship. A sheet of cloth-backed chain
      tached to the helmet, and from it is sus-        mail, in three sections, is suspended from
      pended a three-tier throat guard made of         the underside of the shikoro, providing ex-
      red-lacquered, narrow iron panels. Two           tra protection for the neck and illustrating
      tiers of silver-leafed leather lames, sus-       the practical nature of this set. This qual-
      pended below the iron throat guard from a        ity is also reflected in the layer of chain
      silver-leafed iron collar, provide further       mail beneath the kusazuri (protective skirt)
      protection for the throat.                       and in the construction of the substantial
            Tdsei gusoku included a number of          suneate (shin guards), each made of three
      specialized protective parts such as the         hinged sections of iron plate. The haidate
      kote (armored sleeves), haidate (protective      (protective apron) is made of card-shaped,
      apron), and suneate (shin guards). Here,         hard leather lames. A decorative element
      the kote protect the arms with parallel iron     for the front of the helmet, consisting of a
      splints and the hands with gloves ham-           gold-leafed leather fern wreath, a circle,
      mered from sheets of iron. These silver-         and a wood shigami (cat. 160), has survived
      leafed parts are all connected with a            with the armor, though the fittings neces-
      latticework of iron chain mail, and the          sary to secure it to the helmet are lacking.
      whole is attached to a ground of white fig-      The entire set was covered with black lac-
      ured satin. In addition to the kusazuri, the     quer, which has altered over time to its
      legs are protected by two other compo-           present brown hue.                       AMW
      nent parts related to the rest of the set in
      their materials and composition. The
      haidate is made of silver-leafed, vertical
      iron splints divided into three sections and
      combined with iron chain mail, which
240
154
      241
      J55
242
               156
156 Tdsei gusoku armor                       guards) are black-lacquered iron, and the
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, hemp,      kote (armored sleeves) are made of iron
    bear fur, gilt metal                     chainmail and blue hemp cloth. The iron
    cuirass h. 37 (i41A)                     helmet is of the hoshi kabuto (star helmet)
    Edo period, icth century                 type, unusual for the armor of the Toku-
                                             gawa shogunate.                          HY
    Kunôzan Toshogu,
    Shizuoka Prefecture
This set of tdsei gusoku was owned by the
twelfth Tokugawa shogun, leyoshi (1793-
1853). The lacquered iron cuirass consists
of two hinged parts. The upper part is
laced. The bottom tier of the seven-
sectioned kusazuri (protective skirt) is
edged with bear fur. The sode (upper-arm
                                                                                           243
157 Tóseí gusoku armor                          gourds and chrysanthemums, all con-              with chrysanthemum-shaped medallions
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal    nected by a weave of chain mail to iron          attached to a light brown cloth ground
    cuirass h. 37 (^l/^}                        gloves and attached to a ground of blue          brocaded with a design of clouds. The
    Edo period, iSth-icth century               silk cloth richly brocaded with a design of      black-lacquered suneate are made from
    Kunózan Tóshógü,                            peonies.                                         three hinged curved sections of iron lined
                                                      The lower half of the body is pro-         with linen. The kote (armored sleeves), are
    Shizuoka Prefecture
                                                tected by the standard set of several well-      a grid of iron chain mail with gourd and
When a son in the Tokugawa shogunate            integrated parts. The kusazuri is made of        floral medallions, backed with the same
household celebrated his coming of age, it      five tiers of small black-lacquered leather      brocaded cloth as the haidate.
was customary for the Iwai house, over-         lames divided into nine sections. The tiers            The helmet is a suji kabuto, or "ridged
seers of the shogunal armor, to present         are bound together with blue silk lacing.        helmet," somewhat similar in construction
him with a set of armor. This set is one        Below the kusazuri is the haidate (protec-       and shape to that of the Kagoshima Jingu
such example. Although six similar sets are     tive apron), made of five tiers of card-         ddmaru (cat. 148). In this tdsei gusoku hel-
extant and their provenance is unclear,         shaped small, black-lacquered leather            met, however, the shikoro, or neck guard,
this one is traditionally said to have be-      lames, also bound with the blue silk lacing.     is formed of five iron panels tiered to
longed either to the ninth shogun, leshige      The haidate is backed with the same richly       curve sharply downward. A sword-shaped
(1711-1761), or the eleventh shogun, lenari     brocaded blue cloth that was used for the        projection stands alone at the front of the
(1773-1841). It is made of two hinged           kote. The shins are protected by a pair of       helmet, a popular Momoyama-period
halves, with lamellar tiers laced in red, and   suneate, made of six iron splints and iron       style. In the Muromachi period, similar
the helmet is of the suji kabuto (ridged)       chain mail.                                      projections were usually combined with a
type.                                      HY         The helmet is formed from two              horn-shaped kuwagata, whose twin prongs
                                                sheets of hammered iron and lined with           would flank it on either side, as in the Ka-
                                                heavily stitched linen cloth. Twelve deco-       goshima Jingü helmet. The interior of the
158 Tdsei gusoku armor                          rative rivets encircle the base of the hel-      helmet is inscribed, Made by Yoshimichi.
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, yak hair      met, and cart wheel designs are depicted         The hammered iron mask is lacquered on
    cuirass h. 45.0(173/4)                      in maki-e lacquer at the sides. A shikoro of     the interior and is equipped with a set of
    Momoyama period,                            five tiers of long horizontal iron panels is     silver-plated teeth; a four-tiered throat
    late loth-early i7th century                suspended from the base of the helmet, as        guard is attached to the mask.
    Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo          is a hammered iron mask with a detach-                 An early seventeenth-century portrait
    Important Cultural Property                 able nose. A plume of white yak hair trails      of Sakakibara Yasumasa depicts the war-
                                                from the rear of the helmet, reflecting the      rior wearing this armor (cat. 33). In the
The powerful influence exerted by Euro-         tendency for the projecting element of the       painting, Yasumasa sits cross-legged on a
pean armor on the development of "mod-          tdsei gusoku helmet to be made of unusual        bear skin cushion, and the dragon and
ern equipment" is reflected in this set of      materials and to be positioned more freely       wave design on the armor is recognizable.
tdsei gusoku. Along with firearms, which        than in earlier periods.                AMW      It is interesting to note, though, that in the
altered the nature of Japanese warfare,                                                          painting, the armor is equipped with a set
sets of Western armor began to arrive in Ja-                                                      of sode, upper arm-guards, also decorated
pan from the end of the Muromachi pe-           159 Tdsei gusoku armor
                                                                                                  with the wave designs. The mask has been
riod. Japanese warriors adapted them by             iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal,
                                                                                                  removed, allowing a clear view of the sit-
adding typical Japanese parts: kusazuri             silver
                                                                                                  ter's face.                             AMW
(protective skirts) were suspended from             cuirass h. 39.0 (153/8)
the cuirass and shikoro (neck guards) from          Momoyama period,
the helmet. Japanese armorers then                  late loth-early i7th century                 160 Tosei gusoku armor
started to produce entire sets of Western-          Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo               iron, leather, lacquer, silk, paper,
style armor, known in Japanese as nan-              Important Cultural Property                      wood, gold leaf
bandd gusoku, of which this set is                                                                   cuirass h. 39.0 (153/4)
representative.                                 This set of tdsei gusoku was owned by                Momoyama period,
      According to the Tokugawa jikki           Sakakibara Yasumasa (1548-1606), the                 late i6th-early i7th century
(Records of the Tokugawa shoguns), this         daimyo of a domain in Kozuke Province
set was presented by Tokugawa leyasu            (present-day Gunma Prefecture). Lavish               Honda Takayuki Collection, Tokyo
(1543-1616) to his important ally Sakakibara    use is made of maki-e lacquer to depict the          Important Cultural Property
Yasumasa (1548-1606), daimyo of a domain        gold and silver dragon that winds around
                                                                                                 This massive set of tdsei gusoku was origi-
in Kôzuke Province (present-day Gunma           the lower tiers of the cuirass, and the gold     nally owned and worn by Honda Tada-
Prefecture). The cuirass is made from two       waves that churn along the bottom two            katsu (1548-1610), one of Tokugawa le-
single sheets of hammered iron, one for         tiers of the kusazuri (protective skirt). Sil-   yasu's most trusted generals and a power-
the front and one for the back, hinged on       ver is used to trim both the cuirass and the
                                                                                                 ful daimyo of Ise Province (a large part of
the left side and fastened together with        kusazuri. Gold maki-e lacquer and gilt           present Mie Prefecture). Attached to the
cord at the right. The rims of the cuirass      metal cart wheel designs are dispersed           sides of the distinctive helmet is a striking
are finished with lacquer, and the interior     over many parts of the set, including the
                                                                                                 pair of antlers, large but lightweight, made
is lined with black-lacquered leather. Iron     small fukikaeshi of the helmet, the top of
                                                                                                 of wood and layers of paper hardened with
shoulder straps serve as the base for a pair    the cuirass, and the iron gloves.                coats of black lacquer. The grimacing
 of hinged gydyd, which protect fastening            The set, composed of tiers made from        horned head (shigami) at the front of the
cords and a pair of horn toggles. Also at-      black-lacquered horizontal iron panels, is       helmet, carved from wood, covered with
 tached to the shoulder straps are a set of     of the nimaidd type, with the front and          black lacquer and gold-leafed, was a type
 kobire, tiny shoulder guards often used in     back forming two discrete hinged sections.       of ornament popular from the Momoyama
 tôsei gusoku, here three tiers of narrow       The five-tiered kusazuri is divided into         through the Edo periods. This set includes
 iron panels bound with blue lacing. The        seven sections. Below this is the haidate        a string of gold-leafed wood prayer beads
 kote (armored sleeves) are made from           (protective apron), made of iron chain mail      (not pictured here) reflecting the Buddhist
 metalwork patches, some in the shape of                                                         faith of the warrior.
244
157
158
            245
      159
246
J60
      247
      J6J
248
162
      249
     The set is complete, with all of the       hammered iron mask extends down from            shown wearing the armor with a jacket
component protective parts, and the cui-        the top of the cheek and nose to a three-       over it, as well as an Ichinotani helmet.
rass is of the nimaidd type, with two           tiered iron throat protector, while the full                                            AMW
hinged sections. The tiers are made of          peak of the front of the helmet shields the
long, horizontal panels—iron for the cui-       upper part of the face. A sleek, gold-leafed    163 Tôsei gusoku armor
rass, leather for the kusazuri (protective      leather crescent moon, elegantly poised             iron, leather, gold leaf, lacquer, silk,
skirt)—shaped and lacquered to give the         off-center, balances on the front of the hel-       wood, bear fur, wool
appearance of tiers of individual lames.        met. Not atypically, the helmet bowl was            cuirass h. 39.0(153/8)
Accompanying the set is a portrait of Tada-     recycled from an older helmet; it is en-
                                                                                                    Edo period, igth century
katsu wearing the armor, including the          graved with the name of its maker and the
prayer beads, and sitting confidently           date: Mydchin Nobuie, one day in the elev-          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
spread-legged on a stool (cat. 31).      AMW    enth month of the fourth year ofTenbun
                                                                                                This set of tdsei gusoku is said to have
                                                [1535].                                 AMW
                                                                                                been owned by the thirteenth-generation
161 Tôsei gusoku armor                                                                          Hosokawa daimyo Yoshikuni (1835-1876). It
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gold leaf     162 Tdsei gusoku armor                          reflects the influence of a tradition of ar-
    cuirass h. 38.0 (15)                            iron, leather, lacquer, silk, wood,         mor design followed within the Hosokawa
    Momoyama period,                                silver leaf                                 family known as the "Sansai ryü," or the
    late loth-early lyth century                    cuirass h. 35.8(i41/s)                      Sansai mode, in which innovations con-
                                                    Momoyama period,                            ceived by Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646)
    Sendai City Museum,
                                                    late i6th-early iyth century                were standardized. Sansai believed that
    Miyagi Prefecture
                                                    Fukuoka Art Museum,                         the colors of silk lacing on the cuirass
The impressive tdsei gusoku armor of the                                                        should be limited to black, brown, dark
                                                    Fukuoka Prefecture
Date clan of Sendai was marked by an in-                                                        blues, and purple; in this set, the cuirass is
                                                    Important Cultural Property
sistence on both functional pragmatism                                                          laced with dark blue, which subtly con-
and severe elegance. This example, one of       This set was originally owned by Kuroda         trasts with the chestnut hue of the cuirass.
three similar sets ordered by Masamune          Nagamasa (1568-1623), daimyo of a domain        Another distinctive characteristic of the
(1567-1636), the first of the Date daimyo       in Chikuzen Province (part of present-day       Sansai mode, not always used but featured
and a patron of the arts, was given to a re-    Fukuoka Prefecture). It is an example of        in this set, is the construction of the left
tainer; a second set remained in the Date       the gomaidd type of tdsei gusoku, in which      portion of the kusazuri (protective skirt),
family while the third has been excavated       the cuirass is divided into five hinged sec-    the side that would be turned toward the
from the foundation of Masamune's mau-          tions, one section each for the front, back,    enemy, from gold-leafed panels and crim-
soleum. Copies of the armor were pro-           and left sides, and two sections for the        son lacing. The bottom of the kusazuri is
duced by subsequent generations of the          right side, where the armor is fastened.        edged with bear fur, as is sometimes the
Date daimyo.                                    The cuirass is formed from tiers made of        case in Hosokawa armor. A jinbaori (battle
       Like the Kuroda armor in the Fu-         single, long, horizontal panels of iron         jacket) of white wool with gold brocade
kuoka Art Museum (cat. 162), the cuirass is     wrapped with rough-grained, black-              facing is worn over the cuirass; the left
of the gomaidd type, constructed from five      lacquered leather. Small iron parts,            sleeve is made of red wool, matching in
hinged sections, though here each section       trimmed with gold embedded in lacquer,          color the lacing of the left portion of the
consists of a single black-lacquered iron       border the top of the cuirass. A four-tiered    kusazuri.
plate. Characteristic of Masamune's ar-         kusazuri (protective skirt) constructed              Sansai is reported to have said that he
mor, the kusazuri (protective skirt) is di-     from large lames made of lacquered,             preferred a fragile helmet ornament, for
vided into nine sections, each with six tiers   smooth leather is divided into seven sec-       when it broke in combat it would do so
of single, black-lacquered iron plates. The     tions, bound with dark brown silk lacing        easily, without distracting him; he thought
tiers are bound together with blue silk lac-    and suspended from the cuirass.                 that the sight of a helmet ornament break-
ing. The other parts maintain this insis-             The helmet is in the Ichinotani style.    ing on a battleground was something truly
tence on black and functional severity: the     Ichinotani is a place name, the site at         heroic and beautiful. Although this set was
haidate (protective apron) is made of six       which the twelfth-century tragic hero           not made for use in battle, the enor-
rows of card-shaped, black-lacquered iron       Minamoto Yoshitsune (1159-1189) achieved         mously long and gracefully curved, black-
on a ground of black figured silk; each of      his greatest military triumph. The broad,       lacquered wood ornaments of Yoshikuni's
the tubular suneate (shin guards) are two       silver-leafed appendage is formed from a        helmet seem to reflect this attitude.        YS
 full sections of black-lacquered iron; the     thin sheet of wood attached to the back of
black-lacquered kote (armored sleeves) are      the iron helmet bowl. The four-tiered shi-
made of iron chain mail backed with black       koro, unlike the rest of the armor, is lac-
 figured silk, with six iron splints at the     quered in reddish-brown. Kuroda family
forearm and gloves of iron plate.               records indicate that when Kuroda
       The black-lacquered, ridged suji ka-     Nagmasa participated in Hideyoshi's Ko-
buto helmet continues the austere ele-          rean expeditions, he received the helmet
gance typical of the whole set. It lacks any    from Fukushima Masanori (1561-1624), a
decorative embellishment around the hole        warrior who became daimyo of the Hiro-
at the top of the crown. The shikoro is         shima domain, as an offering to help mend
 made of four tiers of thin horizontal iron     their strained relations. Nagamasa trea-
 strips and the top tier is turned back to      sured the helmet and is recorded to have
 form small fukikaeshi tabs, each with a        worn it in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600
 simple openwork decoration of a five-          (cat. 104) and at the Siege of Osaka in
 petaled plum blossom. The grimacing             1614-1615, which may account for the
                                                 many repairs. In an early seventeenth-
                                                century portrait (cat. 32) Nagamasa is
250
163
      251
      164
252
   165                                                                166
164 Tósei gusoku armor                         165 Tosei gusoku armor                    166 Tosei gusoku armor
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, wood, gold       iron, leather, lacquer, silk, wood,       iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal,
    leaf, yak hair                                 gold leaf                                 wood, gold leaf
    cuirass h. 42.8 (i6?/8)                        cuirass h. 40.2 (157/3)                   cuirass h. 39.9(155/8)
    Momoyama period, late loth century             Edo period, iyth century                  Edo period, mid-i8th century
    li Naoyoshi Collection,                        li Naoyoshi Collection,                   li Naoyoshi Collection,
    Shiga Prefecture                               Shiga Prefecture                          Shiga Prefecture
                                                                                                                                    253
i6y Tôsei gusoku armor
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, wood,
    gold leaf
    cuirass h. 40.2 (157/8)
    Edo period, mid-icth century
    li Naoyoshi Collection,
    Shiga Prefecture
168 Haramaki
    iron, leather, lacquer, silk, gilt metal,
    wood, gold leaf
    cuirass h. 29.6(115/8)
    Edo period, mid-icth century
    li Naoyoshi Collection,
    Shiga Prefecture
254
ïfifi                                                                 J69
mor, the arms are protected by a five-         seven, but the debt to the earlier armor is    tall wakidate on the helmet, are duly
tiered pair of small sode (upper-arm guards) obvious. Even at this early stage in the his-    employed.
and kote (armored sleeves) of chain mail       tory of the daimyo rulership of the li               The girth of cat. 167, largest among
with iron gloves. Displayed prominently in family in Hikone, the distinguishing char-         the li sets, reflects the physical size of its
relief on the gloves is the Japanese charac- acteristics of their family style of armor       owner, li Naosuke (1815-1860), the thir-
ter z, first of the two characters that form   were established. This style would con-        teenth daimyo of Hikone and an imposing
the name li. The distinctive red-lacquered tinue to be used throughout the Edo pe-            political figure during the turbulent era
iron helmet became a model followed es-        riod.                                          leading up to the Meiji Restoration of
pecially closely in the later li armor; it is       By the time of the brief sixty-day        1868. Recognizing the futility of efforts to
fitted with a shallow, five-tiered iron shi-   reign of the ninth-generation daimyo, li       maintain Japan's self-imposed isolation,
koro (neck protector) and the wakidate, the Naoyoshi (1727-1754), when peace had              Naosuke played a pivotal role in bringing
pair of long gold-leafed wood decorative       blessed Japan for more than a century, the     about change from 1858 to 1860, when he
elements attached to the sides. White yak      tendency toward the decorative elabora-        served as tairô, literally "great elder," for
hair cascades from the top of the helmet.      tion of armor unrelated to practical need      the weakened Tokugawa shogunate. Seek-
      Although slight modifications are ap-    became increasingly noticeable. For exam-      ing to direct his country into the interna-
parent, the armor of the second-gener-         ple, the cuirass of cat. 166 comprises a       tional arena, he>-engineered the signing of
ation daimyo of Hikone, li Naotaka (1590- busy combination of variously textured              a trade agreement with the United States,
 1659), as represented by cat. 165, follows    tiers, bound with white, light green, and      antagonizing conservative Japanese and
closely that of his father, Naomasa.           red silk lacings. Nevertheless, the distinc-   thereby provoking his assassination in 1860
Among other minor changes, the cuirass is tive, well-established features of li armor,        at the Sakurada Gate in front of Edo Cas-
bound with leather cords in a more com-        such as the coat of red lacquer and the        tle.
 plex and decorative manner and the num-                                                            The two remaining sets of red-
ber of tiers in the small sode is increased to                                                lacquered li armor were made for children
                                                                                                                                        255
170
      of the li daimyo: cat. 168 for a daughter of     qualities of Yukihira's style, has an elegant
      li Naosuke, and cat. 169 for li Naoshige, a      arched shape. The surface texture of the
      son of the second-generation li daimyo,          blade is of a type described by sword con-
      Naotaka. Cat. 168 takes the form of hara-        noisseurs as itame, or wood grain. The
      maki (cats. 150,151,152), and reflects the       temper line along the edge of the blade is
      Edo-period practice of making copies of          almost completely straight. Engraved on
      earlier armor, though the copies often sac-      the front side of the blade is a shuji repre-
      rificed authenticity to decorative elabora-      senting the fierce-looking but benevolent
      tion. On cat. 169 can be seen the tachibana      Buddhist guardian deity Fudô Myôô as
      mon, the li family crest, depicting the fruit    well as a depiction of the Kurikara dragon,
      and leaves of the mandarin orange on a           a symbol of Fudó, coiled around a sword
      stem enclosed in a circle; this or a more        and about to swallow it from the tip. On
      simplified version was often used by the li      the reverse side of the blade is the shuji for
      clan on their personal belongings, such as       Bishamonten, another Buddhist guardian
      saddles, clothing, and sword mountings           deity, especially adopted by warriors, as
      (cat. 191). Small-scale sets of armor typi-      well as a Buddhist image that can be taken
      cally were made for younger members of           for either Bishamonten or Fudô Myôô. On
      warrior families. They served as visual re-      the tang is inscribed, Made by Yukihira of
      minders of the social status of the child        Bungo province.
      and were worn at important occasions,                 Long a celebrated work, this tachi
       such as the coming of age ceremony.             blade was given by the daimyo and literary
           , In all, fourteen successive generations   figure Hosokawa Yûsai (also known as Fu-
       of the li family held the position of daimyo    jitaka, 1534-1610) to Karasumaru Mitsuhiro
       of Hikone until it was abolished shortly af-    (1579-1630), to whom he also transmitted a
       ter the Meiji Restoration in 1868.      AMW     highly valued secret teaching passed orally
                                                       from teacher to select disciple, on the
                                                       tenth-century poetic anthology Kokinshù.
      170 Tachi blade
                                                       The accompanying leather mounting
          Yukihira (fl. early i3th century)            dates from that time.                      HY
          steel
          blade length 79.9 (31 */z)
                                                       171 Katana blade
          Kamakura period, i3th century
                                                           Mitsutada (fl. 13th century)
          Eisei Bunko, Toyko                               steel
          National Treasure                                blade length 68.5 (27)
      The swordsmith Yukihira of Bungo Prov-               Kamakura period, 13th century
      ince (most of present-day Oita Prefecture)           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      is said to have been a disciple of Teishû, a         National Treasure
      late Heian-period monk and sword maker
                                                       Originally a long tachi measuring over 90
      at Hikosan, a mountain center of Bud-
      dhism. Yukihira's known works include a          centimeters (c. 35 l/z inches), this blade was
                                                       made into a katana in the Momoyama pe-
      tachi dated to 1205, so ^ *s understood that
                                                       riod. Unlike the tachi, which was slung
      he was active in the Kamakura period.
                                                       from the waist with the edge down, the ka~
      The tachi is a type of sword slung from the
                                                       tana was worn edge up, thrust through the
      waist with the edge facing down. This
                                                       belt. The tang of this blade holds two gold-
      slender example, representing the finest
256
            171
                                                                                                 257
173 Wakizashi blade                              174 Tanto blade                               shapes (chdji midare), as on this blade.
    Yasutsugu (d. 1646)                              Sagami no kami Masatsune                  Carvings are often by Umetada Myoju, as
    steel                                            (1534-1619)                               here, or by one of his disciples. The in-
    blade length 34.9 (133/4)                        steel                                     scriptions on the tang reads: Musashi
    Edo period, iyth century                         blade lenth 28.5 (ii1/^                   Daijô Fujiwara Tadahiro. Tadahiro is a disci-
                                                     Momoyama period, loth century             ple of Umetada Myôju. The twenty-fourth
    Tokyo National Museum                                                                      day of the ninth month of the sixth year of
                                                     Sword Museum, Tokyo                       Kariei [1629], carving by Myôju at age
The first of many swordsmiths to use the
name Yasutsugu was born in the village of            Important Art Object                      seventy-two—indicating that this work was
Shimosaka in Omi Province (present-day           Sagami no kami Masatsune was a sword-         a joint effort of master and student.     HY
Shiga Prefecture) as Shimosaka Ichi-             smith employed by the Tokugawa of
zaemon, and studied with Omiya Kane-             Owari province, one of the three Toku-        176 Katana blade
tomi (fl. late sixteenth century), signing his   gawa branch houses (gosanke). He was               Echizen no kami Sukehiro (1637-1682)
works Shimosaka. He later moved to Echi-         born in 1534 in Mino Province (part of             steel
zen Province (part of present-day Fukui          present-day Gifu Prefecture), where he
Prefecture), where he served the Matsu-                                                             blade length 69.6 (273/8)
                                                 studied under Kanetsune of Seki and was            Edo period, 1677
daira family. Around 1606 he was granted         given the name Kanetsune, which was
the honor of using in his name the Japa-         later changed to Masatsune; in 1592 he re-         Tokyo National Museum
nese character yasu, from the given name         ceived the honorary title Sagami no kami.          Important Art Object
of Tokugawa leyasu. Thereupon he                 In 1600 he accompanied the fourth son of
changed his name to Yasutsugu and began                                                        Echizen no kami Sukehiro was appren-
                                                 Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616), Matsudaira       ticed to the Osaka swordsmith Tsuda Su-
to serve the Tokugawa shogunal house as          Tadayoshi (1580-1607), when he moved to
swordsmith. Successive generations of                                                          kehiro; he was adopted by his teacher and
                                                 Kiyosu in Owari Province (present-day         inherited his name. In 1657 he received
swordsmiths who went by the name Yasut-          Aichi Prefecture). After Tadayoshi's death, the honorary title Echizen no kami from
sugu were active until the late Edo period;      Masatsune lived near Nagoya Castle and
the first two generations served both the                                                      the court, and ten years after that he en-
                                                 served the Owari Tokugawa.                    tered the service of Aoyama Inaba no
shogunate in Edo and the Matsudaira fam-               Masatsune's work belongs to the Seki
ily of Echizen, but during the third gener-                                                    kami, a Tokugawa retainer who served as
                                                 tradition of Mino province. The surface       warden of Osaka Castle.
ation the family divided into the Edo and        texture is usually a mixture of itame (wood
Echizen branches. Reflecting the influ-                                                              At first Sukehiro made temper lines
                                                 grain) and másame (straight grain), as can    with irregular "clove" shapes (chôji mi-
ence of Masamune (fl. late thirteenth-           be seen on this fine blade. Typically his
early fourteenth century), the famous                                                          dare), like those of his teacher, but eventu-
                                                 blades have a straight temper line (suguha), ally he pioneered a beautiful and
swordsmith of the Kamakura period, and           as in this example, or an undulating tem-
his son Sadamune, the Yasutsugus style is                                                      distinctive style of temper line reminiscent
                                                 per line (notareba). On this tanto, a short   of the shape of ocean waves known as
characterized by an irregular temper line        blade less than 30 centimeters (c. 12
(midareba). Carvings in the blade of such                                                      tôran midare, as can be seen in this exam-
                                                 inches) in length, has been carved a vivid    ple. The shape of the blade, with a rather
themes as dragons, Buddhist figures, and         openwork depiction of the Kurikara
trees are also typical of his work, mostly                                                     slight curve, was common in the Edo pe-
                                                 dragon, coiled around and about to swal-      riod, and it has a fine itame (woodgrain)
executed by Kinai Tomosuke (fl. early sev-       low a ritual sword. The tang is inscribed
enteenth century) and his disciples.                                                           surface texture. The inscription on the
                                                 with the name of the smith, Sagami no         front of the tang identifies the sword-
      This fine wakizashi blade, about 30 to     kami Fujiwara Masatsune.                   HY smith, Tsuda Echizen no kami Sukehiro,
60 centimeters (c. 12 to 24 inches) long,
was made by the second-generation Yasu-                                                        and the date is recorded on the reverse, A
tsugu, who died in 1646. The itame (wood-        175 Katana blade                              day in the eight month of the fifth year of
grain) surface texture recalls the work of            Musashi Daijô Tadahiro (1572-1632)       Enpô [1677].                               HY
Masamune and Sadamune, and the tem-                   steel
per line is described with large undulations          blade length 58.9 (23 */s)               177 Katana blade
(notare). On the front side of the blade are          Edo period, 1629                              Osumi no Jo Masahiro (fl. early i7th
carvings by Kinai Tomosuke depicting the              Tokyo National Museum                         century)
Buddhist deities Jizô Bosatsu, Fudô Myôô,             Important Art Object                          steel
and Bishamonten; on the reverse is a carv-                                                          blade length 70.5 (273/4)
ing of the Kurikara dragon about to swal-         This blade, somewhat shorter than the             Momoyama period, 1606
low a ritual sword. Engraved on the front         typical katana, was forged by Musashi
of the tang is a depiction of the hollyhock       Daijô Tadahiro, born Hashimoto Shin-              Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
mon, which the Tokugawa allowed the               zaemon Tadayoshi. Employed as a clan              Important Cultural Property
Yasutsugu smiths to use; below it is an in-       craftsman in the Nabeshima domain of          Osumi no Jo Masahiro was an apprentice
scription that reads, With foreign iron, at       Saga in Hizen Province, northern Kyushu, of the famous Kyoto swordsmith Hori-
Edo, Bushü, and on the reverse is inscribed       he was sent to Kyoto in 1596 on clan order kawa Kunihiro (active late sixteenth-early
Echizen Yasutsugu, meaning that Yasu-             to study with Umetada Myóju (1558-1631),      seventeenth century). Masahiro's style is
tsugu of Echizen Province made the blade          a famous carver of swords and maker of        based on the style of the fourteenth-
at Edo in Bushü (Musashi Province) using,         swords and metal fittings. Following his re- century smith Sadamune of Kamakura.
along with native iron, rare imported iron        turn to Saga in 1598, his school prospered    This fine example of Masahiro's work, typ-
from the West.                             HY     and Hizen to, or swords of Hizen Province, ical of the Momoyama-period blade, is
                                                  became well known. He received the title      wide with a slight curve and large point. It
                                                  Musashi Daijô in 1615 and changed his         has an itame (woodgrain) surface texture,
                                                  name to Tadahiro. Hizen swords are char-      and the temper line consists of small un-
                                                  acterized by a fine itame (woodgrain) sur-    dulations (konotare). Inscribed on the front
                                                  face and temper lines that are either
                                                  straight (suguha} or have irregular "clove"
258
173   174
            259
of the tang is, Osumi no Jo Fujiwara Masa-
hiro, and on the reverse, An auspicious day
in the third month of the eleventh year of
Keichd [1606].                            HY
260
      J78
179
180
gane (metal fitting covering the pommel)          hilt entirely, a fashion that continued into    brocade, to which were fastened menuki
takes the shape of a shishi, a mythical lion-     the Muromachi period and which is typi-         (metal ornaments) with the family mon,
like animal, and the fuchi kanagu (metal          fied by this ornate example. The wooden         and the whole was then intricately
collar at the blade end of the hilt) is cov-      hilt is covered with silver, over which is      wrapped with brown or purple silk cord.
ered with a peony design; along the length        laid an extensive gilt copper openwork          The same cord was continued on the up-
of the hilt are hammered decorative peony         weave with high-relief chrysanthemums.          per part of the sheath, and leather and silk
studs. All the metal hilt fittings are gilt       The wood sheath is covered with gilt cop-       hanging straps were attached.
copper. The silver-covered wooden sheath          per given the appearance of rayskin and               In this mounting, handed down in the
is overlaid with a gilt openwork floral-scroll    metal fittings with high-relief and en-         Uesugi family, daimyo of Yonezawa (in
and peony design, and the long edges are          graved chrysanthemums. A gilt copper            present-day Yamagata Prefecture), and
gilt rimmed. The chains are attached to           dragon-and-wave design is depicted on the       probably given to them by Toyotomi Hi-
"legs" decorated with the peony design in         kozuka in high relief and engraving, while      deyoshi (1537-1598), the hilt is covered with
high relief on a nanako ground. The blade         the kdgai is decorated with a ruler and         gold brocade and wound with brown silk
contained within this mounting, not               bracken sprout design.                     HY   cord; the cord is continued onto the
shown in this exhibition, is far removed                                                          sheath. The sheath is covered with amber
 from practical use.                         HY                                                   lacquer sprinkled thickly with gold parti-
                                                  181 Itomaki no tachi mounting
                                                                                                  cles; this kind of lacquer ground is called
                                                      wood, silk, lacquer, shakudd, gold,
180 Koshigatana mounting                                                                          nashiji (pear-skin ground), for the ruddy
                                                      leather
    wood, silver, gilt copper                                                                     speckled pear that it resembles. Against
                                                      length no (43^4)                            this ground, on each side of the sheath,
    length 42 (161/2)                                 Momoyama period, early iyth century         are seven paulownia mon in maki-e lac-
    Muromachi period, 15th century
                                                      Sword Museum, Tokyo                         quer. The metal fittings are also decorated
    Tokyo National Museum                             Important Cultural Property                 with paulownia crests, crafted in high re-
                                                                                                  lief and thinly covered with gold using the
The koshigatana, a short sword worn at            Ornate itomaki no tachi were produced           iro-e technique on a nanako (raised-dot)
the waist usually without a sword guard,          from the end of the Muromachi period.
was carried in combination with the slung                                                         shakudd ground. Not included in the exhi-
                                                  Daimyo used swords of this type for cer-        bition, the Kamakura-period steel blade
sword, or tachi. The length of the blade          emonial purposes, as rewards or gifts, and      normally in this mounting was made by a
varies from 25 to 35 centimeters (10 to 13 3/4    as dedicatory gifts to temples and shrines.     swordsmith of the Ichimonji school of
inches). The typical mounting features ex-        The itomaki no tachi characteristically had     Bizen Province.                            HY
tensive metal fittings distributed over its       metal fittings of shakudd (or sometimes
length. Sometimes short swords were fit-          gold) decorated with family mon (crests)
 ted with a kozuka (small knife) and a kdgai      on a nanako (raised-dot) ground. The
 (a skewerlike implement carried in special       length of the sheath was decorated with
 pockets on the side of the sheath). From         the same mon and with auspicious motifs
 the late Kamakura period, the reinforcing        such as paulownia and phoenix in maki-e
 metal fittings on the hilt came to cover the     lacquer. The hilt was covered with rich
                                                                                                                                           261
                      J8J
182
183
182 Itomaki no tachi mounting                    183 Kazaritachi mounting                        with white rayskin and has a row of orna-
    wood, silk, lacquer, shakudd, gold,              wood, rayskin, copper, gold, enamel,        mental studs shaped like ta\vara (straw rice
    silver, leather                                  lacquer, leather                            bags) and menuki (hilt ornaments) with a
    length 105.5 (411/2)                             length 102 (40 !/8)                         paulownia mon. The sheath is decorated
    Edo period, iyth century                         Edo period, early iyth century              with a floral-scroll design of paulownia and
                                                     Watanabe Kunio Collection, Tokyo            hollyhock mon in gold maki-e lacquer on a
    Tokyo National Museum
                                                                                                 nashiji lacquer ground. Along the sheath
The hilt of this classic early Edo-period ito-   The kazaritachi, developed in the Heian         are four gilt copper fittings with paulownia
maki no tac/zz"(cat. 181), covered with a gold   period as a more ornate version of the          crests and red and green enamel flower
brocade cloth, is wrapped with brown silk        karatachi (Chinese sword) of the earlier        motifs against an intricate nanako (raised-
cord. This same wrapping is also used on         Nara period, was the most important             dot) and openwork background. The tsuba
part of the sheath. Along the length of the      sword used on ceremonial occasions at the       is inlaid with green enamel.
sheath are many hollyhock mon, the crest         imperial court. Kazaritachi mountings are             Representative of the refined style
of the Tokugawa clan, in gold and silver         characterized by the extensive use of           and outstanding craftsmanship of the
maki-e and thin sheets of metal. The vari-       openwork metal fittings in colorfully inlaid    early modern era, this kazaritachi is said to
ous metal fittings distributed over the          floral scroll designs, and by the prominent     have been given by Emperor Go-Yozei to
sword are also decorated with the holly-         "feet" with appendages to which the             Tokugawa Hidetada (1579-1632), the sec-
hock mon in high relief thinly covered           hanging straps are attached. The hilt is        ond shogun, on the occasion of his being
with gold (iro-e) on a nanako (raised-dot)       typically covered with white rayskin and        awarded the court title seii tai shogun on
shakudd ground. Although its provenance          punctuated with a row of ornamental             the sixteenth day of the fourth month of
                                                                                                                                            HY
is unknown, the use of the hollyhock mon         studs. As on the earlier karatachi, the tsuba   the tenth year of Keichô (1605).
suggests that this itomaki no tachi was          (sword guard) is made in the stylized shape
owned by a family with connections to the        of a fundó (balance weight). From the Mo-       184 Kazaritachi mounting
Tokugawa shogunate.                        HY    moyama period, members of the imperial              wood, rayskin, lacquer, copper, gold,
                                                 court aristocracy used kazaritachi with a           enamel, leather
                                                 slim, straight sheath that encased only a           length 101 (39 3/4)
                                                 perfunctory blade; warriors with a court
                                                                                                     Edo period, late iyth century
                                                 rank, however, used one in which the
                                                 sheath was broad and arched to accommo-             Takahashi Toshio Collection, Tokyo
                                                 date a practical blade.                         This kazaritachi mounting (cat. 183) has
                                                       The sheath of this example is some-       the characteristic features of its type, such
                                                 what broad and curved. The hilt is covered
262
                    184
J85
186
as prominent "feet" a /iundo-shaped tsuba,     consuming to manufacture, simplified            187 Set of daishô mountings
and extensive metal fittings with colorful     styles gradually came to be used. One such          wood, rayskin, silk, lacquer, shakudô,
enamel inlay distributed over the length of    substitute was the hosodachi, or slim tachi.        gold, silver, horn
the sheath. The curve and breadth of the       Another was the even more simplified                length top, 92 (36 V4); bottom, 56 (22)
sheath indicate that it was owned by a         maki-e no tachi type, of which this pair,           Edo period, i8th century
warrior. It was transmitted in the Maeda       transmitted in the Hosokawa family and
                                                                                                   Watanabe Kunio Collection, Tokyo
family of the Daishóji domain, a branch of     thought to date from the late Edo period,
the powerful Maeda clan of the Kaga do-        is a representative example. They are iden-     From the Muromachi period, warriors are
main (cats. 260, 261). The oak-leaf mon,       tically made except that one has metal          known to have worn long katana and short
dispersed over the sheath in maki-e lac-       fittings of gold, to be used on festive occa-   wakizashi swords together as a pair, but in
quer on a nashiji ground and also on the       sions, and the other has metal fittings of      the Edo period combinations of long and
metal fittings, was the crest used by the      silver, to be used on solemn occasions.         short swords with identical mountings
Yamanouchi daimyo of Tosa, on the island             The hilts are covered with white ray-     were standardized and were known as
of Shikoku. This mounting was presented        skin. Along the lower part of the hilts are     daishd goshirae, or large and small mount-
to one of the Maeda lords to mark some         rows of five cherry blossom-shaped orna-        ings. For formal occasions sets were worn
occasion.                                 HY   mental studs, and at the center are menuki      in which the sheath of each sword was
                                               consisting of three kuyd mon, the Hoso-         covered with black lacquer, with the
                                               kawa family crest of eight small circles        metalwork made of shakudd, either unor-
185 Silver maki-e no tachi mounting
                                               around a single large circle. The sheaths       namented or with the family mon on a
    wood, rayskin, lacquer, silver, leather    are decorated with the kuyô mon in maki-e
    length 98 (38 5/s)                                                                         nanako (raised-dot) ground. Lacquered
                                               lacquer on a nashiji lacquer ground. The        horn was typically used for some of the
    Edo period, late i8th century              metal fittings encircling the mounting at       small parts, such as the kashira (pommel),
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         various points are also decorated with the      the rings for the tying cords on the sheath,
                                               kuyô mon on a nanako (raised-dot) ground.       and the tip of the sheath of the long
                                               The "feet" are those of an ordinary tachi,      sword.
186 Gold maki-e no tachi mounting
                                               without the prominent appendages seen                 This pair of daishd goshirae, dating
    wood, rayskin, lacquer, gold, leather       in the kazaritachi. The tsuba, shaped like a
    length 96 (37 3/4)                                                                         from the eighteenth century and unusual
                                               fundó (balance weight), and the hanging         for its felicitous decorative motifs, was
    Edo period, late i8th century               cords bound with seven metal rings, how-       handed down in the Maeda family, daimyo
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                          ever, represent traces of the kazaritachi      of a wealthy domain in Kaga Province
                                                style retained in these otherwise simplified   (part of present-day Ishikawa Prefecture).
As the ceremonial kazaritachi mounting          ceremonial swords.                        HY
(cat. 183) was expensive and time-                                                             The hilts are covered with white rayskin
                                                                                                                                        263
        187
188
189
and wrapped with black silk cord. The          188 Set of daisho mountings                     189 Katana mounting
kashira are made of horn and coated with            wood, rayskin, lacquer, silk, shakudo,         wood, lacquer, rayskin, sharkskin,
black lacquer, while the fuchi (metal col-          gold, horn                                     leather, gold, iron, copper, silk, horn
lars at the blade end of the hilts) are deco-       length top, 89 (35); bottom, 63 (243/4)        length 88 (34 5/g)
rated with auspicious designs in gold and           Edo period, i8th century                       Momoyama period, loth century
silver on a shakudd ground. The menuki
                                                    Sword Museum, Tokyo                            Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
(hilt ornaments) are modeled with a phoe-
nix design. The sheaths are coated with        This set of black-lacquered daisho goshirae     This mounting, made for a sword that was
black lacquer and, typically, the tip of the   (cat. 187), made according to the estab-        forged by Seki no Kanesada (fl. late six-
long one is cut straight across while the      lished conventions, was owned by the Na-        teenth century) and owned by Hosokawa
short one is rounded. A kozuka (small          beshima family, rulers of the Saga domain       Sansai (Tadaoki, 1563-1646), came to be
knife) and a kdgai (skewerlike implement)      in northern Kyushu. The hilts of both           treasured as the Kasen Goshirae, or "Im-
are attached to the longer sword, while the swords are covered with white rayskin and          mortal Poets Mounting." The reason for
shorter one has only the kozuka. These ac- wound with black silk cord. The kashira             the name, some say, is that Sansai struck
cessories are decorated with the stylized      (pommels) are made of horn covered with         down some traitorous thirty-six retainers,
plum blossom crest of the Maeda family,        black lacquer, and the fuchi (metal collars     the same number as the Thirty-six Immor-
in high-relief gold on a nanako (raised-dot)   at the blade end of the hilts) are inset with   tal Poets, so designated in the eleventh
shakudd ground; the reverse is inscribed       high-relief gold mon of contraposed mydga       century. The name of the mounting may
with the name and kad of the maker of          sprouts on a nanako (raised-dot) shakudd        simply reflect Sansai's love of poetry. The
 these fittings, Goto Kôrei (fl. late eigh-    ground. Typical of daisho sets, the tip of      hilt is covered with black-lacquered ray-
 teenth century), a metalworker who served the longer sword is cut straight across,            skin and wound with brown leather over
 the Maeda family. The round tsuba, or         while that of the shorter sword is rounded.     gold bean-shaped hilt ornaments (menuki);
 sword guards, are decorated with conven-      The longer sword is fit with a kozuka           the kashira (pommel) is made of blackened
 tional symbols of good fortune, such as a     (knife) and a kdgai (skewer) with the same      copper. The sheath is decorated by a tech-
 mallet, symbol of the god of wealth, a        mydga crest, gold on a nanako shakudo           nique in which sharkskin is covered with
 money pouch, jewels, and scrolls in gold      ground. The round tsuba, or sword guards,       black lacquer and polished so that the
 on a shakudd ground.                       HY are made of undecorated shakudd.          HY
264
       190
J9J
192
white stubble of the skin is exposed; rings    spiraling stripes of red lacquer and silver     164-169), as in this pair of daisho goshirae
are engraved on the section near the tsubd,    plate. The sheath opening, the ring and         (cat. 187). High-relief menuki in the form
or sword guard. The tip of the sheath,         hook to which the tying cord is fastened,       of mandarin oranges (tachibana), the fam-
made of iron, tapers like "the bottom of a     and the tip are made of black-lacquered         ily crest of the li, are placed on the red-
boat." The round tsuba, also made of iron,     horn.                                           lacquered rayskin-covered hilts, which are
is decorated right and left with elegant            On the brass tsuba is a large openwork     then wrapped with black silk cord. The
openwork of silhouetted butterflies. This      moon; in the bottom half, in gold and cop-      kashira (pommels) are made of undeco-
dignified and subtly detailed mounting         per, stands Zhang Guolao, the Chinese           rated silver; the fuchi (collars at the blade
conveys well the taste of the cultivated       Daoist immortal of the Tang Dynasty who         end of the hilts) are made of brass and in-
Sansai.                                   HY   was said to have traveled immense dis-          set with the mandarin orange crest in sha-
                                               tances on a white mule, which he kept in a      kudd. The rounded tips of both sheaths
190 Katana mounting                            gourd, at his waist, when not needed.           are also made of silver, fashioned with a
                                                    The metal fittings are by Tsuchiya         scroll motif. Red lacquer is applied to the
    wood, lacquer, rayskin, sharkskin,
                                               Yasuchika (cats. 210, 211).                HY   sheaths so as to look like cord wrapped
    rattan, gold, copper, brass, shakudd
                                                                                               diagonally. The tsuba are made of
    shell, horn
                                               191 Set of daishd mountings                     shakudd.                                     HY
    length 96 (37 3/4)
    Edo period, mid-i8th century                   wood, rayskin, silk, lacquer,
                                                   shakudd, gold, silver, brass, horn          192 Set of daishd mountings
    Sword Museum, Tokyo                            length top, 101 (393/4); bottom, 63.8           wood, rayskin, silk, lacquer, iron, gold,
                                                   (251/8)                                         horn
The hilt, covered with white rayskin, is
wrapped in brown-lacquered rattan. The             Momoyama period, iyth century                   length top 105.8 (415/3); bottom 79.5
menuki, copper with gold details, take the         li Naoyoshi Collection,                         (31'A)
                                                                                                   Edo period, i8th century
form of a horse. The kashira (pommel) and          Shiga Prefecture
the fuchi (metal collar at the blade end of                                                        li Naoyoshi Collection,
the hilt) are made of brass with a paulow-     li Naomasa (1561-1602), a close ally of To-         Shiga Prefecture
nia design in gold, shakudd, and shell. The    kugawa leyasu, was famous for the red-
sheath is covered with what appears to be      lacquered armor and swords that he wore         On both swords, large and small, the hilts
black-lacquered sharkskin, upon which are      to battle; this style was carried on by sub-    are covered with white rayskin etched
                                               sequent generations of the li clan (cats.
                                                                                                                                          265
            193
194
195
266
with an allover hexagonal tortoise-shell        Although subdued Muromachi-period-               Tokugawa, is distributed over the entire
pattern, on top of which are gold menuki        style koshigatana (cat. 180) continued to be     length of the mounting, suggesting that it
with a dragon design, the whole then            made, the sword mountings of the Mo-             originally belonged to a daishd set; the
wrapped with brown silk cord. The kashira       moyama period, reflecting the spirit of the      short sword was probably lost during or af-
(pommels) and fuchi (metal collars) at ei-      times, were often ornate, with the hilts         ter the Meiji period. The hilt is covered
ther end of the hilts are made of gold-         and sheaths covered with such materials          with white rayskin and wound with light
covered iron. The smaller sword is fit with     as rayskin or thin sheets of gold. Transmit-     green silk cord, beneath which are placed
a kozuka (small knife) that is decorated        ted in the Hosokawa family, daimyo of the        hilt ornaments (menuki) with the holly-
with a high-relief depiction of a dragon.       Kumamoto domain (in present-day Kuma-            hock mon. The kashira (pommel) and fuchi
      In the mid-Edo period many different      moto Prefecture), this is one such exam-         (collar) at either end of the hilt are deco-
methods were used to decorate sword             ple, traditionally said to have been used by     rated with gold high-relief hollyhock mon
sheaths. Here diamond-shaped pieces of          Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610) and Sansai            on a nanako (raised-dot) ground of sha-
rayskin are placed on the sheath, covered       (1563-1646).                                     kudd. Scattered on the sheath are holly-
with black lacquer, and then polished, re-            The hilt is covered with a thin sheet      hock mon in gold maki-e and shell. The
sulting in a pattern that suggests butter-      of gold, patterned like rayskin; the sheath      ring for the tying cord is horn. Both sides
flies.                                          is covered with sheet gold in a hexagonal        of the round sword guard hold the holly-
       It was also common at this time to       (tortoise-shell) pattern, each section filled    hock mon in gold on a nanako (raised-dot)
take themes for the decoration of the           with either a floral design or the kuyd mon,     ground of shakudd, as do the kozuka (small
 sword fittings from traditional Chinese        the crest of the Hosokawa family. The            knife) and kdgai (skewer) attached to the
 narratives. The iron tsuba of the large        kashira (pommel) and fuchi (metal collar         sheath.                                     HY
 sword refers to the Tanxi tale from the Ro-    on the blade end of the hilt) metal fittings
 mance of the Three Kingdoms, in which          on the hilt are decorated with high-relief       195 Katana mounting
 Liu Bei of the Shu kingdom, riding the         paulownia and kuyd mon, both in thin                 wood, lacquer, rayskin, leather,
 horse called Dilu, was chased by his en-       sheets of gold (iro-e) on a raised-dot               copper, iron, horn
 emy Cai Mao to the waters of the Tanxi;        ground. Gold shishi, lionlike mythical               length 93.0 (36 5/s)
 miraculously, Dilu jumped the stream and       beasts, form the hilt ornaments (menuki),            Momoyama period, i6th century
 Liu Bei was saved. This tsuba is engraved       the work of a Goto school craftsman
 Otsuryùken Miboku, the artist name used        (cat. 215). A kozuka (small knife) attached          Tokyo National Museum
 by Hamano Shôzui, active from the mid to        to the reverse of the sheath is decorated           Important Cultural Property
 the late Edo period, in his late years. The     with a high-relief gold depiction of shishi
 tsuba of the small sword is decorated with      with peonies.                              HY    This Momoyama-period mounting was
 a depiction of Mencius and holds an in-                                                          owned by Yüki Hideyasu (1574-1607), son
 scription that reads Eishun, the artist        194 Katana mounting                               of Tokugawa leyasu and daimyo of a do-
 name used by the mid-eighteenth-century            wood, lacquer, rayskin, shell, silk, gold,    main in Echizen Province (part of present-
 metalworker Nara Jôi during his earlier            shakudd, horn                                 day Fukui Prefecture). The hilt is covered
 years.                                    HY       length 97.3(381/4)                            with black-lacquered rayskin and wrapped
                                                                                                  with brown leather. The kashira (pommel)
                                                    Edo period, i8th century
                                                                                                  and the fuchi (collar on the blade end of
193 Koshigatana mounting                             Tokyo National Museum                        the hilt) are made of blackened copper and
    wood, silk, shakudd, gold                                                                     engraved with a zigzag "mountain road"
    length 47 (18 Vz)                           The Tokugawa had this mounting made in            design. The sheath is completely covered
    Momoyama period, loth century               the late Edo period for a famous tachi            with red lacquer. On the iron tsuba, or
     Watanabe Yoshio Collection, Tokyo          blade that was forged by Ichimonji Suke-          sword guard, are two oxen facing counter-
     Important Cultural Property                zane (active late thirteenth century) and         clockwise, boldly sculpted in the round. HY
                                                owned by the Tokugawa family of Kii
                                                Province. The hollyhock mon, crest of the
                                                                                                                                            267
196                                                                          197
268
199                                                                         200
201
 row were often depicted in combination       continued to be made in Kyoto through-         201 Sword guard
 with Hachiman Daibosatsu, decorating ar- out the Edo period. They are character-                Kaneie (fl. late loth-early iyth
 mor, sword blades, and metal fittings; al-   ized by delicate openwork designs of               century)
 though Hachiman Daibosatsu is not            natural motifs, such as floral subjects and        iron with inlaid copper, silver, and
 depicted on this tsuba, the design implies   birds. This example is shaped like a four-         gold
 that motif. The color and hardness of the    petalled flower; its fine openwork interior        diam. 8.3(3 V4)
 iron and the design suggest that this was    consists of two large mydga sprouts to the         Momoyama period, early iyth century
 the work of a late-Muromachi-period tsuba. right and left of the tang hole, a plum blos-
 maker of Owari.                           HY som above and below the tang hole, other           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                              motifs such as clover, a bamboo hat, and           Important Cultural Property
 200 Sword guard                              plovers. The mydga plant, an unlikely
                                                                                             Kaneie, a tsuba maker who lived near
      iron                                    seeming decoration for armor and weap-
                                                                                             Kyoto in Fushimi, Yamashiro Province, is
      diam. 8.o(31/s)                         ons, nevertheless appears often, since its
                                                                                             credited as the first to make sword guards
      Muromachi period, loth century          name is a homonymn for words meaning
                                                                                             with pictorial decoration. He was active
                                              "divine protection."                      HY
      Yamada Hitoshi Collection, Tokyo                                                       from the late Muromachi period into the
                                                                                             Momoyama period. Strongly influenced
 From the Muromachi period, Kyôsukashi,                                                      by Muromachi-period ink paintings, he de-
 or Kyoto openwork, iron tsuba were made,                                                    picted such subjects as landscapes and fig-
 it is said, on the order of the sixth Ashi-                                                 ures. The designs on his relatively thin
 kaga shogun, Yoshinori (1394-1441); they                                                    iron tsuba were carved in relief, shaving
                                                                                                                                    269
                                                                   202
203 204
off the background portions, and subtly in-      202 Sword guard                            ing for the tang, is an inscription that
laid with contrasting colored metals such            Kaneie (fl. late loth-early iyth       reads, Resident ofFushimi, Jdshu
as gold, silver, and shakudd.                        century)                               [Yamashiro province]; Kaneie. Despite the
      Depicted on the front of this elegant          iron with inlaid gold and silver       irregular shape and rough finish of the sur-
iron tsuba is an autumn view of Kasuga               diam. 7.9(3 Vs)                        face, this masterpiece by Kaneie is techni-
Shrine near Nara, with its identifying deer,         Momoyama period, early iyth century    cally accomplished; it reflects the
a maple branch at the left edge, and at the                                                 sophisticated simplicity of medieval ink
upper right a pagoda and torii gate behind           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                     painting and the Buddhist faith of the war-
rolling hills. Inlays pick out the details,          Important Cultural Property            rior.                                    HY
such as the copper torii and touches of sil-     Also by Kaneie (cat. 201), this fist-shaped
ver on the deer and gold on the maple            iron tsuba is crafted so that a kozuka (small 203 Sword guard
leaves. On the reverse a maple tree is           knife) can be inserted through the single         Umetada Myoju (1558-1631)
carved. Flanking the central opening             hole to the left of the tang opening. On          brass with inlaid shakudd
through which the tang of the blade is           the front are the Buddhist deity Bisha-           diam. 8.0 (3 l/s)
 passed are two holes for the kozuka (small      monten and two old cedar trees, the de-           Momoyama period, early iyth century
knife) and kdgai (skewerlike implement),         tails picked out with subtle inlays of gold
 here filled with shakudd. On the front,                                                           Kawabata Terutaka Collection,
                                                 and silver. The reverse side shows two old
 flanking the tang hole, is an inscription                                                         Kanagawa Prefecture
                                                 cedar trees and a pair of wild geese. On
 that reads Resident ofFushimi, Joshu            the front, flanking both sides of the open- Umetada Myôju, one of the most famous
 [Yamashiro province]; Kaneie.              HY
                                                                                               swordsmiths of the Momoyama and early
 270
        205
206
Edo periods, was equally well known for       holes for the kozuka (small knife) and kdgai   especially openwork iron tsuba, and most
metal fittings. He made a great many          (skewer) are later additions.            HY    were decorated with inlay work. Through-
tsuba, using materials such as brass, sha-                                                   out the Edo period such important schools
kudd, and copper. Designs included depic-                                                    as the Hayashi, Hirata, Nishigaki, and
tions of such motifs from nature as oak       204 Sword guard                                Shimizu flourished; at the end of the Edo
trees and grapes. His skill at delineation,        Hayashi Matashichi (fl. mid-iyth          period the famous Kamiyoshi Rakuju
composition, and use of color evokes the           century)                                  appeared.
Rinpa style of painting.                           iron with inlaid gold                          Following the move of the Hosokawa
     This round tsuba, made of brass with          diam. 8.4 (3^4)                           clan to Kumamoto in 1632, Hayashi Ma-
a slightly raised edge, is a representative                                                  tashichi, the founder of the Hayashi
                                                   Edo period, iyth century
work by Myoju. On both sides, rendered                                                       school, was engaged as an official clan
in inlaid shakudd, is an oak tree with leaves      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                        craftsman. This fine flower-shaped iron
and acorns surrealistically large for its          Important Art Object                      tsuba by Matashichi is decorated with
trunk—an example of the common use of                                                        crisply executed openwork depictions of
dislocation and disjunction as decorative     The metalworking industry of Higo Prov-        cherry blossoms and the kuyd mon, the
devices in Japanese art. Flanking the tang    ince (present-day Kumamoto Prefecture)         Hosokawa family crest, all detailed with in-
hole on the front the artist's name is en-    developed under the protection and pa-         laid gold. The artist's name, Matashichi, is
 graved: Umetada on the right, and Mydju      tronage of the Hosokawa daimyo of Kuma-        inlaid in gold between the tang hole and
 on the left. The shakudd fillings in the      moto, producing objects for the sword         the kozuka (knife) hole at the left.     HY
                                               mountings for which Higo was famous.
                                               Various types of metal fittings were made,
                                                                                                                                     271
                                                               207
205 Sword guard                                nizes well with the color of the iron. To the   cately inlaid with gold. Among the extant
    Hayashi Matashichi                         left of the tang hole the artist's name, Ma-    tsuba of Hayashi Matashichi, this is a par-
    (fl. mid-iyth century)                     tashichi, is inlaid in gold.              HY    ticularly fine work.                     HY
    iron with inlaid gold
    diam. 8.o(31/s)                            206 Sword guard                                 207 Set of sword guards
    Edo period, iyth century                       Hayashi Matashichi                              Kamiyoshi Rakuju (1817-1884)
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           (fl. mid-iyth century)                          iron with inlaid gold
      Important Art Object                         iron with inlaid gold                           diam. left, 7.5 (3); right, 8.4 (3^4)
                                                   diam. 8.o(31/s)                                 Edo period, icth century
On this flower-shaped iron tsuba are five          Edo period, iyth century                         Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
openwork cherry blossoms. An inlaid gold            Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
rope pattern encircles the inner portion,                                                      A verdant growth of dew-laden pampas
and beyond this in a concentric circle, fine   The tsurumaru, literally "round crane," is a    grass, with the moon shining through it,
threadlike openwork lines represent mist.      type of dancing crane motif in which the        has long symbolized Musashino, the broad
Evenly spaced around the scalloped pe-         tips of the widely spread wings meet above      grassy plain where the warriors of eastern
rimeter are four heart-shaped perforations.    the head, forming a circular cartouche.         Japan created the shogunal capital, Edo.
The blossoms of this powerful work are         This red-tinted black iron tsuba is deco-       As early as the Heian period Musashino
carved in slight relief, and the gold harmo-   rated with the tsurumaru motif in skillfully    served as a theme for literature and paint-
                                               executed openwork. The eyes are deli-
272
   208
                                                                                  210
209
ing, and in the Momoyama period the               208 Sword guard                              cuted with openwork as well as extensive
bending, swaying, moonlit grasses became              Attributed to Hirata Dójin (1591-1646)   inlaid cloisonné enamel and gold-wire dec-
commonplace in the decorative arts as                 iron with inlaid cloisonné enamels       oration of stylized clouds and floral motifs;
well.                                                 and gold                                 even the thick edge is embellished with
       This pair of iron tsuba, large and small       diam. 8.2 (3 V4)                         enamels.                                  HY
for a daishd set of swords, is finely deco-           Momoyama period, iyth century
rated with the requisite pampas grass,                                                         209 Sword guard
dew, and crescent moon in openwork, and               Watanabe Kunio Collection, Tokyo
                                                                                                   Goto Ichijô (1791-1876)
further ornamented with a hammered-                                                                shakudd with inlaid gold
                                                  Hirata Dójin, born Hikoshiró, is said to
gold inlaid floral scroll. The artist's name,                                                      diam. 8.0(3J/8)
                                                  have learned the cloisonné enamel tech-
Rakuju, is inlaid in gold to the left of the                                                       Edo period, i9th century
                                                  nique in Korea when he accompanied the
tang holes. Kamiyoshi Rakuju was a fa-
                                                  Japanese armies at the end of the six-            Tokyo National Museum
 mous late-Edo-period craftsman who stud-
                                                  teenth century. His son, Narikazu, served
 ied the traditional techniques of the
                                                  the Tokugawa shogunate as a craftsman        Goto Ichijo was born in Kyoto, the son of
 Hayashi school from Hayashi Tôhachi
                                                  specializing in cloisonné, a position that   Goto Jujô, a member of a collateral branch
 (fl. first half of the nineteenth century).
                                                  subsequent generations of Hirata held        of the main Goto family that served the
                                             HY
                                                  throughout the Edo period. This ornate       shogunate; later, Ichijô also served the ba-
                                                  and technically accomplished iron tsuba,
                                                  traditionally attributed to Dojin, is exe-
                                                                                                                                        273
                                                                     211
212
kufu in Edo. For his artistic achievements      mountains, behind which peaks the sun.           210 Sword guard
he received in 1834 the honorary rank           The rocks are depicted in high relief and            Tsuchiya Yasuchika (1670-1744)
hokkyd and in 1863, hdgen. For his finely       gold, the sun with inlaid gold, while the            iron with inlaid gold
executed works Ichijô employed a wide           other motifs are rendered in low relief. Fu-         diam. 7.7 (3)
range of subject matter, including natural-     tamigaura has long been a popular place to           Edo period, i8th century
istic floral motifs, landscapes, and figures,   visit on the first day of the year; appropri-
in addition to motifs typical of earlier        ately, the reverse of this tsuba is decorated        Tokyo National Museum
Goto work, such as shishi (mythical lion-       with cranes and the sacred sakaki tree,          Tsuchiya Yasuchika was born in Shônai in
like animals) and dragons.                      both of which have auspicious associations       Dewa Province (presently most of the pre-
      This tsuba, made from shakudd, is         with New Year's. Flanking the tang hole is       fectures of Yamagata and Akita.) He stud-
decorated with a depiction of Futami-           the inscription, Goiô hokkyo Ichijd [kao\.       ied with Sato Chinkyu (fl. late seventeenth
gaura, a meisho (famous scenic spot) in                                                     HY   century) and then moved to Edo, where
Mie Prefecture where the so-called hus-                                                          he apprenticed with Nara Tokimasa (active
band and wife rocks stand in the ocean                                                           late seventeenth century). Yasuchika used
close to the shore, linked with ropes; on                                                        a great variety of metals in his work, in-
top of the larger rock is a torn. Here the                                                       cluding brass, shakudd, and copper for
 large pair of rocks is situated at the lower                                                    backgrounds, though here iron is em-
 right, surrounded by lapping waves; in the                                                      ployed. A figure stands in a mountainous
 upper part are several sailboats and distant
274
background by a stream, holding a sickle       211 Sword guard                                  right of the tang hole, Tou, one of Yasuchi-
and a rope of inlaid gold, with rushes at          Tsuchiya Yasuchika (1670-1744)               ka's artist names, is engraved in seal form
the left and the openwork moon half cov-           copper with inlaid gold                      characters.                               HY
ered by clouds above. The reverse is deco-         diam. 8.5(33/8)
rated with similar motifs, without the             Edo period, i8th century                     212 Sword guard
figure. The tang hole is flanked by open-                                                           Nara Toshinaga (1667-1736)
                                                   Miyazaki Kazue Collection,
ings for the kozuka (small knife) and kdgai                                                         iron with inlaid gold
(skewerlike implement); to its left on the         Kanagawa Prefecture
                                                   Important Cultural Property                      diam. 7.4(27/8)
front is inscribed the name Tou, one of the                                                         Edo period, i8th century
artist names Yasuchika used in his later       This oblate copper tsuba, an excellent ex-
years, when he lived in the Kanda area of                                                           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                               ample of Tsuchiya Yasuchika's (cat. 210)             Important Cultural Property
Edo.                                      HY   late work, has a skillfully carved openwork
                                               design of a flock of plovers flying              Nara Toshinaga is considered one of the
                                               diagonally across the right with a drying        three great metalworkers of the Nara
                                               fishnet at the left. The design is given vari-   school, the other two being Tsuchiya Yasu-
                                               ety with the touches of inlaid gold, and the     chika (1670-1744; cats. 210, 211) and Sug-
                                               kozuka (small knife) and kdgai (skewer)          iura Joi (1700-1761). He was active in the
                                               holes are filled with plugs of gold. To the      city of Edo during the mid-Edo period,
                                                                                                                                        275
                             213
276
214
214 Mitokoromono                                  sword hilt, aided the grip and provided        name, Masaoku, fl. c. 1460), who served
    Goto Tsújo                                    decoration. In the Muromachi period only       the eighth Ashikaga shogun, Yoshimasa
    (fl. c. 1690)                                 the Goto family produced matching mito-        (1436-1490), in the Muromachi period.
    shakudd and gold                              koromono sets, but by the middle of the        Assimilating and building upon standard
    length kôgai, 21.2 (83/s); kozuka (not        Edo period other craftsmen began to pro-       metalworking techniques, Yüjó estab-
    including blade), 9.7 (37/3); menuki,         duce them as well. This set was made by        lished a distinct Goto style, primarily ex-
    3.o(i1/s)each                                 the eleventh-generation Goto metalworker       pressed in mitokoromono, the set of sword
    Edo period, late iyth century                 Tsüjo (Mitsutoshi), and is characteristic of   fittings consisting of the kozuka, kdgai, and
                                                  the work of the Goto school (cat. 215.)        menuki (small knife, skewer, and hilt orna-
    Hiroi Akihisa Collection, Tokyo               Both the kdgai and kozuka are decorated        ments; cat. 214). The Goto subsequently
The mitokoromono, literally "things for           with gold orchids in high relief on a          flourished, with successive generations
three places/' is a set of metal sword fit-       nanako (raised-dot) shakudd ground; the        serving the Ashikaga shogunate, Toyotomi
tings with matching decorative schemes;           gold menuki take the form of orchids. HY       Hideyoshi, and the Tokugawa shogunate.
the set is composed of a small knife (ko-                                                        In the Edo period the Goto products be-
zuka), a skewer (kdgai), and a pair of hilt or-   215 Sword fittings by nine consecutive          came known as iebori, literally "house
naments (menuki). The small knife and                                                             carvings," referring to the official status of
                                                      generations of the Goto family
skewer slide into their separate openings                                                         the Goto as craftsmen to the shogunate, as
                                                      shakudd, gold, silver                       distinguished from other "town carving"
on either side of the sheath. The long ta-            length c. 9.6 (33/4) each
pered end of the kdgai was used to fix a                                                          metalwork, or machibori. In all there were
                                                      Muromachi period-Edo period,                seventeen generations of Goto, listed be-
warrior's hair, while its spoon-shaped end            i5th-i8th century
was shaped to be used as an ear cleaner.                                                          low by artist name, followed by the given
 Menuki, positioned on either side of the             Fukushi Shigeo Collection, Tokyo            name in parentheses and approximate pe-
                                                                                                  riod of activity:
                                                  The founder of the Goto family of sword
                                                  ornament makers was Goto Yüjó (given
                                                                                                                                            277
 1. Yüjó (Masaoku),
    fl. c. 1460
 2. Sójo (Mitsutake),
    fl. c. 1500
 3. Jóshin (Yoshihisa),
    fl. c.1530
 4. Kójó (Mitsuie),
                                                       a.
    fl. c. 1570
 5. Tokujó (Mitsumoto),
    fl. c. 1600
 6. Eijó (Masamitsu),
    fl. c. 1610
 7. Kenjó (Mitsutsugu),
    fl. c. 1620
 8. Sokujó (Mitsushige),
    fl. c. 1630
 9. Teijó (Mitsumasa),
    fl. c. 1650
10. Renjó (Mitsutomo),
    fl. c. 1680                                        b.
11. Tsüjo (Mitsutoshi),
    fl. c. 1690
12. Jujó (Mitsumasa),
    fl. c. 1720
13. Enjó (Mitsutaka),
    fl. c. 1730
14. Keijô (Mitsumori),
    fl. c. 1740
15. Shinjó (Mitsuyoshi),
    fl. c.1750
16. Hôjô (Mitsuaki),                                   c.
    fl. c. 1820
17. Tenjó (Mitsunori),
    fl. c.1850
278
        §•                                                                        1.
h.
sao was made by Renjô (Mitsutomo), the         symbol of long life, endurance, and loyalty,   shakudd and detailed with gold and silver.
tenth-generation Goto head. The inscrip-       and often used as a motif in the arts,         Takasago is a place in the province of
tion on the reverse reads, mon Jdshin; Mit-    spreads widely right and left across the       Harima (present-day Hyôgo Prefecture). In
sutomo [kad of Mitsutomo].                     horizontal plane. The pine needles are de-     legend, and in the No play also called Taka-
      The fourth example (d) holds a closely   picted as wheels of needles, typical of the    sago, an ancient and mutually devoted
described gold high-relief depiction of        traditional Goto style. Shinjô (Mitsuyoshi),   couple named Jo and Uba are revealed as
Fudô Myôô executed by the fourth-              the fifteenth-generation head, made the        the spirits of the pine trees, one at Taka-
generation Goto head, Kojo. The sao was        sao, as inscribed on the reverse, Made by      sago, one at Sumiyoshi. The sao, with a sil-
again made by Jujó (Mitsumasa), the            Eijd; Mitsuyoshi [kad of Mitsuyoshi].          ver wave pattern at the upper left on the
twelfth-generation Goto head, whose in-             The seventh example (g) was made          front, was executed by the twelfth-
scription on the reverse reads, mon Kôjd;      entirely by Kenjó, the seventh-generation      generation head, Jujô (Mitsumasa), who in-
Mitsumasa [kaô of Mitsumasa].                  Goto head. The plump high-relief gold fig-     scribed the edge, Made by Sokujd;
      The fifth example (e) consists of five   ure of Ebisu, revered as one of the seven      Mitsumasa [kad of Mitsumasa].
gold high-relief oxen in a variety of pos-     gods of good luck, sits on a rock holding a         The ninth example (i) is decorated
tures by the fifth-generation Goto head,       fishing pole. The reverse is inscribed, Goio   with a scene of fishing, a motif often em-
Tokujô. The ox is one of the twelve ani-       Kenjd [kad].                                   ployed in the arts from the Muromachi pe-
mals of the zodiacal cycle, a theme often           The eighth example (/z), a motif          riod, here consisting of high-relief
used by the Goto school. The ninth Goto        known as Takasago, was decorated by the        mountains on the left and a fisherman
head, Teijo made the sao and inscribed the     eighth-generation Goto head, Sokujó. The       rowing a small boat at the right, bobbing
reverse, mon Tokujô; Teijd [kad of Teijo].     motif, often depicted by the Goto school,      among the carved waves; details are added
      The sixth-generation Goto head, Eijô,    consists of an old pine tree, here in gold,    in gold and silver. This work was made by
 made the high-relief gold pine tree of the    and an old man holding a rake and an old       the ninth Goto head, Teijo, who inscribed
 sixth example (/); the pine, treasured as a   woman holding a broom. Here the pine           the reverse, Teijo [kad].                   HY
                                               tree is in gold and both figures are made of
                                                                                                                                        279
216
2i6 Saddle                                       Many of the shell pieces have fallen off,       217 Saddle
    lacquer on wood with shell                   leaving only the grooves that held them.            lacquer on wood with shell
      3o(ll13/i6)                                The edges of the pommel and cantle, as              29.8 (ii3/4)
      Heian period                               well as the underside of the seat, are
                                                                                                     Kamakura period
                                                 painted gold, which is a later addition.
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                              This type of saddle, unlike the                Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      National Treasure                          karakura-style saddles used only for cer-           National Treasure
The arched pommel and cantle of this sad-        emonial occasions, actually was used in
                                                                                                 This saddle, made of red oak and paulow-
dle are red oak, and the bars, which form        battle. One tradition has it that this saddle
                                                                                                 nia wood, would have provided the rider
the saddle's seat, are soft paulownia. The       belonged to the illustrious general Mina-
                                                                                                 with a secure, stable seat. Saddles of this
ends of the bars that join the pommel and        moto Yoritomo (1147-1199). Thirteenth-
                                                                                                 type are called suikangura (informal sad-
cantle are exposed in front and back, re-        century epic narratives that describe
                                                                                                 dle), or sometimes gunjingura (military
vealing the saddle's basic structure. This       battles of the late twelfth century mention
                                                                                                 camp saddle), which in the thirteenth cen-
type of saddle is called wagura or yamato-       saddles with similar designs of oak and
                                                                                                 tury meant easy to mount but unfit for
gura (Japanese-style saddle) to distinguish      owls, suggesting that this design was
                                                                                                 ceremonial use. This distinction reflected
it from the earlier karakura (Chinese-style      widely used in the twelfth century. An ex-
                                                                                                 new developments in Japanese saddlery
saddle), in which the bar ends are con-          cellent pictorial record survives today in a
                                                                                                 that brought subtle changes in shape as
cealed. The pommel has a scalloped               masterly late twelfth-century ink drawing,
                                                                                                 well as decor. Compared with cat. 216, the
groove on either side for a rider to grasp       the Animal caricature scrolls at Kôzanji,
                                                                                                 rims of the pommel and cantle are thinner
when needed. Small slits on the bars allow       Kyoto.
                                                      This saddle has been in the Hosokawa       (0.7 cm and i.o cm, respectively) and the
a cinch to be passed through and tied                                                            decoration more elaborate. The rims may
around the belly of the horse.                   family since the mid-sixteenth century,
                                                                                                 have been covered by metal (perhaps sil-
      The saddle is finished with black lac-     when the thirteenth shogun, Ashikaga
                                                                                                 ver) ridges, now lost.
quer and ornamented with a design of oak         Yoshiteru (r. 1546-1565) presented it to Ho-
                                                                                                       The saddle is finished with black lac-
branches and leaves; on the outer faces of       sokawa Fujitaka (Yüsai, 1534-1610), who
                                                 gave it to his fourth son, Takayuki. After      quer, and its pommel and cantle are exten-
 the pommel and cantle are pairs of horned                                                       sively decorated with inlaid iridescent
 owls. All these designs are executed in the     Takayuki's death in 1647 it was owned by
                                                                                                 seashell in the raden technique. Originally,
 technique called raden (inlaid iridescent       one Arisaka Sadaifu, presumably one of
                                                                                                 the seat also was richly decorated with in-
 seashell), usually that of the yakdgai (turbo   the Hosokawa's vassals.                    YS
                                                                                                 laid shell. Except for a few sprinkles for
 marmoratus) or awabi (abalone). The lac-                                                        the pine leaves, most of the shell in this
 quer surface, worn and chipped in some                                                          area has been lost through abrasion caused
 places, has lost much of its original bril-                                                     by repeated contact with a rider's armor.
 liance and has been partly retouched.                                                           The pommel and cantle are decorated
280
217
218
      281
219
with a design of rain-soaked, wind-blown      acters written on the saddle. The charac-       erable damage and some parts show traces
leaves and vines of the kuzu (arrowroot)      ters are superimposed over the plant            of later repair. On the peak of the pommel
plant juxtaposed with pine needles.           forms, and serve as keys to the identifica-     the damage and subsequent repairs have
Among the maze of plant forms are sev-        tion of the poem. This convention, known        been most extensive.
eral Japanese characters, also in the raden   in the Japanese calligraphic tradition as            Since the early seventeenth century it
technique, written in cursive script. The     ashide (literally "reed-script"), in which      has been believed that this saddle was
characters are from a famous waka (thirty-    characters are written as if part of the reed   owned by Minamoto Yoshitsune (1159-
one-syllable poem) on the theme of love,      plant on an embankment, was one of the          1189), the younger brother of Yoritomo
by Jien (1155-1225). This poem was in-        most frequently used artistic forms in the      (1147-1199). This provenance is spurious,
cluded in the imperial anthology, Shin ko-    twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The           however, because the date when the poem
kin wakashù (New collection of ancient        characters are:                                 was first included in the Imperial anthol-
and modern poems).                                                                            ogy, Shin kokinshù, 1205, post-dates
                                              shigure (drizzle of autumn), in the lower       Yoshitsune's death date.                 YS
Waga koi \va                                  center of the pommel's outer faces;
matsu o shigure no                            some (to dye or change hue), on the lower
somekanete                                    right edge of the pommel;                       218 Saddle
Makuzugahara ni                               ni (particle indicating "at" or "in") on the        lacquer on wood with shell
kaze sawagunari                               lower left edge of the pommel;                      30.o(ll13/io)
This love I feel-                             shigure, in the upper center of the cantle;         Kamakura period
    powerless to change her mind,             waga (my), in the lower center of the               Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
    like the drizzle the pine's hue;          cantle;                                             Important Cultural Property
My heart like the wind                        koi (love), on the lower right edge of the
    that stirs the leaves on Kuzu Plain.      cantle; and                                     Like cats. 216 and 217, this gunjingura, or
                                              hará (field), on the lower left edge of the     military camp saddle, is among the most
     The poem's rich, elusive symbolism       cantle.                                         famous examples in Japan. Such wagura
derives from long-established poetic con-                                                     (Japanese-style) saddles with a rounded
ventions. Puns based on Japanese homo-             The inlaying technique used for this       shape and hand grooves in the pommel
nyms give certain words hidden meanings.      saddle is very elaborate. The two sides of      were used by military commanders from
For example, the wind exposing the whit-      the kuzu leaves are depicted in two differ-     the late Heian through the Kamakura pe-
ish undersides of the kuzu leaves (urami,     ent ways: the white undersides are repre-       riods. Lacquered saddles were considered
or "to see the back") in the poetic lan-      sented by inlaid cut pieces of shell            very precious articles, and some were ex-
guage creates a pun on a homonym that         simulating the general shape of the leaves,     ported to China; one was even presented
means "to hate." The word "pine" or           and by dark spaces left between the leaves      to an emperor of the Song Dynasty.
matsu is a pun on another word pro-           to indicate the veins; the faces of the              Gnarled mountain cherry trees (yama-
nounced matsu, which means "to wait."         leaves are defined by lines made of ex-         zakura) extend up and across the outside
     The pictorial equivalents of the plant   tremely fine pieces of shell. The pine nee-     faces of the pommel and cantle. The roots
imagery in the poem mesh with the char-       dles are rendered in herringbone patterns.
                                              The lacquer surfaces have suffered consid-
282
220
of the cherry trees begin at the bottom of       large reed stalks in gold takamaki-e (relief
both legs of the saddle, while their             maki-e) lacquer and sheet gold on a black
branches then arch toward the center, par-       lacquer ground; silver drops of dew cling
alleling the saddle's curved shape and cre-      to the reeds. The two wheels are rimmed
ate a symmetrical design. The branches on        with gold. The stirrups, of black lacquered
both legs are adorned with cherry blos-          wood mounted on iron, are similarly deco-
soms, leaves, and tiny ferns growing along       rated with reeds.
the tree's trunk. Even the seat of the sad-           This saddle is said to have belonged to
dle, which would have been covered by a          Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598). An ink
saddlecloth, is decorated with a delicate        drawing of the saddle is inscribed, Middle
design of scattered leaves and sprays of         of the first month, fifth year ofTenshd
blossoms. Roots and tree trunks are filled       [1577], Hideyoshi [kaó]. However, on the re-
in with full pieces of shell, while most of      verse of the saddle seat is an inscription
the flower petals are delicately outlined        that reads, A day in the ninth month, sec-
with a thin line of shell. The stylized treat-   ond year ofBurian [1446], indicating that
ment of natural motifs such as these             this was an old saddle newly decorated in
cherry blossoms is characteristic Kama-          1577.                                     SN
kura-period arts and crafts. The intricacy
and complexity of the cherry blossom de-         220 Saddle and stirrups
sign is comparable to that of the shigure            maki-e lacquer and gold on wood
saddle (cat. 217), suggesting that both sad-         27.8(101/4)
dles were created during the same period.            Edo period, i7th-i8th century
      This saddle formerly belonged to the
Asano family, overlords of Aki Province              Tokyo National Museum
(present-day Hiroshima Prefecture).        MR
                                                 The front and back wheels are decorated
                                                 with a plum tree and hawk design in
219 Saddle and stirrups                          takamaki-e (relief maki-e) lacquer and cut
    maki-e and black lacquer, gold and           gold leaf on a pear-skin ground (nashiji);
    silver on wood                               the hawks' eyes are glass. An inscription
    saddle 27.5 (io7/s)                          on the reverse of the saddle seat reads,
    Momoyama period, loth century                Tenth day of the second month, seventh
                                                 year ofMeid [1498]. As seen in cat. 219, and
    Tokyo National Museum                        as was often the case in the Edo period, an
    Important Cultural Property                  old saddle was newly decorated.            SN
The bold decoration on the front and
back wheels of this saddle is typical of
Momoyama-period design. It consists of
                                                                                                 283
LACQUER
      285
             221
      221 Set of shelves with designs based on      which powdered metal, usually gold or sil-
          TheTaleofGenji                            ver, and lacquer are used to create designs.
          maki-e and black lacquer, gold, silver,   The motifs in this set of shelves are de-
          tin, and mother-of-pearl on wood          picted in takamaki-e (relief maki-e) lacquer,
          65.5 x 72.5 x 33.0 (253/4 x 281A x 13)    in which the maki-e motifs are executed
          Momoyama period, iyth century             on a surface raised with such materials as
                                                    raw lacquer and pulverized stone. In addi-
          Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo
                                                    tion, inlaid mother-of-pearl (raden), and
          Important Cultural Property               gold, silver, and tin are employed. The
      Formerly owned by the Hachisuka family,       bold composition and techniques are char-
      daimyo of Awa Province (present-day To-       acteristic of the group of lacquerwares
      kushima Prefecture), this three-tiered set    known as Kdetsu maki-e, associated with
      of zushidana type shelves includes a cabi-    Hon'ami Kôetsu (1558-1637, cats. 254,
      net on the middle level in which the doors    255).                                     SN
      swing out and another on the lower level
      with a sliding door. The decorative motifs
      are based on the Heian-period romantic
      classic, The Tale ofGenji. The motif of
      two young pines on the top shelf is associ-
      ated with the twenty-third chapter,
      Nenohi, by which name this set is known.
      The designs on the other levels—
      moonflowers on a fan, a carriage, and a fan
      with a picture of a bridge—are all related
      to other chapters in Genji. A fence runs
      diagonally across the doors, and maple
      leaves and pine needles are scattered on
      the interiors of the cabinets and on the
      sides and back of the set.
           Maki-e is the term used to describe a
      group of Japanese lacquer techniques in
286
         222
222 Set of shelves with design based on          and silver takamaki-e (relief maki-e ) lacquer
    Kokei sanshd                                 with cut gold and silver leaf, tin plate, and
    maki-e and black lacquer, gold, silver,      inlaid mother-of-pearl (raden).
    tin, and mother-of-pearl on wood                   The daimyo and tea master Furuta
    65.5 X 72.8 X 32.7 (253/4 X 285/8 X 127/8)   Oribe (1544-1615) ordered a set of shelves
    Momoyama period, i7th century                with the Kokei sanshd motif from Kóami
                                                 Chôgen, younger brother of Koami
    Tokyo National Museum
                                                 Chóan, the seventh head of the Kôami
    Important Art Object
                                                 school of maki-e craftsmen who served the
This set of shelves, similar in form to cat.     Tokugawa shogunate. Seven such sets are
221, is decorated on the top with a design       extant today, although it is not clear which
of a plum tree, and on the lower two tiers       is the original.                            SN
with packages of incense and an incense
burner. On the upper shelf is a depiction
of three men on a bridge, based on the
apocryphal Chinese allegorical tale known
in Japanese as Kokei sanshd (Three laugh-
ers of Tiger Stream). Long ago, according
to the tale, the monk Huiyuan retired to
the Donglin Temple at Mount Lu in
Jiangxi Province and pledged never to
cross the tiger stream into the secular
realm. Once, his friends the poet Tao
Yuanming and the Daoist Lu Xiujing vis-
ited him; the three became so engrossed in
conversation that in seeing his two friends
off, Huiyuan inadvertently crossed the
bridge, and they burst into laughter. The
 front doors are decorated with a brush-
 wood fence and the sides and back with di-
 anthus. The decoration is executed in gold
                                                                                                  287
      223
            223 Writing table                               224 Writing table and writing utensil box
                11.2 X 58.2 X 34.2 (43/8 X 227/8 X 13 Vk)       bundai 9.2 x 59.2 x 35.0 (35/8 x 23^4 x
                maki-e and black lacquer, gold and              137/8)
                silver on wood                                  suzuribako 6.1 x 23.1 x 24.6 (23/8 x 9 Vio
                Momoyama period, loth century                   X 9«/i6)
                Myóhóin, Kyoto                                  maki-e lacquer, gold, silver, and gilt
                Important Cultural Property                     silver on wood
                                                                Momoyama period, loth century
            This type of bundai, or writing table, is as-
                                                                Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo
            sociated particularly with renga (linked
            verse) gatherings. The bundai was not ac-           Important Cultural Property
            tually used as a support for writing but        Both the bundai (writing table) and the su-
            rather to hold the paper on which poems         zuribako (writing utensil box) are deco-
            would be brushed. This example is said to       rated with a combination of bamboo,
            have been owned by Toyotomi Hideyoshi           paulownia, and the phoenix. In China, the
            (1537-1598); its top is decorated with au-      phoenix was believed to signal the immi-
            tumn flowers and grasses in takamaki-e (re-     nent appearance of a virtuous emperor.
            lief maki-e) lacquer and cut gold and silver    The bird eats bamboo seeds, rests on a
            leaf on a black lacquer ground. The sides       type of paulownia tree, and drinks from
            are covered with hiramaki-e (level maki-e)      the fountain of nectar, said to spring only
            chrysanthemums and paulownia mon.               in an age of perfect peace. This is repre-
            The style of the decoration is reminiscent      sentative of the lavish Momoyama-period
            of the so-called Kôdaiji maki-e, popular in     style, in which the takamaki-e (relief
            the Momoyama period, which was associ-          maki-e} technique, cut gold and silver leaf,
            ated with Kôdaiji, a Zen temple in Kyoto        and thick gilt silver plate were lavishly
            established in 1605 by the widow of To-         used. The background is executed in a
            yotomi Hideyoshi. The techniques actu-          technique known as nashiji (pear-skin
            ally employed are mostly traditional            ground), a maki-e ground treatment, simi-
            Muromachi-period ones, however, so this         lar in appearance to the skin of the nashi,
             work may be considered a transitional          or Japanese pear, in which metal flakes,
             piece.                                    SN   usually gold, are suspended in lacquer. SN
288
224
      289
      225
290
226
      291
227
      227 Bridal trousseau                           On the first shelf is a set of utensils for the
          maki-e, red and black lacquer on           incense game (cats. 233, 234) and on the
          wood; gilt copper, silver and nickel       bottom shelf is a suzuribako (writing uten-
          zushidana 75.8 x 101.9 x 39.7 (293/4 x     sil box; cats. 224, 225, 226). A clothes rack
          40 Vs x 155/3)                             and wash basin are displayed in front. Set
          kurodana 71.2 x 77.5 x 38.4 (28 x 30^2 x   out before the kurodana are a kushidai
          15^/8)                                     (comb stand), and to the left, a set of oha-
          shodana 103.9 x loo-° x 44-° (407/8 x      guro equipment for blackening the teeth
          393/8 x 173/8)                             (cats. 229, 230); the distinctive red-
                                                     cornered box on the kurodana contains
          Edo period, i9th century
                                                     cosmetic paraphernalia. The shodana
          Hôfu Môri Hôkôkai,                         holds articles related to reading and writ-
          Yamaguchi Prefecture                       ing; in front is a cast nickel mirror on its
                                                     folding holder, with the storage box to the
      The Edo-period daimyo bride brought to         right.
      her new home an elaborate set of house-
                                                           This set was used by the daughter of
      hold furnishings reflecting the power and
                                                     Narihiro (1783-1836), the tenth-genera-
      prestige of the daimyo family. The con-
                                                     tion Mori daimyo of the Hagi domain in
      tents of the trousseau were established by     present-day Yamaguchi Prefecture, when
      the early Edo period. A typical trousseau
                                                     she married into the Mori branch family of
      centered around three sets of shelves, the
                                                     Tokuyama. The many constituent parts
      zushidana (right), the kurodana (black
                                                     are decorated with a plum blossom floral
      shelves) (center), and the shodana (book       scroll and latticework design, and the wa-
      shelves) (left). Included are most of the
                                                     ter plantain mon, a family crest used by
      things required for personal use, such as,
                                                     the Mori. These motifs are executed in
      on top of the zushidana, a large box con-
                                                     gold and silver hiramaki-e (level maki-e) lac-
      taining smaller boxes of cosmetic items.       quer. The arabesque plum blossom design
                                                     is executed in alternating hiramaki-e and
                                                     enashiji, in which designs are depicted
                                                     with nashiji (pear-skin ground). The fit-
                                                     tings are gilt copper, engraved with the wa-
                                                      ter plantain mon and a floral scroll.       SN
292
228
                                                 293
229
294
230
      295
231
232
296
233
231 Shôgiset                                    was popular in both court and temple cir-       233 Set of utensils for the incense game
    mdki-e lacquer on wood                      cles, and eventually was embraced by the            maki-e lacquer on wood; silver, ebony
    h. 23.0 (QV'IO)                             warrior class. Shogi is believed to have            box 13.2 x 24.0 x 18.0 (53/16 x 97/16 x
    Edo period, icth century                    originated in India, though it spread               7>/8)
                                                widely and developed in a number of dif-            Edo period, i8th century
    Tokyo National Museum
                                                ferent forms. Japanese shogi is related to
                                                the Chinese form. Although it is not clear          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                when it arrived in Japan, by the Kamakura       In the Heian period, the fragrance of aro-
232 Go set                                      period it was enjoyed by members of the         matic wood was enjoyed by members of
    maki-e lacquer on wood                      court class. In cat. 105, warriors can be       court society. The appreciation of incense
    h. 28.2 (ni/s)                              seen playing both games. A total of six         became formalized in the Muromachi pe-
    Edo period, icth century                    types of shogi are known; the type known        riod, much like tea drinking and flower ar-
    Tokyo National Museum                       as shdshdgi (small shogi), which eclipsed       ranging, and many varieties of monkd,
                                                most of the others from the Sengoku pe-         literally "listening to the incense," were es-
These two sets of board games, one for          riod, is the type illustrated in the screens.   tablished. Throughout the Edo period, en-
shogi, sometimes called Japanese chess          The boards of both games are usually            thusiasts of this widely popular game
(cat. 231), and the other for go (cat. 232),    made from the wood of either the oak or         included members of the warrior class.
were made as part of the bridal furnishings     kaya (Japanese nutmeg) tree; the latter is      This set of incense utensils, handed down
for the daughter of Harutomi (1771-1852),       preferred today. The black pieces used in       in the Hosokawa family, is decorated with
the tenth-generation Tokugawa ruler of          go are made of black stone, with that from      the kuyô mon, the Hosokawa family crest,
the Wakayama domain in Kii Province             Ñachi in Wakayama Prefecture especially         and a floral scroll in maki-e lacquer on a
(cat. 230). Although it is not typical for      prized.                                    WA   pear-skin ground (nashiji); the metal imple-
these games to be decorated with maki-e                                                         ments are made of silver. The wife of Shi-
lacquer, these are decorated like the other                                                      gekata (1720-1785), a mid-Edo-period
components of the set, with the maki-e                                                           Hosokawa daimyo of Kumamoto, is said to
hollyhock mon. The game pieces for the                                                           have used this set.                        SN
shogi set, usually made of wood, are made
of ivory, reflecting the high position of the
Kii Tokugawa house.
      Go (also called igo) is thought to have
 originated in ancient China, arriving in Ja-
 pan during the Asuka period (552-645). It
                                                                                                                                         297
234
234 Set of utensils for the incense game      with the kuyô mon, family crest of the Ho-        1651), the third Tokugawa shogun. The en-
    maki-e and black lacquer, gold on         sokawa clan, in gold maki-e lacquer. In the       tire set is decorated with a pear-skin
    wood; silver                              containers are stored 360 shells, each one        ground (nashiji), a gold and silver maki-e
    box 20.5 x 24.3 x 18.8 (SVio x 99/16 x    half of a pair with matching designs drawn        clove floral scroll, and the three-leaved hol-
      73/8)                                   from The Tale of Genji, or with floral and        lyhock mon. The edges of the trays are
      Edo period, i8th century                bird decoration. To play the game, the            rimmed with silver, and the interiors of the
                                              shells are mixed up and participants must         bowls are finished with red lacquer.       SN
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                              find the two shell halves with the same
Like cat. 233, this set of incense utensils   picture. Because the two perfectly
has been handed down in the Hosokawa          matched halves symbolize fidelity, the
family and the wife of Shigekata (1720-       shell matching set was regarded as one of
1785), a mid-Edo Hosokawa daimyo of Ku-       the most important items in a daimyo
mamoto, is said to have used it. The          bridal trousseau.                        SN
decoration consists of such plants and
flowers as bush clover, chrysanthemum,        236 Set of trays and tablewares
peony, camelia, iris, and bamboo arranged         maki-e and red lacquer and silver on
in circular motifs in slightly raised gold        wood
takamaki-e (relief maki-e) lacquer. The           (left) 22.6 x 39.4 x 41.2 (87/8 x 15^2 x
metal implements are made of silver. SN
                                                  (center) 21.0 x 37.3 x 38.4 (S1/* x 145/8 x
235 Shell matching game                           151/8)
    shell containers 49.5 x 40.0 (19l/z x         (right) 19.5 x 35.3 x 36.4 (7x/i6 x 137/8 x
      153/4)                                      143/8)
      maki-e and black lacquer on wood;           Edo period, ryth century
      color on shell                              Rinnôji, Tochigi Prefecture
      Edo period, i8th-i9th century
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                      This ensemble, comprising large, medium,
                                              and small kakeban (tablelike trays for spe-
The octagonal, black-lacquered containers     cial occasions), lidded bowls, a hot water
for this shell matching game are decorated    ewer, and a rice container, is said to have
                                              been used by Tokugawa lemitsu (1604-
298
235
236
      299
237
237 Set of tray and tablewares                     238 Picnic set                                  sake container, a square tray, a footed tray
    maki-e, black and red lacquer on wood              maki-e lacquer and gold on wood             with cut corners, and sake cups, all deco-
    tray a 16.0 x 36.3 x 36.3 (05/i6 x 14^4 x          37.0 x 37.8 x 23.0 (145/8 x 147/8 x 91Ao)   rated with motifs of the four seasons in
      H'A)                                             Edo period, i8th-i9th century               maki-e lacquer. The top of the frame is
      tray b 13.5 x 33.4 x 33.0 (55/16 x i31/8 x                                                   decorated with a pair of carp and churning
                                                        Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      13)
      tray c 11.9 x 30.7 x 30.4 (4n/i6 x izVió x
                                                                                                   waves in slightly raised gold and silver
                                                   This picnic set includes a multi-tiered box takamaki-e (relief maki-e) lacquer on a
      nVio)                                        for food, dishes, a pair of sake flasks, and    pear-skin ground (nashiji). The lid of the
      Edo period, lyth century                     cups. The various items are covered with a octagonal tiered box is covered with a
                                                   chrysanthemum design primarily in               nashiji background and a framed picture
      Hokkeji, Gifu Prefecture                                                                     from The Tale of Genji and the sides of
                                                   slightly raised gold and silver takamaki-e
                                                   (relief maki-e) lacquer and sheet gold on a     each  tier hold framed flower and bird de-
This set of trays and bowls is said to have
been used by Mitsumasa (1619-1633),                pear-skin ground (nashiji). This type of set, signs in maki-e lacquer. The drum-shaped
                                                   popular from the Momoyama period on-            sake container is decorated with a phoenix
grandson of Katô Kiyomasa (1562-1611).
                                                   ward, is known in Japanese by several           design on an exposed wood-grain ground.
Kiyomasa was a retainer of Toyotomi Hi-
                                                   names, such as kdchu (travel kitchen), sa-      Because the drum was indispensable for
deyoshi (1537-1598) and daimyo of a do-
                                                   gejù (portable tiered box), and hanami          singing and dancing at parties, sake con-
main in Higo Province (present-day
Kumamoto Prefecture). On a black lac-              bentd (flower-viewing lunch box).            SN tainers came to be made in the shapes of
                                                                                                   drums; though the earliest extant exam-
quer ground, three different mon (family
                                                                                                   ples date from the Muromachi period,
crests) are depicted in gold hiramaki-e            239 Picnic set
                                                                                                   they are known from Kamakura-period
(level maki-e) lacquer. The paulownia mon                maki-e lacquer on wood
                                                                                                    paintings. Mandarin ducks on rocks are de-
was given to the Katô by Toyotomi Hide-                  32.6 x 34.8 x 17.8 (12^Ao x 133/4 x 7)
                                                                                                    picted on the top of the rectangular sake
yoshi. The Chinese bellflower and orizumi                Edo period, i8th-i9th century              container, and landscapes are framed on
(broken inkstick) mon were originally the                Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         the sides. The interior of the square tray
crests of the Bitó family, daimyo of a do-
                                                                                                    has a persimmon and chestnut design on a
main in Sanuki Province (currently Ka-             Fitted inside the outer frame of this picnic nashiji background; a running water and
gawa Prefecture), but due to poor                  set are a lidded four-tiered octagonal box, a maple design decorates the sides. On the
administration, their domain was confis-           drum-shaped sake container, a box-shaped         footed tray is a plum tree and pheasant de-
cated and their armor and other personal
                                                                                                    sign on a nashiji background. The cups
belongings given to Katô IÇiyomasa; subse-
                                                                                                    have a design of cherry blossoms and run-
quently, the Bitô mon were also used by
                                                                                                    ning water on a wood-grain ground.        SN
 the Katô family.                          SN
300
238
239
      301
CERAMICS
       303
      240 Jar                                        nearby Uji were packed for presentation to
          Shigaraki ware                             the shogunate. With the resulting base of
          h. 27.5(103/4)                             economic support, the kilns prospered
          Muromachi period,                          throughout the Edo period, during which
          i5th-i6th century                          time they produced an expanded reper-
                                                     toire of mostly glazed utilitarian objects.
          Fukuoka Art Museum, Fukuoka                     The unpretentious qualities of Shi-
          Prefecture                                 garaki wares that came to be appreciated
      The rustic stoneware vessels of the Shi-       by tea men are evident in this Muromachi-
      garaki kilns (in present-day Shiga Prefec-     period tsubo. Its shape is simple, broaden-
      ture), like those of Bizen and other similar ing from a flat base to a bulging shoulder,
      kilns in the medieval era, were                then tapering to a narrow neck and evert-
      utilitarian—tsubo (jars), kame (wide-          ing again at the mouth. The incised pat-
      mouthed jars), and suribachi (grating          tern  of cross-hatching between two
      bowls). In the late fifteenth century, the     parallel lines at the shoulder is a distinctive
      early tea master Murata Shuko (1423-1502) Shigaraki motif, especially on smaller jars.
      judged Shigaraki jars to be, in combination Three parallel horizontal lines, the Japa-
      with fine imported objects, appropriate for nese character for the numeral three,
      use in the tea ceremony. Shigaraki wares       etched just above the decoration on two
      were the first native Japanese ceramics,       sides of the jar, are thought to be some
      along with those of Bizen, to be so em-        kind  of kiln mark.
      braced. They came to be used in the wabi            The firing effects characteristic of
      form of tea, which was based on the inno- Shigaraki wares are evident. The body is
      vations of Shukó and refined during the        stippled with white grains of feldspar
      sixteenth century by Takeno Jóó (1502-         present in the Shigaraki clay and drawn to
      1555) and then Sen no Rikyü (1522-1591). As the surface by the heat of the kiln. Small
      traced through contemporary tea journals, holes are left by other feldspar particles
      the most typical Shigaraki component of        that have melted away, an effect known in
      the range of tea utensils was the mizusashi Japanese as ishihaze, or "stone-burst." The
      (fresh water container), though kensui         kiln fires also induced the scorched color-
      (waste water jars) and hanaire (flower con-    ing and the thin coat of natural wood ash
      tainers) were also used. Most of these ves- glaze, which partially covers the vessel,
      sels were originally utilitarian, though by    running down past the shoulder to the
      the late sixteenth century pieces were be-     middle of the body. From the late six-
      ing made specifically for the tea context.     teenth century, smaller versions of this
            Among the users of Shigaraki wares       type  of jar were produced specifically
      were leading military figures, including       for use as flower containers in the tea
      Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) who used        setting.                                  AMW
      a Shigaraki jar in 1583 at the festivities at-
      tending the construction of Osaka Castle. 241 Sake flask
      Katagiri Sekishü (1605-1673), the influen-          Bizen ware
      tial proponent of a formalized daimyo tea,          h. 30.2(117/8)
      used Shigaraki as did many daimyo, in-              Momoyama period, early i7th century
      cluding the Date clan of Sendai who were
      steeped in the teachings of Sekishú and             Okayama Prefectural Museum,
      Furuta Oribe (1544-1615). Tsunamura                 Okayama Prefecture
      (1659-1719), the fourth-generation Date        The high-fired and unglazed wares of Bi-
      daimyo, recorded in his tea diary the use      zen and Shigaraki, esteemed for their aus-
      of several Shigaraki pieces, both old and      tere rusticity, were the first Japanese
      new, some treasured and used repeatedly. ceramics to be deemed suitable for use in
            The continued use of Shigaraki wares the tea context. From the mid-sixteenth
      in tea was assured with the formalization      century the potters of Bizen (in present-
      of the Rikyú aesthetic of rustic simplicity    day Okayama Prefecture) supplemented
      by the master's grandson Sotan (1578-          their production of utilitarian wares with
      1658). Of even greater importance was the tea and tea-related objects, particularly
      designation in 1632 of the Shigaraki kilns     mizusashi (fresh water containers), hanaire
      as producers of the "official" glazed tea      (flower containers), and fine tablewares.
      jars in which the famed leaves from            While utilitarian wares changed little even
                                                     over long periods of time, tea wares
                                                     evolved according to current fashions.
                                                          Tokkuri, or sake flasks, were produced
                                                     in great quantity by the Bizen kilns in the
                                                     Momoyama period. In this example, clean
                                                     lines define the plump, barrel-shaped
                                                     body, thin neck, and crisply finished
304
240
      305
      241
306
242
mouth. The neat, concise form, made             seeds) could result from the ash in the kiln   242 Fresh water container
from a relatively fine-grained clay, pro-       atmosphere. It was possible to control             Mino ware, Shino type
vides a sympathetic surface for the red di-     which parts of a piece would be affected           h. 19.2(7^/2)
agonal streaks, hidasuki, which resulted        by the flames and ash by masking with              Momoyama period,
from shielding a vessel wrapped in rice         other objects.                                     late loth century
straw from direct contact with the flames             Archaeological excavations through-
                                                out Japan have revealed that in the medi-          Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, Tokyo
during firing. The straw burns away, leav-
ing the hiddsuki on a background of un-         eval period, the Bizen complex was only
scorched white clay.                            one of more than thirty in Japan where
     Hidasuki are but one of several char-      utilitarian stoneware objects, primarily
acteristic Bizen firing effects that were       tsubo (jars), kdme (wide-mouthed jars), and
highly regarded by tea patrons. Depending       suribdchi (grating bowls) were fired. Dur-
on the placement of an object within the        ing the Muromachi period, production
kiln and its position in relation to the path   was concentrated at fewer but larger kilns,
of the shooting flames and the shower of        suggesting the start of cooperative efforts.
ash from the burning wood, different fir-       Ready access to ports on the Inland Sea al-
ing effects would result. Pieces placed di-     lowed the establishment of a distribution
rectly in the flames would be dramatically      system to markets around central Japan.
scorched. Light flecks of natural glaze (tea    Further consolidation seems to have oc-
men likened their appearance to sesame          curred by the late Muromachi or early
                                                Momoyama period, concentrated around
                                                three large kilns to the north, south, and
                                                west of the village of Inbe in Bizen, where
                                                production continued through the Edo
                                                period.                                 AMW
                                                                                                                                        307
 243 Bowl
     Mino ware, Shino type
     diam. 2y.5(io13/i6)
     Momoyama period,
     late loth-early iyth century
      Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo
 244 Bowl
     Mino ware, Nezumi Shino type
     diam. 28.5 (iiVy
     Momoyama period,
     late loth-early iyth century
     Tokyo National Museum
     Important Cultural Property
 245 Bowl
     Mino ware, Nezumi Shino type
     diam. 24.9(93/4)
     Momoyama period,
     early iyth century
      Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo
 246 Teabowl
     Mino ware, Black Oribe type
      h. 8.5 (3 3/8)                 243
      Momoyama period,
      early iyth century
      Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
244
308
 245
246
       309
247
247 Covered dish                             tea-related wares were embraced by an        against Mino and by the mid-^oos had
    Mino ware, Green Oribe type              enthusiastic group of patrons whose          subjugated it, an important early triumph
    h. 6.3(21/2) x 1.27.9 (11)               membership included prominent military       for the instigator of the movement toward
    Momoyama period,                         figures, as evidenced by the recovery of     a unified Japan. Nobunaga was interested
    early 17th century                       Mino ceramics from excavated daimyo          in regulating the ceramic industry in his
                                             residences from many sites throughout        domain and was a practitioner of tea. He
    Tokyo National Museum                    Japan.                                       was served by the tea masters Sen no
In Mino Province, now the southern part           During this same period, Mino's im-     Rikyü (1522-1591), Imai Sôkyu (1520-1593),
of Gifu Prefecture, the production of        portance as a center for ceramic activity    and Tsuda Sógyü (d. 1591). In 1600, Mino
highly innovative glazed ceramics pros-      was matched by its significance as the       was the setting for the pivotal Battle of
pered at a large number of kilns from the    stage for major political personalities and  Sekigahara (cat. 104), in which Tokugawa
middle of the sixteenth century through      events. In the sixteenth century, Saitô Do- leyasu (1543-1616) won the position of
the early seventeenth century. The Mino      san (d. 1556) overthrew the Toki clan to be- preeminence that was maintained by his
potters, while mindful of the need to sat-   come a daimyo of Mino. To improve            descendants for 250 years.
isfy the requirements of function, experi-   relations with Oda Nobuhide (1510-1551),          In the fifteenth century, the technol-
mented with glazes and decorative            daimyo in the neighboring province of        ogy for producing glazed ceramics was in-
schemes as well as with shapes and the       Owari, Dosan married his daughter in 1548 troduced to the Mino area from the
techniques for forming them. Their           to Nobuhide's son, Oda Nobunaga (1534-       well-established kilns of neighboring Seto.
                                             1582). Nobunaga subsequently moved
310
By the beginning of the sixteenth century,       opposite are horizontal and without a sin-        conjunction with irregular shapes and
a more efficient and advanced type of kiln       gle focal point, while the clover and its op-     sometimes graphic designs. Here, one side
began to be used in Mino and Seto, lead-         posite are each set on a central axis from        of the outer wall and the bottom of the in-
ing eventually to the creation of new            which the design bifurcates.                      terior of the bowl are covered with decid-
wares at the Mino kilns, including Shino               The irregularly shaped bowl from the        edly abstract images traditionally
and Nezumi Shino. At the beginning of            Tokyo National Museum (cat. 244) is an ex-        interpreted as cranes and reeds, carved
the seventeenth century, the multi-              ample of Nezumi Shino, a type of Mino             through the outer coat of black glaze and
chambered noborigama (climbing kiln) was         ware covered with iron-rich slip that fires       filled in with white slip.
introduced from Karatsu to the Mino area,        gray, the color of a mouse (nezumi). Iron               The covered dish in the shape of a fan
first to Motoyashiki, enabling the artistic      slip was applied with a ladle to parts of the     from the Tokyo National Museum (cat.
breakthroughs that culminated with               vessel, creating soft-edged borders with          247) is a product of the Mino noborigama
copper-glazed Green Oribe wares. At              the sections left uncovered. The artist           kilns, which produced Oribe ceramics
these noborigama, copies of the wares of         etched hard-edged designs through the             characterized by an iridescent green cop-
other Japanese kilns such as Iga, Shigaraki,     gray slip with a sharp tool, and then ap-         per glaze and underglaze iron drawing.
and Karatsu were also made. Utilitarian          plied feldspathic glaze to the whole vessel.      The design of this vessel is a blend of natu-
objects were produced even at those kilns        The areas not covered with the iron slip,         ral and geometric motifs. Triangular inden-
that fired the finest tablewares and tea         such as the mass at the center of this dish       tations inside the vessel at the base of the
utensils, and they assumed greater impor-        and two parallel oblong shapes on the rim,        fan and incised lines in the lid collect
tance as the demand for Mino tea-related         fired white. The wagtail etched atop the          glaze, creating color variations within the
wares decreased.                                 central white form transforms it by associ-       large mass of green.
      A coat of feldspathic white glaze, typi-   ation into a rock, while the iron slip fingers          The Oribe potters often employed
cal of Shino ceramics, envelops most of          at the base of the rock become waves, with        molds to make complicated shapes. They
the mizusashi (fresh water container) from       the addition of scraped lines beneath the         experimented with a wide range of vessel
the Nezu Institute of Fine Arts (cat. 242).      rock. Five-leafed kumazasa, a type of bam-        forms, including sets of small shallow or
This glaze was perfected in the 15805, the       boo, are incised through the slip on either       tall dishes, known as mukdzuke, and large
result of earlier experiments involving ash      side of the rock and painted on the rock          dishes with stepped sides and bowlike han-
glazes with a high feldspathic content. A        with iron slip. In contrast to the decora-        dles. This dish was designed to contain
simple drawing in iron oxide is visible be-      tion on the face of the dish, the exterior        food, although the cover does not fit
neath the glaze; it depicts a pair of arching    has been treated in an energetic, non-            snugly enough to retain heat effectively.
reeds on one face of the vessel and a range      representational manner.                          Apart from its utilitarian function, and
of three low mountains and pine trees on               Similar decorative techniques have          perhaps more important, the cover was re-
the other. The stolid shape of the mizu-         been employed in the shallow Nezumi               garded as another surface for decoration
sashi conveys a great sense of weight. The       Shino bowl from the Suntory Museum of             and as a dramatic device, concealing not
form is enlivened by pronounced bulges at        Art (cat. 245). Most of the wide interior of      only the edible contents of the dish but its
the top and bottom and irregular contu-          the bowl has been masked with iron slip,          interior decoration as well.             AMW
sions, willful marks of the potter's artistic    leaving uncovered only part of the rim and
personality that foreshadow later and even       interior. The plate is dominated by a great       248 Large dish
 more dramatic effects. The treatment of         willow, its trunk extended across the white           Karatsu ware
the rim was likened by connoisseurs to the       boulderlike mass with a drawn arched line             diam.43.Q(i7 1 / 4 )
 notch of an arrow (yahazu) giving rise to       of iron slip; its branches fill the dish inte-        Momoyama period,
the name by which this type of mizusashi         rior. Three birds are each formed of the              late loth-early ryth century
 was known. Similar yahazu-sty\e mizusashi       same three etched marks. Non-represen-
 were also made at other Japanese kilns, in-     tational decoration is also prominent.                Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
 cluding Karatsu, Bizen. and Shigaraki, re-            Oribe-style Mino ware was fired at a            Important Cultural Property
 flecting a confluence of tea-ware taste.        small number of the Mino kilns. The
       The Shino bowl from the Suntory           name of the ware refers to the great Mo-
 Museum of Art (cat. 243) was made for            moyama period tea master, Furuta Oribe           249 Jar
 kaiseki ryôri, the meal associated with the     (1544-1615), born in Mino and awarded a               Karatsu ware
 tea ceremony. Inimitable and irregular in       domain near Kyoto by Toyotomi Hide-                   h. 15.8 (6 V4)
 shape, this heavily potted dish rests on        yoshi (1537-1598). Oribe's exact relation-            Momoyama period,
 three legs. It is decorated with underglaze      ship to the Mino kilns is unclear, though            late loth-early i7th century
 iron drawing and covered with a thick coat       the style that bears his name is thought to
 of white feldspathic glaze. In the central       reflect his advanced ideas regarding aes-             Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo
 section, interwoven grasses, a common            thetics. Perhaps no shape is more repre-         Karatsu ware is the glazed high-fired pot-
 Shino motif, sprout from one of the four         sentative of the tea wares Oribe is said to      tery of Hizen Province, a large area in
 trimmed corners. Each of the four sec-           have favored than that of the kutsugata, or      northern Kyushu that falls within present-
 tions on the rim holds a discrete design.        shoe-shaped, teabowl, here represented by        day Saga and Nagasaki prefectures. As at
 Two of the adjoining sections are filled         one from the Umezawa Kinenkan in the             other locations in western Japan, a great
 with recognizable motifs depicted in an          Black Oribe mode (cat. 246). Its exagger-        flourish of ceramic activity occurred in Hi-
 abbreviated but naturalistic manner: one         ated warp was added after the basic form         zen following the Korean expeditions of
 with airborne plovers and a net hung to          had been thrown on the wheel. The lac-           1592 and 1597, *ne unsuccessful attempts
 dry, the other a simple drawing of bush          querlike black glaze was a technical inno-       of Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) to sub-
 clover. The other two sections are filled        vation made earlier at the Mino kilns at         jugate the Asian mainland. Many of the
  with abstract geometric designs, the ori-       Amagane, the result of removing an iron-         military leaders in these invasions were
  gins of which may possibly lie in imported      glazed vessel from the kiln while it was still   daimyo and prominent warriors of Kyushu
  European art forms. The design in each          hot and rapidly cooling it. At the earlier       domains, including Matsuura Shigenobu
  section is formally related to the one oppo-    kilns, the glaze was applied to simple cylin-    (1549-1614), Nabeshima Naoshige (1538-
  site. Both the net and bird motif and its       drical teabowls, while in the Oribe style it
                                                  was just one decorative element, used in
                                                                                                                                            311
                 248
i6i8), and Goto lenobu of Hizen. In the       bowls (cat. 246), popular in the early seven- outer edge of the rim, forming the ground
early 15905, Hideyoshi issued orders in-      teenth century and associated with the          for two triangular sections of parallel grass-
structing his officers to bring craftsmen     prominent tea master Furuta Oribe (1544- like strokes at the base of the trunk.
with them upon their return to Japan from     1615). Oribe, who helped to popularize               The tsubo (jar) from the Idemitsu Mu-
the Korean peninsula. Accordingly, Ko-        Karatsu wares by using them himself at          seum of Arts (cat. 249) is of a type com-
rean potters made their way to Hizen and      tea gatherings, resided at Nagoya Castle in monly made for utilitarian storage, though
with the protection of the local rulers es-   Hizen for eighteen months from 1592 to          this example was probably employed as a
tablished kilns in many of its variously      1593. The castle was the expedition opera-      mizusashi (fresh water jar). The body sits
held territories, including the Saga,         tions base, located near the port of            atop a ring foot, tapering from its pro-
Hirado, and Karatsu domains. Even prior       Karatsu (not to be confused with Nagoya         nounced, bulging mid-section to the
to the Korean invasions, such Korean-         Castle on Honshu). Terasawa Hirotaka            mouth whose narrow rim is delicately
influenced glazed ceramics seem to have       (1563-1633), a retainer of Hideyoshi and a      turned out. On the upper part of the jar, a
been made on a limited scale in Hizen at      tea enthusiast, also served the war effort      simple design of reeds, a common Karatsu
kilns near the Kishidake Castle of the Hata   from Nagoya Castle and after the first          motif, is rendered in fluid brushstrokes of
clan. Until they were ousted by Hideyoshi     campaign was appointed daimyo of the            underglaze iron.
in 1594 the Hata were rulers in the area.     Karatsu domain, where he supported ce-                The great prosperity enjoyed by the
They had long engaged in trade and piracy     ramic production.                               Hizen Karatsu kilns during the early part
with Korea and China. The great expan-              The two examples of Karatsu ware in       of the seventeenth century suffered due
sion of ceramic production following the      the exhibition are decorated with designs       to the growth in popularity of native por-
Korean expeditions, however, is well re-      painted in underglaze iron oxide. The           celains, first fired in Hizen. The number
flected by the excavated sites of over one    large dish from the Umezawa Kinenkan            of kilns making Karatsu pottery decreased
hundred Hizen kilns where a variety of        (cat. 248) is potted from sandy clay, its shal- and most of those remaining made utilitar-
types of Karatsu ware was made.               low curving bowl stepped up to a wide un- ian wares. In the Karatsu domain, some
     Utilitarian vessels were the mainstay    dulating rim pinched at irregular intervals. kilns fired ceramics commissioned by the
of the Karatsu kilns. Tea men were drawn      Typical of many large Karatsu dishes, the       daimyo for presentation to the shogunate
to their unpretentious beauty and adopted     ring foot is small for the size of the vessel   or other daimyo, a practice that is said to
them for use in the tea ceremony. Over        it supports. Except for the foot and the        have begun as early as the tenure of Tera-
time, vessels for the tea context were com-   area immediately surrounding it, the dish        sawa Hirotaka and continued despite peri-
missioned, including those in styles that     is completely covered with a mixed feld-         odic interruptions until the Meiji
can also be found at other Japanese kilns,    spathic and ash glaze. A sinuous pine tree       Restoration, even as the post of daimyo of
such as kutsugata, or "shoe-shaped," tea-     meanders over the dish interior, throwing        the Karatsu domain passed from one clan
                                              some of its branches up along the rim of         to another.                              AMW
                                               the dish. An uneven line encircles the
312
      250 Fresh water container
          Takatori ware
           h. 15.5 (6>/8)
           Edo period, first half iyth century
           Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
        The modest complex of Takatori kilns, es-
        tablished under the auspices of the
        Kuroda family, was one of several begun in
        the early seventeenth century with the
       backing of Kyushu daimyo. The Kuroda
       clan received control over their domain in
       the northern Kyushu province of Chiku-
       zen, part of present-day Fukuoka Prefec-
       ture, for supporting the victorious
       Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616) at the Battle
       of Sekigahara in 1600 (cat. 104). Typically,
       immigrant Korean potters were responsi-
       ble for beginning production of the Taka-
       tori stonewares.
             As recorded in retrospective accounts
       such as the Takatori rekidai kiroku (Record
       of the successive Takatori generations), an
       1820 compilation of Takatori-related oral
       tradition and written evidence, the earliest
       official clan kiln was established by the
249    daimyo Kuroda Nagamasa (1568-1623) at
       the base of Takatori mountain after his
       move to Chikuzen in 1600. The operation
       of this kiln, Eimanji Takuma, is attributed
       to the Korean potter P'alsan (also known
       by his Japanese name Takatori Hachizô)
       who came to Japan following Hideyoshi's
       Korean expeditions. A second clan kiln
       was opened in 1614, at Uchigaso. After Na-
       gamasa died in 1623, P'alsan and his son
       fell into disfavor with the next-generation
       Kuroda daimyo, Tadayuki (1602-1654), for
      asking permission to return to Korea, a re-
      quest that was not granted; they were ban-
      ished to Yamada where they are said to
      have begun another kiln.
             Extensive investigations at the sites of
      the first two kilns have clarified the char-
      acter of their products and broadened a
      once-narrow perception based on the
      wares of later kilns that reflect an aesthetic
      associated with Kobori Enshü (1579-1647),
      the important seventeenth-century arbiter
      of tea taste. The Eimanji Takuma kiln, ex-
      cavated in 1982, was found to be a modest
      i6.6-meter multi-chambered noborigama
      (climbing kiln). Although some tea objects
      were fired, most of the wares were utilitar-
      ian. The subsequent Uchigaso kiln, exam-
      ined from 1979 through 1981, was a much
      larger 46.5-meter noborigama. The exca-
      vated sherds suggest that a great variety of
      utilitarian and tea objects were produced
      in a number of different styles; ranging
      from simple but robust jars to teabowls in
      the flamboyant style associated with
      Furuta Oribe (1544-1615), which exerted a
250   great impact on many kilns throughout Ja-
      pan during the early seventeenth century.
      Sherds of pieces closely related to the
      products of the later Shirahatayama kiln
      were also found. These excavations also
      indicate that certain types of objects
                                                 313
thought over the years to be Karatsu ware
were also fired at the early Takatori kilns.
      The Shirahatayama kiln opened
around 1630, during the tenure of Kuroda
Tadayuki. The Enshü-influenced wares
typical of this and later kilns are character-
ized by understatement and subtle con-
trast, effectively employed in this Takatori
 mizusashi (fresh water container). The cy-
lindrical mizusashi, potted from finely tex-
 tured clay, is glazed with earthtones that
 have fired into a sleek coat. Overlaps of
 the smooth exterior glaze laid on in four
 well-considered applications create four
 delicate lines arcing from top to bottom.
 Another sweep of glaze, also a somber
 tone, washes the lip of the vessel, while
 the interior is covered with a fine, irregu-
 lar, mazelike pattern. The bottom is un-
 glazed.
       The stylistic traits associated with Ko-
 bori Enshü were perpetuated at kilns es-
 tablished in 1665 a* Koishiwarazumi.
 There the major output consisted of tea
 wares, especially great quantities of chaire
  (powdered-tea containers). The close asso-
  ciation between the Takatori lineage of
  potters and successive generations of
  Kuroda daimyo continued with new kilns
  being sponsored until the end of the Edo
  period.                                  AMW
 314
  252
253
southwest to Kumamoto in Higo Province        once owned by Sansai, but it is unclear         252 Teabowl
in 1632. Sansai retired to Yatsushiro in      whether this piece was produced at one of           Satsuma ware
Higo, accompanied by Chonhae and other        the pre-1032 Agano kilns in Buzen or                h. 10.8 (41/4)
potters, establishing kilns that fired tea    shortly after Sansai moved to Yatsushiro.           Edo period, early iyth century
wares. After the Hosokawa move to Kuma-       Traditionally, it is said to have been made         Fukushi Shigeo Collection, Tokyo
moto, Sarayama Hongama was continued          by Chonhae; whether this attribution is
by descendants of Chonhae as the official     correct is impossible to verify, though later   Satsuma ware is another of the many
kiln of the Ogasawara clan, the Hosokawa      Yatsushiro wares often have less delicate       types of ceramics established by a daimyo
replacements in Buzen.                        forms and sometimes decoratively pat-           following his participation in Hideyoshi's
      This hanaire (flower container), with   terned designs. A fitting on the back of        Korean expeditions. According to histori-
its simplicity of shape and earth color, is   this type of container allowed it to be         cal records maintained by the Naeshiro-
representative of the refined tea wares       hung on the post of a tea room, though it       gawa Satsuma ware kiln, Shimazu
produced under Sansai's patronage. The        could be placed on the ground.           AMW    Yoshihiro (1535-1619), a Sen no Rikyü
box in which the flower container is stored                                                   (1522-1591) disciple and ruler of the large
 bears an inscription stating that it was
                                                                                                                                      315
Satsuma domain in southern Kyushu, re-           myo continued to encourage the activities       documents record that in the same year Yi
turned from Korea in 1598 accompanied            at Tateno through their patronage and by        Chak-kwang's son was given the name Sa-
by more than seventy Koreans. Among              sending potters to other Japanese kilns to      kunojô and assigned by Hidenari to head
them, it is thought, were a number of pot-       learn new techniques, as Shimazu                the Matsumoto kiln; he was given the
ters who were responsible for operating          Narinobu (1769-1841) is reported to have        same stipend that his father had received,
the earliest Satsuma kilns. Tradition is that    done at the end of the eighteenth century.      while Kôraizaemon got a stipend that was
the first kiln, producing utilitarian vessels    Official and non-official kilns were active     slightly less. The expansion of the Matsu-
and not clan-protected, was begun while          within Satsuma throughout the Edo pe-           moto kiln operation is reflected by the
Yoshihiro fought at the Battle of Sekiga-        riod, producing a wide range of ceramics        growing number of stipended potters in
hara in 1600 (cat. 104). The Uto kiln in         including the colorful overglaze enamel         clan records from the late 16205 to 1645.
Chosa, the earliest clan-sponsored kiln,         works that are, for many, the type most of-           In the second half of the seventeenth
was not opened until around 1601, after          ten associated with Satsuma.             AMW    century, the number of official kilns in the
Yoshihiro had returned to his domain. The                                                        domain increased. In 1657, a ^m was
second, Osato kiln, was begun after Yoshi-       253 Teabowl, named Daimyd                       opened in Fukawa Sonóse, east of Matsu-
hiro retired in favor of his son lehisa (1576-                                                   moto, with the help of laborers assigned by
                                                     Hagi ware
1636) in 1607 and moved to Kajiki, slightly                                                      the clan and skilled potters who relocated
                                                     h. 8.5 (3 3/8)
 east of Chôsa. Both were located near                                                           from Matsumoto. This operation, how-
                                                     Edo period, i7th century
Yoshihiro's residences and are said to have                                                      ever, had a somewhat different status than
been operated by the Korean Kim Hae                  Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, Tokyo          Matsumoto in that it was allowed to pro-
(also known by the name he acquired in Ja-                                                       duce other wares in addition to those it
 pan, Hoshiyama Chüji). At both kilns, the       The Hagi kilns were both daimyo-                produced for the clan. In 1663, during the
chief products were tea wares.                   sponsored and begun by Korean potters
                                                                                                 tenure of the Mori daimyo Tsunahiro
       This teabowl, probably from one of        who came to Japan following the Korean          (1639-1689), clan kilns producing only offi-
these first two clan kilns, is one of the few    campaigns. They were located on the             cial wares were established as offshoots of
 examples of its type known. Its shape is re-    main Japanese island of Honshu, on the          the Matsumoto kiln, the Miwa and Sahaku
lated to contemporary Korean porcelain or        northern shore of its western tip (part of
                                                                                                 kilns. In 1700, the first-generation Miwa
Mishima-style vessels, reflecting the roots      present-day Yamaguchi Prefecture). This         head potter was sent to Kyoto on clan or-
of the early Satsuma potters. Simple and         area was controlled by the Môri, a clan         der to learn the Raku techniques, as was
 stolid, the bowl is firmly supported by a       whose territories were drastically reduced      the fourth-generation head in 1744. By
 tall, ring foot, tapering from a low, pro-      from eight provinces to two after Mori
                                                                                                  sending the potters to Kyoto, the daimyo
 truding waist toward a wide mouth. The          Terumoto (1553-1625) opposed Tokugawa
                                                                                                 hoped to keep the potters of the heavily
 glaze, a forerunner of the deep black glaze     leyasu (1543-1616) at Sekigahara in 1600         Korean-influenced Hagi wares aware of
 that was to become a characteristic Sat-        (cat. 104). In 1604, the seat of the Mori ad-
                                                                                                  other Japanese ceramics.
 suma type, has fired to an irregularly          ministration was transferred to Hagi and,
                                                 according to mid-eighteenth century                   With clan approval, the Hagi tradition
 mottled surface that softens the form.                                                          was transmitted within the extended Mori
 Brushed in Edo-period writing on a paper        records compiled by the clan, a kiln was
                                                 then established at Matsumoto near the           family. A Hagi potter went to the clan kiln
 cartouche on the lid of the box that holds                                                       of Chôfu, a Mori branch family domain, at
 the bowl is Satsuma owan, or "Satsuma           Hagi castle by the immigrant Korean pot-
                                                 ter Yi Chak-kwang who was assisted by his        the request of the Mori daimyo Tsuna-
 bowl."                                                                                           moto (1650-1705). As recorded in an 1815
                                                 younger brother Yi Kyóng. The Hagi ware
        Examinations of the Uto site indicate                                                     kiln document, a Hagi potter established
                                                 enterprise evolved into a closely managed
 that the kiln was small and not fired many                                                       an official kiln in 1745 for the rulers of the
                                                 organ of the clan where glazed ceramics
 times, a peculiarity that might be ex-                                                           small Tokuyama domain, also a branch
                                                 based on Korean prototypes, chiefly tea
 plained by the Hoshiyama family account                                                          family of the Mori.
                                                 wares, were produced.
 that soon after opening the Uto kiln, Kim                                                             Throughout the Edo period, the clan
                                                       Reflecting the ceramic ideal sought
 Hae was sent by Yoshihiro to the well-                                                           continued its involvement with the Hagi
                                                 by the Mori patrons, this Hagi teabowl re-
 established Seto kilns for five years of                                                         kilns, both old and new, official and non-
 training. Shortly after Kim Hae's return to     calls Korean wares, specifically Ido type
                                                 bowls. Ido bowls are thought to have been        official, some of which flourished while
 the Satsuma domain and with Yoshihiro's                                                          others failed. In 1815, the clan issued an or-
                                                 employed originally for utilitarian pur-
  move to Kajiki in 1607, the Osato kiln re-                                                      der prohibiting non-official kilns from
                                                 poses in Korea and imported to Japan in
 placed Uto. The Osato kiln, also small, ap-                                                      making copies of official teabowls or using
                                                 the sixteenth century for tea men who ap-
  pears to have been fired many times,                                                            a certain type of clay; apparently, the order
                                                 preciated their understated beauty. The
  probably until Yoshihiro's death in 1619.                                                       was not observed, as it was repeated in
                                                 slightly irregular cone-shaped bowl, thick
        Yoshihiro's son lehisa ruled from Ka-                                                     1832. In the early nineteenth century, kilns
                                                 at the bottom and thinner near the rim,
  goshima, south of the earlier locations. Af-                                                    were established with Mori assistance to
                                                 flares from a precariously small, high, ring
  ter Yoshihiro passed away in 1619, Kim                                                          fire porcelain wares for daily use, to com-
                                                 foot, accented at the joint of the foot and
  Hae moved there at lehisa's behest and                                                          plement the pottery made by the other
                                                 body with a tooled line. Glaze covers the
  operated a small-scale clan kiln in Tateno.                                                     kilns.                                    AMW
                                                 bowl in an uneven coat that has fired to a
  At this kiln, continued by Kim Hae's de-
                                                 subtle range of colors, from white areas
  scendants after his death, tea wares were
                                                 where the glaze is thick to pink blushes.
  produced that reflect the refinement of
                                                       The extent to which the Mori were
  the then-current Kobori Enshü aesthetic.
                                                 involved in the affairs of the Matsumoto
  This kiln was replaced by a much larger
                                                 kiln, and the others that followed, can be
  one where the scale of production was ex-
                                                 traced through historical records. A docu-
  panded and new wares were developed.
                                                 ment dated 1625 with the kad of the first
  Subsequent generations of Shimazu dai-
                                                  generation Mori daimyo of Hagi, Hidenari
                                                 (1595-1651), relates his granting of the
                                                  name Kôraizaemon to a certain Saka Su-
                                                 kehachi, the former Yi Kyóng. Mid-Edo
316
254 Teabowl, named Jud
    Hon'ami Kôetsu (1558-1637)
    h. 9.9 (3 7/s)
    Edo period, early iyth century
    Goto Museum, Tokyo
                                                        317
      256
318
                        257
trusted by the tea master Sen no Rikyü           son, Azuma, one of the most reticent of        of kilns established along the eastern and
(1522-1591) with realizing in plastic form       Koetsu's works, seems softened and de-         northern fringes of Kyoto. Around 1647,
the reserved and austere wabi aesthetic he       mure. The rim of the mouth is blunt and        Ninsei established the Omuro kiln in the
espoused, and the responsibility of pre-         describes a slow undulating movement.          western part of the city at Ninnaji and be-
serving this tradition no doubt had a con-       The dominant feature is the white-tinged       gan to fire his ceramics, primarily tea-
strictive effect on Chojiro's successors.        crackled area of glaze.              AMW       related vessels. Ninsei's studio was
Koetsu, on the other hand, adhered to the                                                       characterized by great versatility, produc-
aesthetic theories of his own time, espe-                                                       ing objects in both large and small scales
                                                 256 Large storage jar for tea leaves
cially those of his tea teacher Oribe; these                                                    and sometimes in styles other than the
encouraged outgoing, idiosyncratic expres-           Nonomura Ninsei
                                                                                                multi-colored enameled type exhibited
sions in clay, as seen, for example, in the          (fl. mid-iyth century)                     here, including refined versions of the
products of the Mino kilns (cats. 242-247).          h. 26.3 (io3/s)                            wares of other kilns such as Seto, Karatsu,
       The shape oí Azuma (East, cat. 255)           Edo period,                                and Shigaraki.
and its thick coat of black Raku glaze are           mid-iyth century                                 The angled shoulder and tall, narrow
reminiscent of the works of the third-               Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo         form of the chatsubo, or large storage jar
generation master of the Raku lineage,               Important Cultural Property                for tea leaves, in the collection of the
Dônyu (also known as Nonkô, 1599-1656).                                                         Agency for Cultural Affairs (cat. 256) re-
Letters from Koetsu to the Raku family, in                                                      calls that of much smaller containers used
one of which he orders clay from them,                                                          for powdered tea in the popular katatsuki
                                                 257 Fresh water container
and contemporary biographical accounts                                                          style. Despite the tremendous increase in
                                                     Nonomura Ninsei
indicate that Kóetsu pursued his ceramic                                                        size, the form has lost none of its delicacy.
                                                     (fl. mid-i7th century)
activities with the guidance of Jókei, the                                                      By appending the four loops at the shoul-
                                                     h. 14.0 (5^2)
second-generation Raku master, and                                                              ders that are typical of chatsubo, Ninsei in-
Dônyu. The nature of this relationship               Edo period,                                vented a composite form that he is known
probably was one less of dependence than             mid-i7th century                           to have employed in at least two other
cross-fertilization; the revitalization of the       Tokyo National Museum                      pieces.
 Raku tradition that Donyu is credited with                                                           Most immediately striking in this
 is attributable at least in part to his in-     Nonomura Ninsei is regarded as the piv-        work is the bold decoration. Although the
 volvement with the amateur potter               otal figure in the early development of        multi-color enamel process was probably
 Koetsu. Some of Kôetsu's most striking          Kyôyaki, the ceramic wares of Kyoto, of-       introduced to Japan from China, Ninsei
 black bowls are characterized by their          ten decorated with multi-color enamels.        developed new techniques, experimenting
 sharply defined profile, frequently with an     His work reflected the refinement and lux-     with elegant harmonies of color and deco-
 outward-slanting rim and portions of the        ury of Kyoto and satisfied the aesthetic re-   rative motifs. These often speak less of
 bowl not covered with glaze. In compari-        quirements of Japan's political and            China than of Japan, drawing influence
                                                 cultural elite. By the mid-seventeenth cen-    from native sources such as the yamato-e
                                                 tury, Kyoyaki was being made at a number
                                                                                                                                         319
                          258
painting traditions and lacquer. Small pine    Kaga (part of present-day Ishikawa Prefec-       unglazed bottom of the vessel is stamped
trees in gold and light green, and red ca-     ture) also owned many pieces by Ninsei,          with the large Ninsei seal.
mellia and plum blossoms outlined and de-      some of which are recorded to have en-                 The colored decoration is a mixture
tailed in gold with light green leaves,        tered their collection through the well-         of natural motifs and geometric abstrac-
stretch into the characteristic rich Ninsei-   connected Kyoto tea master and some-             tions. A weave of silver diamond-shaped
guro (Ninsei black) background. Low, roll-     time Maeda guest, Kanamori Sôwa (1584-           lozenges, graded in size from the narrower
ing mountains, like those in Japan, loom       1656). Sowa's social influence and               bottom to wider top, are filled with gold
behind in gold. The lower portion of the       aesthetic guidance were of great impor-          floral abstractions on a red ground. Four
vessel remains undercorated, revealing the     tance to Ninsei, especially during the early     windows are framed by the weave, each
clay body, and the bottom is marked with a     part of the artist's career.                     opening onto a white ground and contain-
large seal that reads Ninsei.                        Like cat. 256, the mizusashi in the col-   ing green-leafed peony buds and blooms in
     Ninsei reaped the benefits of a tea       lection of the Tokyo National Museum             combinations of gold and red, and red and
world support system that linked him with      (cat. 257) adapts the shape of a powdered        silver. The technique employed for the
tea masters and members of the different       tea container, in this case, a natsume, a        flowers is that of yamato-e, especially that
social classes, including court, wealthy       type usually made of black lacquer. Two          seen in the floral forms painted by the art-
merchant, and daimyo clients. Cat. 256         other slightly larger mizusashi in this          ists of Sotatsu's studio. Gold is used for
was owned by the Kyógoku family, daimyo        shape are known, though this example is          the earth and clouds, and to delineate the
of the Marugame domain on Shikoku              the most minutely and painstakingly exe-         juncture of the vertical wall with the top.
from 1658 throughout the Edo period, one       cuted. The walls are thin, elegantly curv-       The top is decorated with a billowing wave
of many works by Ninsei in their posses-       ing up toward the flattened top that is          pattern in silver on a red ground. Subse-
 sion. The wealthy Maeda daimyo of             stepped down at the mouth to form a              quent oxidation has blackened the silver.
                                               ledge upon which the lid would rest. The
320
                                                                                              258 Set of five dishes
                                                                                                  Nabeshima ware
                                                                                                  diam. 20.0(77/8)
                                                                                                  Edo period,
                                                                                                  late i7th—early i8th century
                                                                                                  Tokyo National Museum
                                                                                              259 Dish
                                                                                                  Nabeshima ware
                                                                                                  diam. 29.6(115/8)
                                                                                                  Edo period,
                                                                                                  late i7th—early i8th century
                                                                                                  Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo
                                                                                                                                      321
                259
tice is documented in the personal chroni-     dishes were made in one of a limited range      ular set. Many Nabeshima designs were
cle of Nabeshima Shigemochi (1733-1770).       of sizes. The dishes in this set are medium-    lifted from contemporary design pattern
The entry for the seventeenth day of the       sized, referred to in terms of the old Japa-    books or adapted from textiles and maki-e
sixth month of the second year of Meiwa        nese measurement system as seven sun, an        lacquer wares.
[1765] records a ten-day visit by Shige-       especially practical and popular size manu-           Although porcelains painted with
mochi to his daimyo counterpart in Oda-        factured in quantity and decorated in           overglaze enamels are the most renowned
wara (currently part of Kanagawa               matching sets. Reminiscent of the con-          of the Nabeshima kiln products, extremely
Prefecture), during which time Shige-          temporary lacquer tablewares with which         fine pieces decorated only with underglaze
mochi presented a gift of ceramics.            they were used, the dishes have a shallow       blue were also produced, such as the dish
      Details regarding the early history of   bowl fitted with a relatively tall ring foot.   decorated with a pine tree motif (cat. 259).
official Nabeshima clan porcelain kilns are          The design, concentrated away from        Its size, one shaku, is the largest of the
unclear. A mid-Meiji-period document           the center, depicts a cherry tree in full       most common Nabeshima dish sizes. The
based on older kiln-related clan materials     bloom, employing all of the typical Na-         stylized pine adapts well to the same type
relates that two porcelain-producing kilns     beshima colors except celadon green and         of centrifugal composition seen in cat. 258.
predating the Okawachi kiln fired wares        brown. Fingerlike roots anchor a great          Its jagged yet gracefully twisting trunk and
for the Nabeshima daimyo. The first, at        trunk that throws off several twisting          branches are outlined in blue and then
Iwayagawachi, was superseded by a sec-         branches, the outline and details described     filled in with a uniformly smooth coat of
ond at Nangawara. At these two early           with a dark underglaze blue and filled in       light blue. Attached to the branches are
kilns, it is thought that special wares for    with a lighter blue tone. The petals of the     overlapping circles of precisely drawn,
the daimyo were produced on order,             blossoms are described with a fine red line     stiff, radiating pine needles in dark blue.
though the strict clan control over all        that is also used for the interior detail of    In place of a ring foot, three evenly spaced
phases of kiln activities that was so promi-   the flowers, while the petals themselves        projecting feet, crafted in the shape of
nent at the Okawachi kiln had not yet          are white, the porcelain left in reserve.       scalloped leaves and covered with under-
been established.                              The leaves are colored with overglaze ap-       glaze blue, support the dish. Other three-
      Many of the typical characteristics of   plications of green and yellow. This design     legged dishes of this type, all characterized
Nabeshima porcelains are evident in the        was one of many recorded in a design book       by especially fine workmanship, suggest
set of five dishes in the Tokyo National       maintained by the Nabeshima clan, where          that these vessels were made on order for
Museum (cat. 258). Most Nabeshima              it is dated to 1718, though, due to the fre-     particularly important occasions.       AMW
                                               quent repetition of designs, it cannot be
                                               assumed that this is the date of this partic-
322
260
2Óo Large dish                                   gathered from these two sites, including          lution to the Ko Kutani debate, if there is
    Ko Kutani ware                               white porcelains that were possibly in-           one forthcoming, awaits further archaeo-
    diam. 40.5 (16)                              tended to receive overglaze enamel deco-          logical and art historical research.
    Edo period, late iyth century                ration later, some underglaze blue                      The large dish from the Umezawa
                                                 porcelains, and celadons, have not conclu-        Kinenkan (cat. 260) has twelve hexagonals
    Umezawa Kinenkan, Tokyo
                                                 sively solved the mystery, though some of         along the rim, surrounding a central roun-
    Important Cultural Property
                                                 the characteristic types of so-called Ko Ku-      del that contains a floral motif dominated
                                                 tani were not represented. In the nine-           by two large peonies. The realistically de-
                                                 teenth century, a revival of porcelain            picted flowers face away from each other,
2Ói Sake ewer                                    production took place in the Kutani area,         one fully open and the other just begin-
    Ko Kutani ware                               though these later products should not be         ning to bloom, outlined and detailed in a
    h. 16.8 (6 5/s)                              confused with Ko Kutani wares.                    fluid black line and densely colored with
    Edo period, late iyth century                       The earliest written record concern-       purple enamel. Green stems and leaves,
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           ing the start of kilns in Kutani, dating to       one tinged with yellow, complement the
    Important Cultural Property                  1736, is retrospective in nature. It notes        flowers along with two red line drawings of
                                                 that during the Meireki era (1655-1658),          butterflies, one large and the other small.
Despite the unsettling persistence of unre-      Maeda Toshiharu (1618-1660), the first dai-       On the rim, the major elements of the
solved historical issues, the artistic merit     myo of the Daishôji domain and a son of           central design are abstracted into a motif
of the enameled porcelain wares known as         the enormously wealthy Kaga daimyo and            composed of two contraposed butterflies
Ko Kutani, or Old Kutani, remains un-            art patron Maeda Toshitsune (1593-1658),          viewed from above against a background
questionable. The painted designs of Ko          ordered a person by the name of Goto to           of purple peony petals. This motif is
Kutani porcelains are as exuberant and            make pottery at Kutani, adding that an-          placed in six of the hexagons, which alter-
boldly drawn as the designs of Nabeshima          other type of ware, similar to Chinese           nate with six others filled with a maze of
wares are distilled and precise. The typical      Nankin porcelain, had once been made             green geometric decoration. The over-
Ko Kutani vessel is thickly potted from a         there but was no longer. Two later docu-         glaze enamels are applied with great free-
relatively coarse grade of porcelain clay         ments present more elaborate stories. Ac-         dom, allowing accidental overflows of
and sometimes decorated with a limited            cording to one from 1784, the second              color beyond the boundary lines. Three
amount of underglaze blue. Designs, usu-          Daishôji daimyo Maeda Toshiaki (1637-             sections of blue enamel floral scrollwork,
ally outlined and detailed first in black, are    1693) sent Goto Saijirô to the large com-         each with a purple peony blossom, wind
colored with richly-toned overglaze               plex of advanced porcelain kilns at Arita in      around the back of the bowl.
enamels, including green, purple, dark            Hizen to acquire ceramic skills, after                  Of the few known Ko Kutani sake ew-
blue, yellow, and red. Most of these wares        which he returned to Kutani and opened a          ers with a similar low, round form derived
are decorated with naturalistically de-           kiln. The substance of the story, that the        from metal prototypes, the example in the
picted floral motifs, landscapes with Chi-        Kutani kilns were started on a technologi-        Eisei Bunko (cat. 261) is generally regarded
nese figures, and bird-and-flower themes,         cal foundation introduced from Arita, is          as the most finely executed in both shape
alone or more often in combination with           supported by physical evidence. In the            and decoration. The meticulously formed
abstractions and geometric patterns.              early seventeenth century, the ceramic in-        vessel, supported by three small legs, has a
      The Kutani problem focuses on the           dustry at Arita was the first in Japan to         spherical bottom, a bulging register encir-
 questions of where objects that have tradi-      produce porcelain, and the type of kiln           cling the top, and a broad, knobbed lid.
 tionally been called Ko Kutani were actu-        and the kiln furniture excavated at the Ku-       From a single point at the back, an arching
 ally made, and what the relationship is          tani kilns are similar to those used at Arita.    round handle spans the top of the vessel to
 between these wares and Kutani, an iso-                The complicated Ko Kutani question          the front where it divides and attaches to
 lated village located in the Daishôji do-        has spawned a substantial body of litera-         the body just above the appended half-
 main. Daishôji, a part of the large Kaga         ture and opinion. Some ceramic historians         cylinder spout.
 territory (presently part of Ishikawa Pre-       have reassigned what were originally                     Colorful, animated decoration enliv-
 fecture) under the control of the powerful        thought to be products of the Kutani kilns       ens the vessel. A scroll of red peonies on
 Maeda clan, was ruled by a Maeda branch           to Arita, and blue-and-white sherds exca-        brown stems with green and blue leaves
 family. The sites of two porcelain-               vated at several Arita kiln sites are clearly    forms a ground for five blue and green
 producing kilns in Kutani were examined           of a type that has traditionally been            shishi, mythical lionlike creatures that
 during a series of archaeological excava-         thought of as Ko Kutani. Another theory           frolic over the vessel, one on the lid and
 tions begun in 1970. The earlier kiln was a       is that Arita-made porcelain bodies were          four distributed around the sides of the
 large multi-chambered noborigama (climb-          shipped to Kaga where they were deco-            body. An underglaze blue floral scroll with
 ing kiln), about thirty-four meters in            rated. Recently, fresh discussion has been        three chrysanthemum flowers decorates
 length, which scientific tests indicate was       sparked by the recovery of Ko Kutani              the handle, while the spout has a decora-
 probably used until the latter part of the        sherds during examinations conducted              tive pattern in green and yellow. To mask
 seventeenth century. The start of this kiln       from 1984 through 1986 at the site of the         an apparent kiln defect, the very bottom
 is accorded a date no later than that in-         Daishôji daimyo residence in the capital          of the vessel is painted with a leaf in blue
 scribed on an excavated sherd that reads          city of Edo (presently Tokyo). Until this         enamel.                                  AMW
 Meireki 2 [1656], Kutani. The second kiln,        discovery, no Ko Kutani sherds had been
 also a noborigama, was much smaller, less         found in any of the excavated Edo-period
 than fourteen meters long. A combination          residential sites around Japan. The new
 of documentary and archaeological evi-             findings, in a house occupied by the dai-
 dence suggests that it was fired until prob-      myo of the territory in which the village of
 ably the late seventeenth or early                Kutani and its Edo-period kilns are lo-
  eighteenth century. The various sherds           cated, argue for a close connection be-
                                                    tween the Maeda clan and Ko Kutani
                                                    wares; the nature of this connection,
                                                    though, cannot yet be determined. A reso-
 324
261
      325
TEXTILES
       327
      262
328
ing the lighter shade wherever it had been     yoshi's crest (mon), in a stiff, heraldic line        To make the design on this ddbuku,
applied. This ddbuku is a fine and early ex-   across the purple-dyed shoulders and more        the paulownia and arrow motifs were re-
ample of the komon (small pattern) stencil     freely disposed on the white midsection,         served in white while their respective
technique, developed from the stencil          and feathered arrow shafts, forming an-          backgrounds were dyed purple and green;
methods used earlier on leather for armor,     other rigid line, on the green lower border.     in the midsection the process was reversed
and often employed in the Edo period for       The contrast of the regular, static arrange-     and the background reserved in white
the clothing of the warrior class.        KS   ment above and below with the looser             while the paulownia were dyed purple,
                                               composition in the middle makes for a            blue, and two shades of greerr. The divi-
263 Dôbuku                                     bold, dynamic design.                            sion of the background into contrasting
    shibori dyeing on silk                           The fabric is nerinuki, a plain-weave      color areas, the use of motifs from nature,
                                               silk of raw (unglossed) warps and de-            and the overall effect of lightness, soft-
    1.115.0 (44 7/s)
                                               gummed (glossed) wefts. Its characteristic       ness, and delicacy in the design are charac-
    w. 115.8 (45 Vs)                                                                            teristics of the decorative style now called
                                               crispness, soft luster, and flat surface are
    Momoyama period, loth century                                                               tsujigdhana, which flourished from the lat-
                                               particularly suited to shibori dyeing, a re-
    Kyoto National Museum                      serve, or resist, technique in which parts       ter half of the Muromachi through the
    Important Cultural Property                of the fabric are protected against the dye      Momoyama period.
                                               when the piece is dipped in the dye bath.              Among the upper classes of earlier pe-
This dobuku is said to have been given by      Either the background or the design may          riods, clothing with dyed designs had been
Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598) to Nanbu        be so protected. The area to be reserved is      a poor second to that with woven designs.
Nobunao (1546-1599), a warrior who sent        "squeezed" (shiboru) away from the rest of       The popularity of tsujigahana among the
horses and falcons to Hideyoshi during the     the fabric by pinching or shirring, then         daimyo of the Age of the Country at War
Odawara campaign in 1590. The design is        tightly wound with waterproof thread, fi-        (Sengoku era) must have been simultane-
entirely appropriate for a gift between feu-   ber, or (for larger areas) bamboo sheathing;     ously a result of and a spur to advances in
dal warriors: paulownia blossoms, Hide-        when the fabric has been dyed and dried,         shibori techniques.                        KS
                                               these protective elements are removed.
                                                                                                                                         329
      263
330
264
      331
      264 Dobuku                                      266 Jinbaori
          stencil dyeing on silk                          kirihame and appliqué on wool
          1.87.0(341/4)                                   1. 77.0 (30)
          W. 141.O   (55   l
                            /2)                           w. 104.0 (40 Vz)
          Edo period, iyth century                        Momoyama period, i6th century
          Agency for Cultural Affairs, Tokyo              Tokyo National Museum
      This ddbuku, shaped like a jinbaori, is said    Made of wool dyed bright red with cochi-
      to have been used by Inagaki Nagashige          neal, this boldly decorated jinbaori is said
      (1539-1603) or his son Shigetsuna. Eight        to have been owned by the daimyo Koba-
      later consecutive generations of the In-        yakawa Hideaki (1577-1602), a nephew of
      agaki ruled as daimyo of the domain of          Toyotomi Hideyoshi and commander in
      Toba (in present-day Mie Prefecture), start-    the 1597 invasion of Korea and supporter
      ing in 1725 when Inagaki Akikata (1698-         of Tokugawa leyasu at the Battle of Seki-
      1752) transferred to Toba and lasting until     gahara. On the back are represented a pair
      the Meiji Restoration, during the reign of      of large crossed sickles. The blade of each
      Inagaki Nagahiro (1854-1920). Until re-         is made in the kirihame technique, fitting
      cently, the ddbuku remained in the posses-      black and white wool pieces into holes cut
      sion of the Inagaki family. Although            out of the garment and sewing them se-
      generally similar in form to ddbuku deco-       curely into place; the handles are appli-
      rated with small-pattern komon designs          quéd on top of the red wool. Woolen
      dating from the beginning of the early          fabrics were brought to Japan in the Mo-
      modern era, this example is reversible.         moyama period by the Portugese, as re-
      The composition of the intricate design is      flected by the Japanese word for such
      unusual in early komon textiles, suggesting     material, rasha, derived from the Portu-
      an early Edo-period date. The back of the       gese raxa, meaning woolen cloth. The
      dobuku is decorated with the large mon, or      curved hem of this jinbaori, uncharacteris-
      family crest, of the Inagaki, depicting fac-    tic of traditional Japanese clothing, shows
      ing sprouts of the mydga plant.            KS   instead the impact of the sartorial style of
                                                      the Portugese and Spanish who came to
                                                      Japan in the Momoyama period.              KS
      265 Jinbaori
          kirihame and embroidery on wool             267 Kosode
          1. 90.0 (35)                                    embroidery and kanoko shibori
          w. 126.0 (49 l/s)                               dyeing on figured satin
          Momoyama period, ryth century                   1.142.5(551/2)
          Sendai City Museum,                              W. 124.0 (48 3/8)
          Miyagi Prefecture                                Edo period, i7th century
                                                           Nomura Collection,
      This striking jinbaori is said to have been          National Museum of Japanese
      owned by Date Masamune (1567-1636),                  History,
      daimyo of Sendai. Originally the jinbaori's          Chiba Prefecture
      purpose was functional; it was worn over
      armor for protection against cold and rain.     The kosode was the principal Japanese
      Gradually the element of design assumed         outer robe from the sixteenth century on,
      greater importance, and styles were cre-        having previously served as outer garment
      ated that reflected the personal tastes of      for the lower classes and as undergarment
      the military elite. Horizontally centered on    for the upper classes. From the kosode
      the back of this jacket of thin wool is the     evolved the modern kimono. Kosode liter-
      bamboo and sparrow crest (mon) of the           ally means "small sleeves," a reference not
      Date family embroidered in gold. Using          to the length or width of the sleeves them-
      the kirihame technique, the prominent           selves but to the size of the wrist openings.
      and variously sized circles of white, yellow,   This kosode is a representative example of
      red, green, and blue wool are fitted into       the Kanbun style of kosode decoration that
      holes cut out of the garment and trimmed        was particularly popular during the Kan-
      with different colors.                     KS   bun era (1661-1673) of the Edo period. In
332
265
      333
            266
the Kanbun style the front and back of the         On the back of this kosode, large over-         A close look at the embroidered ma-
garment are each a single field for a mark-   lapping maple leaves form the arc across        ple leaves reveals that they are solidly
edly asymmetrical design depicted quite       the shoulders to the right hem, with the        paved with cherry blossoms—a kind of sur-
large, even in closeup. The primary design    red figured satin (rinzu) background ex-        real juxtaposition much favored in kosode
field was the back, on which the design       posed on the left. The maple leaves, out-       designs of the early Edo period. The com-
formed a dramatic arc across the shoulders    lined with gold, are of two types. Some are     bination of cherry blossoms and maple
and down the right side, leaving the left     depicted in kanoko shibori, literally, "fawn-   leaves evokes for the Japanese their two fa-
side undecorated. Kosode decorated in this    spot" shibori, referring to the allover dap-    vorite seasons, spring and fall.
striking style were favored by the then-      pled pattern of small white spots, each               Other similar Kanbun-style decora-
economically powerful merchant sector of      centered on a dot of the background color.      tive schemes can be seen in the Shinsen
society, but were also widely popular with    These diagonal rows of tiny white circles       onhiinagdta, a kosode design book pub-
other classes.                                were produced by pinching off successive        lished in 1666, the sixth year of the Kan-
      An order book of the Kariganeya ko-     bits of fabric along the bias and binding       bun era.                                   KS
sode design house illustrates Kanbun styles   each bit tightly with waterproof thread or
ordered by Tôfukumon'in (1607-1678),          fiber, except at the tip, before immersion
daughter of the second Tokugawa shogun,       in the dye bath. Gold embroidery picks
Hidetada, and consort of Emperor Go-          out the veins and forms tiny globes of dew
Mizunoo.                                      on the shibori leaves. The remaining
                                              leaves are rendered in gold and white em-
                                              broidery against brush-applied black dye
                                              (hikizome).
334
267
      335
      208 Uchikake                                    cocks and large blooming peonies. Pea-
          embroidery and kanoko shibori               cocks and peonies formed a favorite
          on figured satin                            auspicious motif, symbolic of beauty and
          l.17i.8(67)                                 plenty. Running water flows through the
           W. 12O.O (46 3/4)                          design, from top to bottom. Against the
           Edo period, i8th century                   green dyed background, the design is com-
                                                      posed chiefly of a sharply defined, white
          Tokyo National Museum
                                                      reserve pattern executed by the skilled ap-
      The uchikake, a woman's outer garment           plication of dye-resistant paste. This tech-
      worn unbelted over the kosode, first ap-        nique, known as shiro age, was a typical
      peared in the Muromachi period; in the          feature of yùzen dyeing of the latter part
      Edo period women of the samurai class be-       of the Edo period. The design is high-
      gan to wear formal uchikake on an or-           lighted throughout with embroidery in
      nately embroidered background of white,         red, gold, and other colors.              KS
      red, or black. This example is made of red
      figured satin (rinzu). The design consists of 270 Kosode
      cherry blossoms and bamboo screens amid              yùzen (resist-paste) dyeing and
      conventionalized cloud-scrolls. On the               embroidery on silk
      back of the robe one of the screens is deco-
                                                           1. 174.0 (67 7/8)
      rated with a kind of pomander ball known
                                                           W. 126.O (49 */&)
      as a kusudama. Embroidery is the chief
                                                           Edo period, i9th century
      technique employed to execute the de-
      signs, with gold-leaf-covered thread used            Nomura      Collection,
      on the clouds and screens, although some             National Museum of Japanese
      of the cherry blossoms are depicted with             History,
      clusters of dots in the kanoko shibori resist-        Chiba Prefecture
      dyeing process (cat. 267).
             The design suggests one of the most      Save for the shoulder area, a design of
      beloved of Japanese pastimes—a cherry-          rafts with flowers tossed on the waves cov-
      blossom viewing party, with the partici-        ers all of this light blue silk crepe (chiri-
      pants protected from vulgar gazes by the        men) kosode. The theme of rafts with
      lightweight bamboo screens. Clouds drift-       flowers was favored by women of the
      ing among the cherry blossoms refer to a        court and samurai aristocracy for their
      perennial Japanese literary conceit, ex-        clothing; in this example the rendering of
      pressed in scores of poems: an "elegant         the design is already quite stylized.
      confusion" as to whether it is cherry blos-          The waves and spray are depicted by
      soms or clouds one is looking at.            KS the shiro age technique, reserved from the
                                                      blue dye with dye-resistant paste; the
                                                      crests of the waves are embroidered with
      269 Furisode                                    gold-leaf-covered thread. Borne on the
             yùzen (resist paste) dyeing and          rafts are cherry blossoms, irises, narcissus,
             embroidery on silk                       peonies, wisteria, and chrysanthemums,
             1.166.3 (64 7/8)                         depicted by a variety of methods: reserved
             W. 124.2 (48 3/8)                        in white, dyed in indigo and purple in
             Edo period, iQth century                 stenciled kanoko dots, with embroidery in
             Tokyo National Museum                    red, purple, light green, and gold. The ru-
                                                      inous cost of kanoko shibori, besides plac-
      The furisode (swinging sleeves) is a type of ing it beyond the means even of many
      kosode distinguished by sleeves that hang       samurai, actually brought about its prohi-
      free of the main body of the garment, be-       bition by the shogunate in sumptuary laws
      low the arm. Although in the early part of that were sometimes harshly enforced.
      the Edo period the sleeves of the furisode      Stenciled kanoko, being far easier to exe-
      were not especially long, they gradually in- cute, was neither exorbitant nor illegal: in-
      creased in length so that by the latter half    stead of binding each spot individually
      of the period, sleeves as long as ninety cen- with dye-proof fiber, the dyer would resist
      timeters (c. thirty-five inches) were made.     an entire motif with paste applied through
      The furisode was worn on special occa-          a stencil; after the dye had dried and the
       sions by children and young women. This        paste had been removed, the dyer might
      refined example could have been worn by         simulate true kanoko by painting in the
      a woman of the samurai class. The fabric        tiny central dot of background color by
       is a type of silk crepe called chirimen. Its   hand. The placement of the design on the
      textured matte surface lent itself well to      garment, the use of the shiro age yùzen
      the delicate detailed designs created by        technique, and the densely stitched em-
       yùzen dyeing.                                  broidery are characteristic of the later part
             The uppermost portion is dyed a solid of the Edo period. The purple embroidery
       green. Beneath, a refreshing design runs       floss was probably dyed with a chemical
       diagonally across the garment: pine and        pigment.                                      KS
       maple trees occupy the upper half while in
       the bottom half are male and female pea-
336
268
      337
      269
338
270
      339
      271 Kosode                                      Characteristically, touches of embroidery
          embroidery and dyeing on silk               in bright gold and colors liven this cool
          1.155.0 (60 Vz)                             color scheme. Katabira in other color
          w. 120.o (46 3/4)                           schemes might be worn by men as well as
          Edo period, icth century                    women, but blue-and-white chaya-dyed ka-
          Nomura Collection,                          tabira were worn only by women, particu-
          National Museum of Japanese                 larly if not exclusively by women of the
          History,                                    upper levels of samurai society.
                                                            Typically, chayazome designs were
          Chiba Prefecture
                                                      landscapes or waterscapes; here we have
      A characteristic samurai-class kosode from      an idealized rustic landscape with a stream
      the latter part of the Edo period, the deco-    purling through it, fishing nets drawn up
      ration on this example is concentrated be-      to dry (in tepeelike shapes) along the
      tween the waist and the bottom hem and          stream banks, compounds of thatch-
      executed in shiro age, reserved white, with     roofed cottages behind brushwood fences,
      added embroidery. On the light green            a tiny arched bridge, and everywhere flow-
      chirimen (silk crepe) cloth is a shore scene    ering fields and pine groves in a boldly
      of plovers and pine trees, with the waves       two-dimensional arrangement whose re-
      and pine trees in reserved white and em-        semblance to a meandering stream is prob-
      broidered in gold-leaf-covered thread. The      ably not accidental. In this magical
      plovers, sewn in gold, fly in a dipping line    landscape, verdure of all the seasons ap-
      from one sleeve to the other. A hut origi-      pear together: plum blossoms of late win-
      nally embroidered at the shore in black         ter; cherry blossoms of early spring; irises,
      thread is now all but gone.                     peonies, and narcissus of summer; chry-
           Many kosode designs of the Edo pe-          santhemums, bellflowers, bush clover, and
      riod were based on literary themes taken         maple leaves of fall. Bamboo grass carpets
      from well-known Japanese and Chinese             the open spaces, water lilies lift their broad
      poems, a trend especially noticeable in ko-      leaves in the stream, and dense stands of
      sode worn by the court and samurai               pine offer cool shade.
      classes. By long poetic tradition, plovers             As well as being aesthetically pleasing,
      over water bespeak winter. The combina-          this katabira is technically a tour de force.
      tion of plovers, a hut, and pine trees at the    The outlines of the paste-resisted areas
      seashore in this example recalls the fa-         were flawless. The ivory background areas
      mous poem by Minamoto no Kanemasa in             were probably brush-dyed, as were the
      the early-twelfth-century poetry anthology        touches of yellow in the pine trees, and
      Kiriydshu (Anthology of golden leaves):           the very fine slightly greenish blue lines in
                                                        the fishing nets and the brushwood fences
      Plovers                                           have probably been drawn with indigo
      fly to and from Awaji Island                      pigment.                                  KS
      calling;
      how many nights have their cries                273 Katabira
      awakened the barrier guard of Suma ?      KS         chaya-zome and embroidery on hemp
                                                           1.161.0 (62 3/4)
      272 Katabira                                         w. 123.0 (48)
          chayazome, embroidery, and pigment               Edo period, icth century
          on hemp                                          Nomura Collection,
          1. 165.0 (64 3/8)                                National Museum of Japanese
          W. 129.0 (50 !/4)                                History,
           Edo period, i8th century                        Chiba Prefecture
           Nomura Collection,
           National Museum of Japanese                 This hemp katabira, or summer robe, is
           History,                                    the canvas for a unified shore scene. Only
                                                       the left sleeve is blank, and so persuasive is
           Chiba Prefecture
                                                       the design that the viewer imagines it con-
      Katabira were unlined kosode worn made           tinuing there, hidden only by distance and
      for the most part of hemp or ramie. The          by mist. Unlike cat. 272, which is assert-
      crisp coolness of these fabrics made them        ively two-dimensional and exceedingly
      particularly suitable for summer wear.           stylized in its depiction of motifs from na-
      Chayazome, or "Chaya dyeing," refers to          ture, this landscape recedes into the dis-
      the exceedingly laborious, exacting, and         tance from hem to shoulder and treats
      expensive technique whereby the areas to         each individual motif with considerable
      be reserved were paste-resisted on both          modeling and three-dimensionality. All the
      sides of the fabric before the garment was
      dip-dyed in indigo. Several shades of blue
      could be achieved by paste-resisting each
      area of the design when its desired shade
      had been reached, then continuing to dip
      the garment for darker shades elsewhere.
340
271
      341
      272
342
273
      343
      blue in the design was executed in indigo       276 Koshimaki
      in chaya-zome resist dyeing; when the dye           embroidery on silk
      had dried and the resist past had been re-          1.163.3 (63 5/8)
      moved, the other colors were added with             w. 126.0 (49 Vfc)
      embroidery.                                         Edo period, igth century
           A thatch-roofed house is seen under
                                                          Tokyo National Museum
      pine and blossoming cherry trees on the
      right sleeve; below is a salt-evaporating       A part of the formal summer attire of
      pan in a pine grove; near the bottom are        women of the warrior class, the koshimaki,
      thatch-roofed houses among pine and             literally "waist wrap," was worn over the
      cherry trees and fishnets hung to dry. Gen-     katabira] it was worn off the shoulders and
      tle waves connect these motifs. This shore      arms, secured at the waist and loosely
      landscape, set against the slightly off-white   wrapped around the lower half of the
      hemp background, is appropriate for a           body. In earlier times the uchikake had
       summer robe. It is thought to have been        been worn in this fashion in the summer,
       worn by a relatively low-ranking woman of      and this was called koshimaki sugata (waist
       a daimyo household. Fashion dictated the       wrap form), but in the Edo period the style
       red silk facings at the collar and wrist       became formalized and the koshimaki as
       openings.                                KS    such was developed. Over a short-sleeved
                                                      katabira such as cat. 273, a similarly short-
      274 Katabira                                    sleeved koshimaki (cat. 275) would be
          chaya-zome and embroidery on hemp           worn; if the katabira was of the furisode
          1.175.8 (68 1/2)                            (swinging sleeves, cat. 272) type, a long-
           W. 12O.O (46 3/4)                          sleeved koshimaki (cat. 276) would accom-
           Edo period, i8th century                   pany it. In the late Edo period, certain
                                                      colors and designs were defined for the
           Tokyo National Museum                       koshimaki\ typically, motifs with auspi-
      Like cat. 272, this chayazome katabira is en-   cious associations were finely embroidered
      tirely covered by an idyllic landscape, in       on black or brown plain-weave silk
      which rustic villas await the arrival of a      (nerinuki).
      daimyo household escaping the oppressive               On cat. 275 the pine twigs, flowering
      urban heat. This too is a fantasy land-          plum, and bamboo—the "Three Friends
      scape, in which vegetative states of all the     of Winter"—connote courage, purity, and
      seasons are seen together: cherry blossoms       resiliency; the cranes and the tortoises
      of spring; iris and cockscomb of summer;         (symbolized by the hexagonal "tortoise-
      chysanthemums, bellflowers, and maple            shell lozenges") connote longevity and pu-
      leaves of fall; and the evergreen pines,         rity; and the four-sided "coin" motif
      symbols of winter. Unlike cat. 272, this         enclosing a stylized blossom stands for
      landscape is mostly water, and water reeds,      prosperity.
      water plantain (with arrow-shaped leaves),             Cat. 276 offers the instantly recogniz-
      and pickerel-weed grow abundantly. The           able "myriad treasures" (takara zukushi),
      viewpoint is generally closer, and the mo-       singly and together the emblems of mate-
      tifs slightly larger and more three-             rial advantage and good fortune. The
      dimensional than in cat. 272.                    "myriad treasures" assemblage can vary
            Chaya dyeing is a lost art—the com-        somewhat in its composition; here it
      position of the resist paste is no longer        seems to include the hat and cape of invis-
      known—so it is not possible to replicate         ibility, the keys to the storehouse of good
      the making of such a katabira. It has been       fortune, the flaming wish-granting jewel,
      plausibly said, however, that the making of      the mallet of good fortune, the drawstring
      a chayazome katabira of this quality took        money pouch, crossed cloves (alternatively
      over two years from the creation of the de-      identified as rhinoceros horns, a highly es-
       sign, making such garments among the            teemed restorative throughout East Asia),
       most luxurious dyed textiles of the Edo          and the "seven jewels"—this last a cate-
       period.                                   KS     gory that comprises gold, silver, and a vary-
                                                        ing list of gemstones.
                                                             The plethora of connotative motifs
       275 Koshimaki                                    on the koshimaki seems intended to com-
           embroidery on silk                           pensate for the notable absence of such
           1.174.4(68)                                  motifs on the chayazome katabira with
           w. 121.4 (47 3/8)                            which they were worn.                     KS
           Edo period, i8th century
           Tokyo National Museum
344
274
      345
      275
346
276
      347
TEA CEREMONY
     UTENSILS
           349
      277 Tea container, named Rikyu                    for his alliance and, remembering Sansai's
          shiribukura                                   earlier desire for the chaire, presented it to
          h. 6.7 (25/8)                                 him as a reward. This dramatic prove-
          Southern Song                                 nance adds immensely to the value of a
          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                            utensil that also is held in great artistic re-
                                                        gard. In this way the chaire has been im-
          Important Art Object
                                                        bued with a lasting legacy.
      This small container for thick tea, or                  Being relatively small in size, the
      chaire, was probably first used as a medi-        Rikyu shiribukura chaire lends itself well to
      cine container in China, and later came to        the tea man's gentle handling. The dark
      be greatly treasured by the Japanese. For         brown color of the outer glaze resembles a
      warriors such as Oda Nobunaga (1534-              thin coating of molasses. The shiny glaze
      1582), Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598), and        covers the chaire from the upper rim to
      Tokugawa leyasu (1543-1616), who sought           the lower area, where it is only partially
      to unify Japan at the end of the sixteenth        glazed. A spiralling pattern on the foot of
      century, the possession of a prize chaire of-     the chaire indicates that it was cut from
      ten symbolized political and cultural             the wheel with a string.
      power. Chaire were often bestowed upon                  Appreciation of a chaire depends to a
      daimyo as rewards for loyalty and support         large extent upon what the Japanese call
      on the battlefield. Hosokawa Sansai (1563-        its "scenery," or the appearance of the
      1646), for instance, is said to have so de-       glaze on the outer surface. This tea con-
      sired the chaire shown here that he               tainer has obviously experienced a less
      declared he would trade one entire prov-          than peaceful life, attested by the evi-
      ince for it. Owners would display famous          dence of repair around the upper edge.
      pieces boldly, in order to humble and sub-        The attitude toward preservation in the
      due those who possessed nothing as great.         tea ceremony (chanoyu) illustrates the seri-
              Chaire were also appreciated for their    ous reverence tea people held for their
      artistic value and actual use in the tea          utensils. A chip or crack would be lovingly
      gathering. Many warriors treasured and            repaired and the utensil would be valued
      protected their utensils because of strong        even more after having suffered such a
      sentimental attachment. In a time of con-         blemish. The natural weathering of the
      stant warfare, when retainers could easily        utensils provided yet another dimension
      change sides, utensils proved unable to be-       that would affect its legendary worth. Ap-
      tray their owners.                                preciation depends also on the shape of
              Chaire were brought to Japan around       the chaire, which is one of several desig-
      the middle of the thirteenth century, dur-        nated standard chaire shapes. As with most
       ing the Kamakura period. Many of the val-         utensils in the tea gathering, one also
       ued chaire were fired in China during the         views the bottom of the chaire. This is
       Southern Song and Yuan dynasties. The             done by gently tilting the chaire to one
       locations of many of these Chinese kilns          side to obtain a view of the foot with the
       are unknown, as is the name of the potter         mark left behind when the potter cut it
       who made this small container. Chaire of-         from the wheel.
       ten are discussed under the rubric kara-               The mouth of this chaire is covered
       mono, or Chinese objects, superior to             with an ivory lid. It is said that the paper-
       Japanese objects and therefore held in            thin gold foil applied to the reverse side of
       high esteem by the Japanese.                      the lid served as a device to signal any ob-
              This container is called the Rikyu         vious tampering with the tea. The foil
       shiribukura. As recorded in the Kitano            would change color if poison were present.
       ochanoyu no ki, the great tea master Sen          In the world of the warrior, taking part in a
       no Rikyu owned and used it at the great           tea gathering could at times be dangerous.
       Kitano tea gathering held by Toyotomi Hi-               Three cloth bags made of different
       deyoshi in the tenth month of 1587. This          fabrics accompany this chaire. During the
       grand tea gathering is believed to have           actual preparation of tea only one bag cov-
       been an attempt by Hideyoshi to invite tea        ers the chaire, but the Rikyu shiribukura
       connoisseurs from all over the country to         can be used with any of the three inter-
       come and display their most famous uten-          changeable cloth bags, all of a type known
        sils. The latter part of the chaire's name,      as kantd, which is a striped cloth. The fab-
        shiribukura, derives from its stout shape,       ric of the two outer bags is labeled jodai
        which slightly bulges out toward the base.       and chùko, pointing to the period of im-
        Despite Hosokawa Sansai's known desire           portation; jôdai objects were imported dur-
        to possess this chaire, he was denied this       ing the first half of the Muromachi period
        privilege during Rikyü's lifetime. It was        (fifteenth century and before) and chùko
        only after Rikyü's untimely death that the       arrived in the latter half (sixteenth cen-
        chaire found its way into the Tokugawa           tury). The fabric of the center bag is
        family. Following the important Battle of        known as Taishi kantd, which is an ikat-
        Sekigahara (cat. 104) in 1600, Sansai was in-    weave cloth found in Indonesia. The
        vited by leyasu for a banquet. Hidetada,
        leyasu's son, is said to have praised Sansai
350
                      277
splashed-pattern technique of kasuri,           of scrolls or to be sewn into bags for chaire.   remained strong among the daimyo and
which still continues to be produced, is        The slender rope attached to the top is          was never completely replaced by a new
characterized by a background of dark red,      tied in a precise way to indicate whether        and overwhelming purely Japanese aes-
with thin, woven horizontal stripes of yel-     the chaire contains tea. The complicated         thetic. The artistic appreciation and cate-
low and dark blue. A pattern of white,          method of tying was also supposedly an           gorization of Chinese chaire, which had
brown, and yellow thread weaves its way         additional measure intended to preclude          been standardized during the Higashi-
between the stripes, lending the fabric a       tampering with the contents.                     yama period, remain close to the divisions
"splashed" look. From its name, Taishi                Throughout the development of the          and ranking seen among chaire today. JIK
kantd is often mistakenly believed to be as-    tea gathering the Japanese have expressed
sociated with another famous fabric that it     a special fondness for covers and contain-       278 Teabowl
closely resembles. This different and           ers, and utilitarian purposes became sup-            h. 6.7 (2 5/8)
much earlier cloth was used with Buddhist       plemented with ceremonial and aesthetic              Southern Song
artifacts and is thought to trace its origins   intentions. Likewise, the boxes for tea
to the Hóryúji, a temple in Nara, which is      utensils are a coveted component of uten-            Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
associated with the famous statesman Shó-       sil ownership. The tea scoop and its ac-         Tenmoku teabowls were originally brought
toku Taishi (574-622). The Taishi kantd         companying tube container and the many           into Japan by monks returning from China
shown here was imported during the Mo-          layers of wrappings and boxes, both inner        during the Kamakura period. The Chinese
moyama period. The term probably de-             and outer, only accentuate the worth of         term tenmoku refers to a type of bowl dis-
rived from a family named Taishiya, in the       the tea container. The boxes also serve as      tinguished by a conical shape, a small, nar-
city of Sakai, who greatly treasured this        vital evidence in certifying the validity of    row foot, and relatively thin walls. Many of
 material.                                       its contents.                                   these bowls are said to have come from
      These cloth bags were originally used            From the Momoyama period to the           Mount Tianmu in Chekiang Province,
 to protect the ceramic utensil from harm.      beginning of the Edo period, the produc-         where many Japanese monks were known
 Gradually the bags themselves, and the         tion of native Japanese chaire flourished        to have been trained and introduced to tea
 way they were tied, became an aesthetic        along with the development of wabi (rus-         drinking within the framework of monas-
 component of the tea gathering. The fab-       tic) tea, which sought to incorporate ku-        tic regulations. The name tenmoku is actu-
 ric was often taken from extremely valu-        niyaki, or native wares, into the tea           ally a Chinese place name.
 able and rare bolts imported from China.        gathering. However, as seen in Sansai's de-           This tenmoku bowl was thrown on a
 Unwilling to waste even the scrap ma-           sire for the Rikyù shiribukura, the old es-     potter's wheel, unlike the later hand-
 terial, the Ashikaga shoguns used rem-          tablished taste for the Chinese chaire           molded native Japanese Raku bowls (cats.
 nants of Chinese fabrics in the mounting                                                         285, 286). It represents an artistic expres-
                                                                                                                                          351
278
279
sion bound to the ideal of precision, per-     bowl is very wide, like a morning glory in      integral part of the use of these wares and
fection, and refinement. It was almost in      full bloom. On the sloping inside wall of       valued as an artistic piece in itself. After a
reaction to this type of highly refined Chi-   the bowl,.almost halfway down from the          guest received a tenmoku bowl of tea, he
nese ware that later tea men began to cre-     rim, are five oil drops, suggesting five        would remove the bowl from the stand
ate native Japanese wares with more            crests spaced at even intervals. This inten-    and cradle it in his hands to drink. After
natural shapes. The almost pristine shape      tional design indicates that the study of       carefully observing the features of that
of this yuteki, or oil-spot, tenmoku bowl      glazes during the Song Dynasty had pro-         particular bowl, he would return the bowl
was highly valued by early connoisseurs        gressed greatly. The thickness of the rim       to its stand before relinquishing it to his
and probably was appreciated more for its      indicates that this bowl would probably         host.
decorative value than utilitarian purpose.     have been a decorative piece for display              When tea drinking was first intro-
The glaze is appropriately named, as it re-    on a special shelf, as it would be difficult    duced to Japan, very simply decorated
sembles a film of oil sparkling on the sur-    to drink from this particular bowl.             tenmoku bowls were used in Zen monas-
face of the water. Silver and blue spots             Tenmoku bowls, when actually used at      teries. In present-day Kyoto there is a spe-
glisten on the black background.               tea gatherings or displayed as decorative       cial tea gathering at Kenninji every April,
      Tenmoku bowls are often compared to      pieces, were presented on special tenmoku       to commemorate Myóan Eisai (1141-1215),
 the half-sphere formed by the base of a lo-   stands (cats. 280, 281). Due to the very nar-   the founder of the temple. During the
 tus flower. Usually the sides of the bowl     row and seemingly precarious base charac-       time since the introduction of tea in the
 extend gradually upward in a straight line    teristic of tenmoku bowls, the stand was an     twelfth century, a new Song style of pre-
 from the foot. However, the mouth of this                                                     paring tea had been developed, which di-
352
 280
281
       353
      282
rectly influenced tea preparation in the        279 Teabowl                                       and Chinese utensils that would comple-
Japanese tea ceremony. The Kenninji                 h. 4.5 (13/4)                                 ment each other.
gathering tries to recreate tea drinking as         Southern Song                                       Hosokawa Yüsai (1534-1610), father of
it was practiced in Zen temples after                                                             Sansai (1563-1646), was not only a re-
                                                    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
Eisai's time during the fourteenth century.                                                       nowned warrior like his son, but is espe-
Tenmoku bowls on stands are distributed         The distinguishing feature of this Chinese        cially remembered for his great literary
to each of the guests sitting in the main       tenmoku bowl is the leaf design in the bot-       accomplishments. He extensively studied
temple hall. A monk carries a bronze            tom and along the side of the bowl, in-           the composition of thirty-one-syllable po-
pitcher with a long, slender nozzle, which      tended to be discovered after the tea had         ems (wakd) and wrote a poem pertaining to
provides a tip on which a small bamboo          been finished. "Konoha" literally means           the warrior and his training in all fields:
tea whisk rests. After removing the tea         tree leaf, and describes a special technique      "Of those who dislike poetry, linked verse,
whisk, the monk then pours hot water into       reserved for tenmoku bowls made with this         dance and tea, the limitation of their up-
the already tea-filled tenmoku bowl and         characteristic. This bowl, made in Kiangsi        bringing is plainly obvious." However, like
proceeds to whisk the brew. He serves           Province and imported into Japan, has a           the delicate balance sought between Chi-
each guest in turn, in this same manner.        disturbing yet romantic charm. It is almost       nese and Japanese wares, a daimyo had to
      During the fourteenth and fifteenth       as if a solitary leaf, swept up by autumn         juggle his role as warrior and tea connois-
centuries, the Ashikaga shogun prized ten-      breezes, came to gently rest in the bowl          seur. Known as a skilled tea person, Sansai
moku bowls for their foreign import ap-         just moments before firing. The outline of        never permitted his artistic calling to over-
peal, and included them in many of the          the veins in the leaf is clearly set off by the   shadow his profession as a warrior. When
lists of famous tea utensils and art objects.   dark tortoise-shell brown of the glaze.           Hotta Masamori (1608-1651), governor of
In later centuries, tenmoku lost much of        Leaves with high silica content, such as          Kaga Province, requested that Sansai dis-
its appeal as the growth of native Japanese     the horse chestnut, are considered the            play his famous collection of utensils, San-
wares was actively encouraged, and as a         best kind to use for this firing effect.          sai evidently disappointed him by dis-
mixture of native and Chinese wares came              Chinese utensils such as these ten-         playing, instead, warrior paraphernalia.
to be used in a harmonious, subdued fash-       moku bowls and their stands were an inte-                                                     JIK
ion. Finally, during the Edo period the in-     gral part of any daimyo's collection. The
terest in the tenmoku bowl was revived by       possession of Chinese utensils went hand          280 Teabowl stand
daimyo tea practitioners. The tenmoku           in hand with the increased production of              lacquer on wood with shell
continued to be used as a ceremonial ware       domestic and Korean-made tea utensils.                diam. 16.4 (61A)
 for offerings made to the gods and Bud-        Murata Shukô (1423-1502), known as one                Ming
 dhas. In addition, it came to symbolize the    of the early proponents of native Japanese
 type of bowl for serving a nobleman or                                                               Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                tea, never advised completely forsaking
 someone of high rank at a tea gathering.       Chinese wares for domestic ones. He sug-          Tenmoku teabowl stands were imported
 In this instance, the elaborate tenmoku        gested that tea practitioners should assem-       along with tenmoku bowls from China to
 stand, in some tea schools, was occasion-      ble a harmonious grouping of Japanese             be used as supports for the narrow-footed
 ally replaced by a plain wood stand, which                                                       bowls (cats. 278, 279). The stand itself was
 was used only once and then discarded. JIK
354
          283
284
often valued as an independent artistic         281 Teabowl stand                              the ruler began to visit his subordinates.
piece. This tenmoku stand has a floral pat-         lacquer on wood                            Socializing became a means of strengthen-
tern encompassed by hexagonal, or                   diam. 15.5 (oVs)                           ing the fragile bond between ruler and vas-
tortoise-back-shaped, crest designs, both           Ming                                       sal. The Ashikaga shoguns regularly visited
inlaid with mother-of-pearl. This tech-                                                        the Hosokawa and other daimyo resi-
                                                    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
nique of applying iridescent seashell,                                                         dences. It was a heavy responsibility to
known as raden, was also used earlier, on,      This tenmoku stand, used as a support for      provide first-rate cultural entertainment.
for example, saddles of the Heian period.       a tenmoku bowl was imported from China.              Special gathering places and suitably
The use of very thin fragments of seashell      Guri refers to the spiral pattern carved in    important utensils, such as this tenmoku
is a specifically Chinese technique and is      deep relief across the surface. The beauty     stand, were required to accommodate
believed not to have been practiced in Ja-      of this stand is due to the technique          such illustrious guests. The combination
pan. Most Japanese raden technique uses a       known as tsuikoku, where layers of dark        of utensils selected for a tea gathering also
thicker fragment of shell. Upon closer in-      brown, almost black, lacquer are alter-        revealed whether careful consideration
spection of this particular tenmoku stand,      nately applied with vermilion layers. The      had been given to the affair. Not just any
the pieces of seashell resemble the peeled-     carved spiral pattern accentuates the strat-   tenmoku bowl could be paired with this
away cross-section of a tree's growth rings.    ified layers of lacquer.                       stand. Warriors wished to be recognized
The effect is one of transparent fragments           The provenance and use of this par-       for their acumen, not only in the arts of
interlaced with delicate strands resembling     ticular tenmoku stand are undocumented.        war, but also in the more creative arena of
 spidery veins of mica.                   JIK   In daimyo tea culture the quality and wide     art and culture. They were competing not
                                                variety of utensils collected by daimyo re-    only with other warriors, but with the old
                                                vealed his artistic knowledge and refine-      aristocrats who had lost political power to
                                                ment. High quality utensils were essential     the warrior class, yet were thought to still
                                                for entertaining superiors. Before the me-     outrank the warriors in pedigree and social
                                                dieval period, a subordinate was expected       refinement.                               JIK
                                                to pay a visit to his superior's residence,
                                                while later the custom was reversed and
                                                                                                                                         355
   285
286
z8z Square tray                                  of good fortune, decorates the lid of this      ing of the fire needed to boil the water.
    lacquer on wood                              incense container. The tsuishu technique,       The incense must be carefully aimed so
    diam. 18.1 (yVs)                             seen also on the peony and leaf incense         that it falls close to the fire, but not too
    Ming                                         container (cat. 284) is effectively used        close, thus prolonging the release of the
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         here. Budai is recognizable by his enor-        scent that permeates the tearoom.
                                                 mous belly and the bag that he carries to             This incense container probably was
This lacquered tray was made in China            collect alms.                             JIK   crafted in China. Using a technique
during the early Ming period. Katatsuki                                                          known as tsuishu a design is carved
chaire, or square-shouldered thick tea con-      284 Incense container                           through several layers of lacquer revealing
tainers, were customarily displayed placed           lacquer on wood                             the different colors lying below the sur-
in the middle of a square tray of this type.                                                     face. This container has layers of red,
                                                     diam. 5.5 (zVs)
Since the purpose of the tray is to en-                                                          green, and yellow, which result in a variety
                                                     Ming
hance the beauty of the thick tea con-                                                           of colors in the flowers, leaves and stems.
tainer, an unadorned, yet tastefully                 Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                          The tsuishu technique was commonly
lacquered tray is much preferred by tea                                                          used to highlight a pattern known as "red
people. Most thick tea containers, or            Kdgd literally means "incense" and "to fit
                                                                                                 flowers and green leaves." Here the flower
chaire, are a shade of dark brown, which         together"—a reference to the lidded con-
                                                                                                 is a peony, which gives a distinct feeling of
contrasts nicely with the red color of the       tainer. The incense container in the tea
                                                                                                 Chinese elegance and taste.
tray. Visible cracks on the tray's surface       gathering holds the incense until it is
                                                                                                       Materials used in making incense con-
are evidence of natural aging. The bottom        added directly to the fire beneath the ket-     tainers can include lacquer, wood, metal,
is covered with black lacquer and marked         tle. This utensil should not be confused        bamboo, shell, or ceramic. Lacquer in-
by an unidentifiable red seal.             JIK   with an incense burner or censer, which         cense containers were often part of the
                                                 were displayed in the tokonoma (alcove)         shoin style of decoration. The early prefer-
                                                 until late in the Momoyama period. The          ence for Chinese wares was later replaced,
283 Incense container                            incense container is used in conjunction
    lacquer on wood                                                                              as native and Korean wares were gradually
                                                 with the charcoal ceremony, which, along        integrated into the tea gathering and ob-
    diam. 6.2 (21/4)                             with the serving of the meal and making of
    Ming                                                                                          jects from everyday use were adapted. Ri-
                                                 the tea, is an integral component of a com-
                                                                                                 kyü enjoyed choosing tea utensils from
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         plete tea gathering. Skillful placing of the     among the most ordinary objects, which
                                                 charcoal encourages the successful burn-
The plump figure of the beggar monk Bu-                                                           were often overlooked by others.
dai (J: Hotei, cat. 80), one of the seven gods                                                         The modern-day tea gathering is of-
356
             287
ten seen as a synthesis of the five senses.       tea, which broke away from the more pre-         typical of Chôjiro's bowls. A dab of black
Often, small pieces of incense are buried         cise, severe Chinese style that had held         lacquer has been applied to repair a blem-
under the barely lit charcoal and release         the fascination of Japanese tea men. In          ish on the top rim of the bowl. A slight
their scent just as the guests arrive. Thus       1585 Rikyü commissioned Chôjirô, a tile          tinge of green inside Otogoze offers proof
the guests are greeted by the lingering           maker for the Jurakudai palace, to create a      of its use.
scent of the incense, before they see the         new type of teabowl according to his strict            Otogoze comes equipped with an im-
host. The guest makes his way along the           specifications.                                  pressive array of protective boxes. First,
tea garden path, washes his hands in the                In contrast to the wheelthrown Chi-        the bowl is wrapped in a cloth bag made
water basin placed outside the tearoom,           nese tenmoku bowls (cats. 278, 279), Raku        from silk crepe. The inner box is made
and symbolically cleanses his thoughts.           teabowls are hand-modeled, with consider-        from paulownia wood and bears the name
Warriors were asked to leave their swords         ably thicker, straighter walls. Raku bowls       of the bowl in the handwriting of the
outside the tearoom door. The use of in-          are usually covered with either a somber         seventh-generation Hosokawa. Paulownia
cense can be traced to Buddhist ceremo-           black or red glaze. Unlike tenmoku bowls,        wood is almost religiously used to store
nies. Although the ritualistic, religious use     Raku bowls were meant to be placed di-           precious tea utensils. It is valued for its ap-
of incense has since been combined with           rectly on the mat, rather than on a stand.       parent resistance to fire and humidity. In
the purely pleasurable, incense still con-        For this reason a Raku bowl has a wider,         some areas of Japan it has been the cus-
 jures up a feeling of otherworldliness and       more stable foot.                                tom to plant a paulownia tree after the
 tranquility.                               JIK         Chôjirô, the founder of the first gen-     birth of a daughter. When the daughter is
                                                  eration of Raku potters, was commis-             ready to marry, the tree has grown large
285 Teabowl, named Otogoze                        sioned by Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646) to         enough to provide the wood for the trous-
    Raku Chôjirô (1516-1592)                       make this teabowl. Rikyu's grandson Sotan       seau containers.
                                                  gave this bowl the name Otogoze, also the              To hold a teabowl cradled safely be-
    h. 8.2 (31/4)
                                                   name of one other bowl by Chôjirô. Oío-         tween both hands, feeling the lulling
    Momoyama period
                                                  goze refers to a female, but not to the frail,   warmth through the thick clay body, is
     Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                            delicate classical type of beauty. On the       truly a sensual experience. All the senses
     Important Art Object                          contrary, this term implies the coarse,         are ignited as one lifts the bowl upward to
                                                   homely features of a woman with a high          the lips. This is followed by a savoring of
It is said that Raku teabowls perfectly cap-
                                                   forehead, plump and bulging cheeks, and         the scent and taste of the tea. Unlike the
ture the wabi spirit of Rikyü's (1522-1591)
                                                   flat nose. When viewed from above and           handle of a western teacup, which dis-
style of tea. Rikyü was responsible for in-
                                                   from the side, the slight warp of the une-      tances one from the immediacy of the
troducing a native Japanese aesthetic to
                                                   ven rim is evident. The dull, matte glaze is
                                                                                                                                               357
brew and the cup, the teabowl is designed        tests, water was boiled in a large kettle and    legs of early kettles and was adopted later
for direct, personal contact. The diameter       then transferred to a covered serving con-       as a popular design for kettle lugs.
of a teabowl is considerably larger than a       tainer, which was then used to pour hot                The contrast of materials, shapes, and
teacup and one's face literally enters into      water over the powdered tea. In other in-        textures of utensils used in a tea gathering
the teabowl as it is engulfed by the wide        stances, hot water was used directly from        presents a curious phenomenon. Compare
rim. One does not just hold a Raku tea-          kettles that were usually placed in a sepa-      the immense weight of the kettle with the
bowl, one is embraced by it.               JIK   rate room or corridor away from the              delicate, almost airy quality of the bamboo
                                                 guests.                                          tea scoop. It is part of a tea student's train-
                                                      As part of the prototypical method for      ing to handle all utensils with equal re-
286 Teabowl
                                                 serving tea, water was boiled in a large, tra-   spect and care. In his didactic poems,
    Raku Sónyú (1664-1716)
                                                 ditional kitchen kettle and then trans-          Rikyü suggested that heavy utensils
    diam. 12.1 (43/4)                            ferred to a covered container that was           should be skillfully lifted so as to appear to
    Edo period                                   used to pour hot water over the powdered         be almost weightless, and, similarly, that
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         tea already in the bowl. Kettles for boiling     light utensils should not be carelessly
                                                 water were usually placed in a separate          waved around, but thoughtfully handled,
The fifth-generation Raku potter, Sonyu,         room or corridor away from the guests.           as if they possessed a secret weight.
was adopted by the Raku family at the age        Gradually the kettle moved to the tearoom              During a tea gathering, after the char-
of two from a wealthy Kyoto family. He           where tea was prepared directly in front of      coal has been added and the fire begins to
was a cousin to the famous brothers, Kôrin       the guests. It was at this point that the        light below the kettle, a murmur can be
(1658-1716) and Kenzan (1663-1743).              mere kitchen utensil began to achieve a          heard building in the quiet, enclosed space
Kórin was a famous Edo-period painter            level of creative artistry.                      of the tearoom. Tea people compare this
and designer in the Rinpa style. Kenzan,              The Hosokawa family collection in-          heated whispering of the kettle to the
the younger, is remembered best for his          cludes eight old tea kettles. All seem to be     sound of the wind through the pines. JIK
ceramic wares. There is still no clear expla-    a different shape and variety and come
nation why the fourth-generation potter,         from different localities throughout Japan.
Ichinyu, adopted a son despite the fact          (Experts believe that this random sam-           288 Tea scoop
that he had already had a son born to him.       pling was deliberate.) The kettle shown              Sen no Rikyü (1522-1591)
A family conflict ensued, and the natural-                                                            bamboo
born son, Ichigen, left the Raku family
with his mother and established his own
                                                 here, with a pattern of pine, bamboo, and
                                                 plum, was made in Ashiya, situated in                1.17.7(7)
                                                 present-day Fukuoka Prefecture. At the               Momoyama period
kiln.                                            time this kettle was cast the two major               Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      This red Raku teabowl is shown with        kettle-producing areas were Ashiya and
a paulownia box, which bears a pressed           Tenmyó. Ashiya is located at the mouth of        For westerners, the tea scoop, or chashaku,
seal and signature. Sonyu seems to have          the Onga River, then known as the Ashiya         is perhaps the most puzzling of all tea
modeled the shapes of his bowls upon             River, and it is believed that casting was       utensils. This fragile sliver of bamboo with
those preferred by Rikyü. Upon examining         done there in order to utilize productively      its willowy curve and slender handle seems
the bottom of the bowl after drinking the        the soil and iron sand.                          to lack the grandeur of a teabowl, nor is it
tea, as is the general rule in tea, one would         Ashiya kettles are characteristically fa-   the product of a lengthy and rigorous
find the graceful swirl of a whirlpool. The      mous for their designs, which are etched         process such as that needed to make a tea
clay walls are thick and the foot is low.        in relief on the surface of the kettle's front   kettle. Yet this unassuming object is per-
The rim intentionally expresses an imper-        and back. Some of the typical designs in-        haps the most treasured and appreciated
fect roundness that is characteristic of         clude flowers and birds, horses, or moun-        utensil shown here. Unlike other utensils
hand-built Raku bowls.                     JIK   tains and water. The pattern here is a           that were crafted by trained artisans, the
                                                 popular combination that weaves together         tea scoop is customarily carved by the tea
287 Teakettle                                    the motifs of pine, bamboo, and plum. All        man himself. Thus these mere shavings of
    iron                                         three plants are especially resilient to the     bamboo have been shaped to produce a
    h. 17.5 (67/s)                               cold and have come auspiciously to sym-          personal expression of an individual's tea.
    Muromachi period                             bolize strength. Etched on one side of the       Styles of tea scoops are meticulously ex-
                                                 kettle is a plum tree that is easily recog-      amined and studied by later generations,
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                 nized by its gnarled branches, which ex-         as it is believed that the "flavor" of a per-
In twentieth-century Japan, a sign would         tend outward to the left and right. Plum         son's tea is reflected in the very bend and
be hung outside the waiting area for a           blossoms lay flat against the surface, and       shape of the bamboo scoop. The beauty of
large, informal tea gathering to indicate        bamboo leaves and a pine tree complete           a tea scoop is as simple and pristine as that
that the kettle had been put on to boil. Al-     the triad. On the opposite side are pic-         of the bamboo itself. Moreover, tea scoops
though a teabowl, whisk, tea container,          tured bamboo leaves, bamboo sprouts,             can be called by either a carefully selected
and a number of other utensils are               pine needles, and cones. This relief tech-       poetic name or by the maker's name. In
needed, a kettle to boil the water is consid-    nique is similar to that found on the back       addition to the tea scoop's "scenery" the
ered the most essential element. The tea         of old Japanese metal mirrors.                    most important features are actually pe-
master Sen no Rikyü (1522-1591) cautioned              The lower half of the kettle may have      ripheral to the object itself: the name of
against over-zealous collecting of utensils.     been recast. It was common practice for          the maker and the accompanying tube
One of Rikyü's didactic poems from a             old kettles to be repaired at the bottom.        container, which is often inscribed with
hundred-poem collection reads, "With but         The areas of appreciation of a kettle are        the poetic name of the scoop, often taken
a single kettle one can make tea, it is fool-    usually the shape, surface, lid, and lugs or      from a classical poem.
ish to possess a multitude of utensils."         ears. The lugs found on either side of this            Yoshimura Teiji, in writing about
      Prior to the ritualization of tea drink-   kettle have been skillfully embellished           "The Soul of Chashaku," prefers to think
 ing in the fifteenth century, early kettles     with the figure of a lion's head, whose          of the fashioning of a tea scoop as sculp-
 for boiling water were a common item in         flowing mane trails down each side. The           ture in bamboo. As in sculpture, the crea-
 any household kitchen. In fourteenth-           lion design was commonly found on the            tion of an external shape is inadequate
 century tocha, or tea identification con-                                                         unless the soul of its creator has been
358
worked into the material. Quoting from
the Sekishü ryü chashaku no hiji, Yoshi-
mura emphasizes that to look at Rikyü's
tea scoop is to look at a person's face.
      It is no surprise that tea masters in-
tentionally sought out the most unusual
samples of bamboo to be found. Several
versions of a popular legend surround the
tea master Furuta Oribe (1544-1615) and
his love of a good piece of bamboo. Ac-
cording to one story, Oribe came upon a
remarkable piece of bamboo in the midst
of a battle. He immediately began to carve
a tea scoop and forgot all about the battle
raging about him. So absorbed was he by
his task that he was unaware of the flying
shrapnel and was consequently wounded.
The tea scoop was appropriately given the
name Tamaarare or "hailing bullets."
       Prior to Sen no Rikyü, tea masters
had not yet assigned much value to the
chashaku. Tea scoops at that time were not
made by tea people, but commissioned
from common artisans and often dis-
carded after use. The tube container was
not considered an integral part of the tea
scoop until Sen no Rikyü's time. The pro-
tective tube is made from a cut piece of
bamboo from which a tightly fitting cap
has been fashioned. Inside, the tea scoop
may be wrapped with a silk cloth to pre-
vent it from rolling around inside the tube.
Like other tea utensil containers, the tube
container often is a document verifying
the contents within. In the case of an as-                                   288
signed poetic name, the classical poem                                                                                         289
from which the allusion originated may be
beautifully inscribed on the front of the
tube container in the distinctive calligra-
phy of the carver. At modern tea gather-
ings, the tube container of the tea scoop
 may be displayed separately in a side al-        self-explanatory and most need to be              289 Tea scoop
cove to allow tea participants to read the        coaxed out. Daimyo participants in tea                Kobori Enshü (1579-1647)
 inscription.                                     gatherings relied heavily upon not only a             bamboo
       The practice of assigning poetic           knowledge of the connoisseurship of uten-             length 17.3 (63A)
 names to tea scoops was popular during           sils, but also on a firm grounding in literary        Edo period
the Edo period. In general, early-Momo-           and religious traditions.
                                                                                                         Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
yama utensils rarely had poetic names,                  Early tea scoops brought from China
 though a name may have been assigned at          were made from ivory, metal, and wood.            The elegant style of tea practiced by Ko-
a much later date. Kobori Enshü was espe-         These prototypical tea scoops were                bori Enshü departed dramatically from the
cially famous for selecting poetic names          thought to be simple measuring spoons for         rustic simplicity of Sen no Rikyü. The re-
 from classical waka. This revealed his deep      tea. Although other woods such as plum or         vival of tea as an aesthetic pastime is pri-
 understanding and appreciation of classi-        cherry are used, bamboo, a material valued        marily due to Enshü. This revival greatly
 cal literature. The poetic name of the tea       for its flexibility and endurance, is most of-    pleased his patrons, the daimyo ruling
 scoop or any other utensil is carefully se-      ten used. There is a protective and com-          class. Enshü's tea aesthetic brought back
 lected to ignite a series of linked associa-     forting quality about using a bamboo              the grandeur of an earlier time, and
 tions for its audience. A poetic name can        scoop with even the most valuable of tea-         whereas Sen no Rikyü had worked at elim-
 easily evoke a particular season, scenic         bowls or tea containers. The bamboo adds          inating useless space in the tearoom,
 area, or allusion to a classical text, and may   an air of ease as the utensils relate to one      Enshü sought to enlarge the tea space and
 derive from a variety of sources. Names of       another during the tea gathering. There           define separate sitting places for daimyo
 temples or references to Zen sayings could       are three classifications of tea scoops.          and their accompanying retainers. Enshü
 also be used as possible names. The name         Shin, or the most formal tea scoops, are          also was an architect and designer of tea
 of a tea utensil relies strongly on the pre-     made from ivory. Gyô, or semi-formal,             gardens.                                   JIK
 sumed knowledge and literary accomplish-         have the bamboo joint at the very end of
 ments of its audience. Very few names are        the tip. So, or grass-style tea scoops, have
                                                  the bamboo joint located at the halfway
                                                  point.                                      JIK
                                                                                                                                              359
290 Flower container                               that flowers for tea should appear as if           containers and tea scoops may be per-
    Sen no Rikyü (1522-1591)                       they were growing in the field. This re-           ceived as presenting excellent opportuni-
    bamboo                                         flects the general philosophy that the nat-        ties for the expression of the host's
      h. 31.5 (l23/8)                              ural beauty of flowers must be respected,          personal tea spirit. The secret in making a
      Momoyama period                              and tampering kept to a minimum. As                good bamboo flower container is an un-
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           anyone who has tried to place flowers for          yielding commitment to finding the best
                                                   tea realizes, it is no easy task.                  possible piece of bamboo. Often, before
Sen no Rikyü has been credited with in-                 The inexperienced hand tries to "ar-          this is attained, several pieces of bamboo
venting bamboo vases for tea. Earlier,             range" and rearrange the blossoms. An im-          may have to be sacrificed.
bronze or celadon flower vases, which              portant feature of tea flowers is that the               This two-layer, cut bamboo flower
arose from a traditional preference for            most quick-fading and evanescent blos-             container has two sections, which can be
Chinese wares, had been considered ap-             soms or buds are greatly desired. Rikyü            used separately or simultaneously to hold
propriate. Four bamboo vases alleged to            supposedly disliked cockscomb because it           flowers. Viewed from the side, this piece
have been made by Sen no Rikyü have be-            was too hearty a flower. Tea flowers must          of bamboo has a natural backward sway. It
come part of the Hosokawa family collec-           be used sparingly to avoid the display of a        is said to resemble those made by Rikyü in
tion. This one, of the single-layer cut type,      luxurious and overly abundant bouquet.             size and bulk. This is no coincidence, as
has a bulky, heavy shape typical of Rikyü's        Flowers in tea are not outward decora-             Sansai represented a conservative branch
style. It is commonly believed that this           tions. On the contrary, they are placed to         of tea that remained loyal to Rikyü's teach-
shape vividly expresses the iron determi-          reveal the inward spirit of the host. Choos-       ings even after the master's death by sui-
nation Rikyü needed to introduce so many           ing an inanimate container to capture the          cide. Another famous student of Rikyü
innovative ideas. When Rikyü first pre-            living spirit of the flowers requires a keen       was Furuta Oribe (1544-1615), who later de-
sented Toyotomi Hideyoshi (1537-1598)              sensitivity coupled with years of tea expe-        viated from Rikyü's tea.
with a bamboo flower container, the dis-           rience. In the tea ceremony, the container               A complete modern-day tea gathering
pleased ruler is said to have hurled it into       becomes the chief mediator between host .          covers a period of several hours and in-
the garden. The large crack that resulted          and guest.                                         cludes not only the preparation of tea, but
when this bamboo container hit a rock in                 The legend of Rikyü's morning glory          the serving of a light meal and placing of
the garden has only caused it to become            tea for Toyotomi Hideyoshi is told and re-         the charcoal before the guests. Whereas a
more valued.                                       told to beginning tea students. Hideyoshi,         scroll, often with a Zen saying or classical
       A bamboo flower container is made           hearing of Rikyü's gorgeous array of morn-         reference, dominates the first half of the
from a cylindrical piece of bamboo. Two            ing glories, asked to be invited to tea spe-       gathering and is said to set the general
straight cuts across the body open a large         cifically to view the blossoms. When he            theme, in the latter half of the gathering
enough space to hold flowers, while a sub-         entered the garden he noticed that all the         the scroll is removed from the alcove and
stantial back portion is left to form a sup-       blossoms had been cut away. The solitary           replaced with flowers in a container. It is
port. The naturally hollow interior of the         remaining blossom had been left in a vase          in the second half of the gathering that
bamboo, which is separated at intervals by         in the tearoom. This action reflected Ri-          the host is able to communicate more inti-
nodes, forms the bowl to hold the water.           kyü's belief that simplicity, bordering on         mately his own personal expression of the
The bamboo nodes are one of the areas of            the understated, is the best practice in tea.     theme. Conversation in the tearoom
appreciation. Before cutting, these nodes                A flower container, when placed in           should be limited to a discussion of the
 are positioned carefully so as to enhance          the tearoom, provides a tranquil resting          utensils. If using his own bamboo flower
 the beauty of the piece. As with the bam-          place for blossoms, grasses, or buds chosen       container, it might be appropriate for the
boo tea scoops, the natural variation in the        to highlight the mood of that particular          host to provide an interesting narrative of
 bamboo helps create the overall contour            season, whether it is a spray of pampas           how he found the bamboo and shaped it.
 of the container. Often the inside of the          grass or a tightly closed pink camellia bud.            The flowers chosen for the second
 container is lacquered to prevent possible         A sixteenth-century account of the way            half of the gathering usually last only until
 leakage. A hole has been chiseled in the           Rikyü used a flower container survives            the end of the day, lending a poignant feel-
 back of this container so that it may also         from the twelfth month of 1567. In the al-        ing to the ceremony. This feeling of eva-
 be hung from a peg in the alcove. The              cove, on a board, he placed a vase that            nescence did not develop solely out of the
 cracks in this flower container have been          held nothing but water. In turn, Rikyü             medieval culture associated with tea. The
 noticeably repaired with lacquer and metal         asked each guest to contemplate the set-           tale of Genji, written during the Heian pe-
 staples. Large pieces of bamboo, unlike            ting and imagine for himself the flowers           riod, includes an especially moving chap-
 other more durable materials, are vulnera-         he might have used. Rikyü probably could           ter in which the accomplished courtier
 ble to dry heat and changes in the                 not have predicted that twentieth-century          protagonist, Genji, chances upon an un-
 weather. Despite the numerous lacquer              museum visitors would be required to               known maiden living in obscure surround-
  strips, which are now all th.at keep this         make a similar leap of imagination.         JIK    ings. He notices the moonflowers growing
  flower container from cracking into frag-                                                            alongside the plaited fence outside her
  ments, this piece still maintains its dignity,   291 Flower container                                dwelling and asks to receive a single blos-
  much like an aging warrior whose outside                                                             som. A young serving girl from inside the
                                                       bamboo                                          house is sent out with a fan upon which to
  battle scars cannot mar the still powerful           Hosokawa Sansai (1563-1646)
  spirit lingering underneath.                                                                         place the frail flower. Later, an affair blos-
                                                       h-35-8(H)                                       soms between the maiden of the house
       The art of chabana, or flowers for tea,
  differs considerably from what is popularly          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                              and Genji, only to wither suddenly with
  known in the West as ikebana, or flower ar-                                                          her unexpected death soon after their
                                                   Bamboo flower containers and tea scoops             meeting. Genji is left filled with great re-
  rangement. In tea, one does not con-             are the two types of tea utensils most
  sciously arrange the flowers in a certain                                                            morse over the very evanescence of life. JIK
                                                   likely to have been personally made by tea
  way. Instead, the desired practice is merely     people. A tea student tries to learn how to
  to place the flowers with a lightness of         make many of the lesser tea paraphernalia,
  touch. Rikyü's famous precept stipulated         such as the cloth utensil bags or bamboo
                                                   chopsticks for the meal. Bamboo flower
360
      291
290
            361
NO-RELATED WORKS
              363
      292 Karaori                                       joyed great popularity for the embellish-
          silk brocade                                  ment of daily wear in the Momoyama
          1.152.0 (59 i/4)                              period, as in cat. 264. In No, costumes dec-
           W. 146.0 (56 7/8)                            orated in this technique are known them-
           Edo period, i8th century                     selves as nuihaku. They might be worn as
                                                        inner robes for boys' roles, or around the
           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                        waist as koshimaki for women's roles.
                                                        Nuihaku were not bound by the technical
      293 Karaori                                       restrictions imposed by weaving, as in the
          silk brocade                                  thicker karaori, allowing great freedom in
           1. 150.0   (58 !/2)
                                                        the execution of decoration.
           w. 150.0 (58 Vz)                                  Cat. 294 is decorated with the seigaiha
           Edo period, i8th century                     motif, a stylized wave pattern, in gold leaf
           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           against the red silk background. Gold spits
                                                        of land emerge from the waves and are
      The karaori, an outer robe for female roles       embroidered with pine trees, behind
      in the No performance, is the most bril-          which can be seen sails embroidered with
      liantly ornate of No costumes. Originally         a variety of designs. Scores of Japanese po-
      the name of the fabric, karaori (literally        ems, tales, and travel diaries paint just
      "Chinese weaving") came to be used as             such a scene of a ship standing out to sea
      the name of the garment itself. In contrast       and disappearing behind a pine-forested
      to kosode, where designs were created             island.
      mostly by dyeing, embroidery, and metal-               The ground of cat. 295 is completely
      lic leaf, karaori designs are all created in      covered with pasted-on gold leaf; such
      the weave; they are brocades, in which            gold-leafed fabrics are called dohaku. Em-
      long design threads of glossed or metallic-       broidered over the gold leaf are open fans,
      leaf-wrapped silk are "floated" across a          each decorated with flowers including
      ground of raw silk. The No karaori are of         plum or cherry blossoms, irises, peonies,
      two types, iroiri (with red), and ironashi        hollyhock, wisteria, morning-glories, bush
      (without red). The former is worn for             clover, and chrysanthemums. The ornate
      young female roles, and the latter for            decorative scheme of this nuihaku well
      middle-aged or elderly female roles. It is        suits a female role for the No stage.     KS
      typically worn full length and with arms in
      the sleeves, though for certain roles the
                                                        296 Chdken
      right sleeve is slipped off and draped back,
      or the robe is pulled up to the knees to re-          silk brocade
      veal the undercostume.                                1.103.3 (40^4)
            These two robes date from the mid-              w. 206.0(803/8)
      Edo period when the karaori was at its                Edo period, i8th century
      most brilliant stage of development. The              Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      abundant use of red and of gold-leafed
      thread makes these robes appropriate for          The chdken, literally "long silk," is an un-
      young female roles. Cat. 292 is densely           lined jacket unique to No worn in dance
      woven with gold thread and covered with           scenes. It is made of a thin silk gauze into
      butterflies dispersed over a field of wild        which designs are woven with gold-leafed
      carnations in threads of many colors. Cat.        and colored threads. Below the arms, the
      293 bears a design of clematis scrolls and        side seams are not sewn together. It is
      paulownia branches on an allover back-            worn for a variety of roles, including that
      ground of linked gold "coins." As many as         of noblemen, or, worn with a type of red
      twelve colors of thread were used to create       pants, a court lady. Any one of a number
      the designs of this luxurious karaori.       KS   of colors can be used for the ground, in-
                                                        cluding white, purple, red, light green, and
                                                        light blue. Designs may be concentrated
      294 Nuihaku                                       on one part of the garment, or spread
          embroidery and gold leaf on silk              across the entire surface. In this striking
           1. 142.0 (55 3/8)                            example, the background fabric was
           w. 144.0 (56 Vs)                             densely woven with gold threads. A design
           Edo period, 19th century                     of flower-filled containers is woven on the
           Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           chest, back, and sleeves, with dandelions
                                                        and maple leaves scattered throughout. KS
      295 Nuihaku
          embroidery and gold leaf on silk
          1.143.0 (55 3/4)
          w. 136.0 (53)
          Edo period, 19th century
          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      Nuihaku, combining embroidery with
      glued-on gold or silver leaf (surihaku) en-
364
292
      365
      293
366
294
      367
      295
368
296
297
        369
                                       298
297 Maiginu                                   others maple leaves. Cherry blossoms and of the court class in the Heian period. In
    silk brocade                              maple leaves are the prime Japanese sym- the medieval era it was adapted by elite sa-
    1.164.0 (64)                              bols of spring and fall.                 KS murai as their most formal garment. It is
    w. 224.0(873/8)                                                                       thought that the kariginu first used in No
    Edo period, iQth century                  298 Kariginu                                performances were those actually worn by
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                           silk brocade                           samurai aristocrats. In the Edo period the
                                                   1.150.0 (581/2)                        kariginu was established as a No costume,
The maiginu, literally "dancing robe," is          W. 2O2.O (783/4)                       and  these kariginu for the stage were made
an outer robe for women's dancing roles,           Edo period, i9th century               larger than the kariginu for daily wear
and resembles the chdken. Designs in gold                                                 from which they had originated. In No,
                                                   Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                     the kariginu is regarded as the most impor-
or colored thread are-woven into thin silk
gauze fabric; the maiginu differs from the                                                tant outer garment for male roles.
chdken in that it is longer and the side      299 Kariginu                                      Both kariginu exhibited here are
seams are sewn together but the underarm           silk brocade                           made of gold brocade and both are lined.
sleeve seams are not. The maiginu is worn          1.174.0(677/3)                         On cat. 298 roundels of water plantain are
in the tsuboori style, pulled up knee-high.        w. 203.o (79 Vs)                       scattered against an allover design of six-
This beautiful example is made of light            Edo period, igth century               pointed hemp leaves. The decoration of
green silk gauze with woven gold designs           Tokyo National Museum                  cat. 299 consists of gold brocade phoenixes
of rafts, some bearing cherry blossoms and                                                and paulownia twigs on a purple back-
                                              The kariginu, literally "hunting robe," was ground. The auspicious combination of
                                              originally an informal jacket worn by men
370
                                       299
the phoenix and paulownia originated in         301 Kataginu                                    and mallet on brown-dyed hemp. Above
China, the former signifying the benevo-            stenciled paste-resist dyeing on hemp       the radish on the back is the dandelion en-
lent ruler and the well-ordered realm, the
latter serving as the bird's nesting place
                                                    i. 97.8(38^)                                closed in a flattened lozenge, a crest often
                                                                                                found on Kyôgen costumes. Cat. 301 has a
                                                    W. 124.2 (48 l/z)
and food. The motif was favored in Japan            Edo period, icth century                    design of black cart wheels entwined with
from the Heian period and sometimes                                                             morning-glories against a reserved back-
                                                    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                          ground of white hemp.
used for No kariginu.                      KS
                                                The kataginu, literally "shoulder robe/' is a        This kataginu is entered in an 1840
                                                sleeveless jacket used in Kyôgen, the           record passed down through the Hoso-
300 Kataginu                                                                                    kawa family, the Onnd ishd narabini kodd-
     paste-resist dyeing on hemp                comic interlude performed between No
                                                plays. In contrast to the subtle and austere    guchd (Book of No Costume and Stage
     1. 82.0 (32)                                                                               Properties), which establishes a date be-
     w. 136.4 (531/4)                           No, which deals with high and mostly
                                                tragic subjects, Kyogen portrays manners        fore which it must have been made.         KS
     Edo period, icth century
                                                and concerns of the commoners with
     Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                         broad humor. While Kyôgen costumes are
                                                not richly ornate like those of No, they are
                                                embellished with bold and freely drawn
                                                designs, often of unusual motifs.
                                                     On cat. 300, reserved in white by
                                                means of resist paste, are a large radish
                                                                                                                                         371
      300
372
30J
      373
302 Koshiobi
      embroidery and gold leaf on silk
      1. 264.5 (103 Vs)
      w. 7.3 (2 3/4)
      Edo period, icth century
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
303 Koshiobi
    embroidery on silk
    1.215.5(84)
    w. 7.2 (2 3/4)
    Edo period, iQth century
    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
The koshiobi, or "waist sash," was used to
secure such No costumes as the kariginu
and various outer robes worn koshimaki
style, that is, off the shoulders and arms.
Designs appear on the sections that are
visible when the sash is worn, including
those at the waist and those that hang
down from the knot tied in front. On cat.
302, a design of cherry blossoms has been
embroidered over gold leaf glued onto red
silk. This type of sash was called ddhaku
koshiobi in reference to the extensive
pasted-on gold leaf (cat. 295). Cat. 303 is
embroidered with arrows and the seigaiha
stylized wave motif (cat. 294) on a blue silk
background. This koshiobi, which has no
red on it (cats. 292, 293), was probably
worn by an actor playing the role of a
middle-aged or elderly woman.               KS
304 Katsuraobi
    embroidery on silk
    1. 254.0 (99)
      W. 3.5 (13/8)
      Edo period, 19th century
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
305 Katsuraobi
    gold leaf on silk
    1.237.5(925/8)
      W. 3.5 (13/8)
      Edo period, i9th century
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                                 302                                          303
306 Katsuraobi
      embroidery and gold leaf on silk
      1.239.1(931/4)                             Decoration, usually embroidered, is con-       308 Chukei fan
      w. 3.8(1'A)                                centrated on the section that covers the           ink, color, and gold leaf on paper;
      Edo period, i9th century                   forehead and the long portions that hang           bamboo, lacquer
                                                 down from the knot in back. The katsu-             1.35.0(133/4)
      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                 raobi with cherry blossoms (cat. 306) and          Edo period, i8th century
                                                 the one with the water plantain and pick-
307 Katsuraobi                                                                                      Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
                                                 erel weed design (cat. 304) are of the iroiri
    embroidery on silk                           type (cats. 292, 293), meaning that red is
    1.242.3(941/2)                               used, and they are worn for young female 309 Chùkei fan
    w. 3.7(1^/2)                                 roles. The katsuraobi with the willow and          ink, color, and gold leaf on paper;
    Edo period, 1910 century                     snow disk design (cat. 307) is ironashi, or        bamboo, lacquer
       Eisei Bunko, Tokyo                        without red, and is used in middle-aged or         1.33.0(13)
                                                 elderly female roles. The katsuraobi with          Edo period, i9th century
Used exclusively for female roles in No,         the "fish scale" design of triangles (cat.
                                                                                                    Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
the katsuraobi is a sash tied over the wig.      305) is worn by female characters driven
                                                 mad by jealousy.                            KS
374
                                                                                        designs of flowers or hanaikusa ("flower
                                                                                        battles"); in each case, the design on the
                                                                                        front differs from that on the reverse. All
                                                                                        four would have been used for young fe-
                                                                                        male roles; the fans with the hanaikusa de-
                                                                                        sign are representative of the type used
                                                                                        by the character who would wear the
                                                                                        Koomote mask (cats. 318, 319).             KS
                                                                                                                                  375
       308
309
376
310
311
      377
             312
314
313
the left hand, placed on the right shoulder,   316 Nokan flute (accompanied by case)        lacquered storage case, often decorated
and struck with the fingers of the right           bamboo, bark, lacquer                    with maki-e and raden (inlaid shell). The
hand.                                              length of ndkan 39.5 (15 Vz)             case for cat. 316 is decorated with a design
     Cat. 314 is decorated with a dragon           Edo period, i8th century                 of gold maki-e grapes on black lacquer.
and cloud design on a background of am-                                                     Grapes, a symbol of fertility used as a mo-
                                                   Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
ber lacquer densely sprinkled with gold                                                     tif from as early as the Nara period, were
(nashiji). The dragon, depicted in raised                                                   also popular for decorative designs in the
maki-e, winds around the drum among                                                         early modern era. The case for the other
gold and silver maki-e clouds. Cat. 315 is     317 Ndkan flute, named Yaegiku               ndkan, cat. 317, bears a maki-e design of
decorated with a spring design of rafts            (accompanied by case)                    plovers flying over waves, a motif seen
with cherry blossoms in gold maki-e on a           bamboo, bark, lacquer                    from the medieval era on that recalls many
black lacquered ground. This kotsuzumi is          length of ndkan 39.5 (15 ^2)             poems of the Heian period, such as this
accompanied by a storage box decorated             Edo period, i8th century                 one:
with a design in maki-e on black lacquer of        Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
running water and maple leaves. The de-                                                     At Shio Mountain
sign alludes to many poems from the                                                         on Sashide shore
                                               The ndkan is a transverse bamboo flute       dwells a plover;
Heian period regarding the Tatsuta River
                                               with a mouth hole and seven finger holes,    May your reign last
(Nara Prefecture), famous for the autumn
                                               wound with thinly split bark. A metal        eight thousand ages, it sings.           KS
foliage along its banks. One such poem
                                               piece is fitted on the end near the mouth
reads:
                                               hole, and many flutes are named after the
In the Tatsuta River                           design on the metal. The nokan is the only
red leaves flow                                wind instrument among the instruments
in disorder;                                   used in No, but it plays few melodies;
if I cross, the brocade                        rather, it functions as a rhythm instru-
mil be cut through the middle.           KS    ment. The ndkan is equipped with a black-
378
315
317
316
            379
      318 Koomote
          polychromed wood
          21.5 x 13.6 (8 Vz x 5 3/s)
          Edo period, i8th century
          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      319 Koomote
          polychromed wood
          21.0 X 13.5 (8 V4 X 5 3/8)
          Edo period, i8th century
          Eisei Bunko, Tokyo
      One of the earliest No masks to be devel-
      oped, Koomote represents the counte-
      nance of a calm young woman, her neatly
      arranged hair parted in the middle, with
      three loose, but not overlapping, strands
      on either side. Ko (literally, "small"), the
      first Japanese character of the two that
      form the word koomote, suggests the
      youth, freshness and charm embodied in
      this mask. Reflecting the standard of
      beauty from the Heian period on, the oval
      face is full, with eyebrows shaved and re-
      painted high on the wide forehead. The
      teeth are blackened (ohaguro), with a paste
      made of powdered iron filings and gall
      nuts steeped in vinegar or tea; this was a
      cosmetic fashion adopted by young
      women on coming of age.
            Although Koomote represents a gen-
      eral character type, subtle differences
      among masks are apparent. Some empha-
      size youthful freshness, some refinement,
      some a delicately erotic charm. Cat. 319,
      for example, suggests the last, with full
      cheeks and relatively widely parted lips.
      On the back of this mask is an inscrip-
      tion of Déme Yükan. Yükan Mitsuyasu
      (d. 1652) was a disciple and successor of Ze-
      kan Yoshimitsu, founder of the Ono
      branch of the prominent Déme family of
      No mask makers.                             MK
380
3J8
      381
      319
382
   320                                                                                     321
                                                                                                 383
      322
                                             323
384
324
      385
      325
386
   326                                                                        327
                                                                                                                                     387
      328                                     329
388
  330
                                                                                    33i
                                                                                               389
  332                                   333
390
Selected Literature
References are given in catalogue order.
                                                                                      391
  i. Onishi Hiroshi and Yamashita Yüji in         123. Nakamura 1978.                            1966-1970, vol. 5; Hiroi 1986.
    Shimada and Iriya 1987, 273-276; Tokyo        124. Kokka no. 602 (1941): 12-14; Takeda     175. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    io86b.                                          1973; Kawsi 1978; MOA Art Museum             1966-1970, vol. 5; Hiroi 1986.
92. Nakamura 1971; Tanaka and Naka-                 1982.                                      176. Hiroi 1986.
    mura 1973; Ford 1980; Kameda 1980; Los        125. Takeda 1974; Takeda 1978!).             177. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
   Angeles 1985; Tokyo 1986!).                    126. Takeda 1967; Takeda igySb.                1966-1970, vol. 4; Hiroi 1971; Juyo
93. Tanaka and Nakamura 1973; "Bujin              127. Takeda 1967.                              Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-1984,
    gaka no keifu" (Traditions of the             128. Tanaka and Nakamura 1973; Addiss          vol. 6.
    warrior-painters). In Tanaka 1986, vol. 2,      and Hurst 1983.                            178. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    175-180; Tokyo 1986!).                        130. Hamada 1976; Sendai igSob; Sendai          1966-1970, vol. 6.
94. Bijutsu kenkyù no. 41 (1935): 227-228;          1987.                                      179. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    Wakimoto 1937; Tanaka and Yonezawa            131. Takeda igySb; Shimizu i98ob.               1966-1970, vol. 6; Hiroi 1971.
    1970; Princeton 1976; Tokyo 19800.            132. Tsuji i98ob; Fukui 1984.                181. Jüyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-
95. Kanrin koro shù, 288; Fujikake Shi-           133. Tsuji K)8ob; Fukui 1984.                   1984, vol. 6.
    zuya. Kokka no. 677 (1948): 213-214;          134. Narasaki Muneshige. Kokka no. 960       183. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    Tanaka and Yonezawa 1970; Tanaka and             (1974): 28-31; Fukui 1984.                   1966-1970, vol. 6.
    Nakamura 1973; "Bujin gaka no keifu"          135. New York 1972.                          189. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
   (Traditions of the warrior-painters). In       136. Naruse 1977; Tokyo igSyb.                  1966-1970, vol. 6; Hiroi 1971.
    Tanaka 1986, vol. 2, 175-180; Tokyo           137. Ota, Takehana, 3nd Naruse 1974;         190. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    i986b.                                           Naito 1981; Tokyo igSyb.                     1966-1970, vol. 6; Hiroi 1971.
96. Nakajima 1967, 1968, 1972; Kokka no.          138. Tokyo igSyb.                            193. Jüyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-
    970; Nakamura 1976; Tsuji 1978.               139. Kumamoto 1980; Tokyo igSyb.                1984, vol. 6; Nihon Bijutsu Token Ho-
97. Tsuji 1966, 1970; Doi 1974; Yamaoka           140. Kobayashi 1978; Nakamura 1979.             zon Kyóksi 1966-1970, vol. 6.
    1978; Wheelwright 1981!); Shimizu 1981;       141. Tokyo 1964; Kumamoto 19780.             195. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
    Detroit 1986.                                 142. Kumamoto 19780.                            1966-1970, vol. 6; Jüyó Bunkszsi Hen-
98. Fujikake 1952; Matsushita and Tama-           143. Kokka no. 462 (1929): 138-145; Takeda      ssn linksi 1980-1984, vol. 6.
    mura 1974; Yoshizawa 1978.                       i978b; Kôno 1982.                         197. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
99. Kokka no. 449 (1928): 99; Tokyo 1962;         144. Kôno 1978; Murashige 1982.                 1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1971.
    Toda 1973.                                    145. Doi 1939; Doi 1976.                     198. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi
100. Tokyo 1962; Tokyo 19763.                     146. Ozaki 1968; Ozaki and Sato 1970; Ko-       1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1971.
101. Wakimoto 1934; Yonezawa Yoshiho.                kuhd 1984, vol. 7; Kyoto 1987.            199. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
    Bijutsushi no. 11 (1954): 97-99; Toda 1973;   147. Kumamoto 19783; Juyo Bunkazai              1966-1970, vol. 7.
    Tokyo 19763.                                     Henssn linkai 1980-1984, vol. 6; Kyoto    201. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
102. Tokyo 1962; Suzuki 1974; Cahill 1976;           19813; Kyoto 1987.                           1966-1970, vol. 7; Juyo Bunkazai Hensan
    Stanley-Baker 1982.                           148. Juyo Bunkazai Hensan linkai 1980-          linkai 1980-1984, vol. 6.
104. Kuwata, Okamoto, Kôyama, and Na-                1984, vol. 6; Kyoto 1987.                 202. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
    kamura 1980; Sansom 1961; Totman              149. Juyo Bunkazai Henssn linkai 1980-          1966-1970, vol. 7; Jüyó Bunkazai Hensan
    1967; Berry 1982.                                1984, vol. 6; Kyoto 1987.                    linkai 1980-1984, vol. 6.
105. Nakamura 1978; Tsuji 19803.                  150. Jüyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-       204. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
106. Nakamura 1978; Tsuji 19803.                     1984, vol. 6.                                1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1986.
107. Cambridge 1970; Adachi 1974; Adachi          151. Juyo Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-       205. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
     1980; London 1981-1982.                         1984, vol. 6.                                1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1986.
108. Takeda 1977; Kawai 1978.                     152. Kumsmoto 19783.                         206. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
109. Kokka no. 319 (1916): 133-136; Kuma-         153. Juyo Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-          1966-1970, vol. 7.
     moto 19793; Yamane 1979; Kumamoto               1984, vol. 6; Sendsi 19863; Ysmsgishi     208. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
     19843.                                          snd Ssitô 1986-1987; Kyoto 1987.             1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1971.
no. Okamoto 1972; Cambridge 1970; Sa-             154. Oksysms 1972; Juyo Bunkszsi Hen-        211. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
     kai 1981; Murog3 1983.                          ssn linksi 1980-1984, vol. 6; Shizuoks       1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1971; Jüyó
111. Sakamoto 1973; Sakamoto 1979.                    1983; Kyoto 1987.                           Bunkazai Hensan linkai 1980-1984,
112. New York 1973; Vlam 1976; Sakamoto           155. Shizuoks 1983.                             vol. 6.
     1979; Juyo Bunkszsi Hensan linkai            158. Juyo Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-       212. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
     1980-1984, vol. 2.                               1984, vol. 6; Kyoto 1987.                   1966-1970, vol. 7; Jüyó Bunkazai Hensan
113. Vlam 1976; Sakamoto 1979; Juyo               159. Juyo Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-          linkai 1980-1984, vol. 6.
     Bunkazai Henssn linkai 1980-1984,                1984, vol. 6.                            213. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyôkai
     vol. 2.                                      160. Júyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-          1966-1970, vol. 7; Hiroi 1971.
 114. Sakamoto 1979.                                  1984, vol. 6; Kyoto 1987.                216. Kumamoto 1976; Kumamoto 19783;
 115. Takeds 19783.                               162. Jüyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-          Ozaki and Sato 1970; Kokuhd 1984,
 116. Yamane 1973; Takeda 1980.                       1984, vol. 6; Fukuoks 1985.                 vol. 6
 117. Fukuoka 1985.                               163. Kumsmoto 19783.                         217. Kumamoto 1976; Kumamoto 19783;
 118. Suzuki 1971; Suws snd Naitó 1972;           164-169. Tokyo 19863; Hikone 1987.              Ozski 3nd Sato 1970; Kokuhd 1984,
     Takeda 19783.                                170. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi           vol. 6
 119. Kswsi 1978; Kumamoto 19843.                     1966-1970, vol. 3; Hiroi 1971; Kokuhd    218. Jüyó Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-
 120. Y3m3ne 1980; Klein 1984.                        1984, vol. 8.                               1984, vol. 5.
 121. Jüyó Bunkazai Henssn linkai 1980-            171. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi       219. Juyo Bunkszsi Henssn linksi 1980-
     1984, vol. 2.                                    1966-1970, vol. 2; Hiroi 1971.              1984, vol. 5.
 122. Yamane 1980.                                 174. Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyóksi       221. Oksda, Mstsuds, snd Arsksws 1978-
392
   1979, vo1- 3-                           268. Yamanobe, Kamiya, and Ogasawara
222. Kyoto 1977.                             1980.
223. Okada, Matsuda, and Arakawa 1978-     269. Yamanobe, Kamiya, and Ogasawara
   1979, vol. 3.                             1980.
224. Okada, Matsuda, and Arakawa 1978-     272. New York 1984.
   1979, vol. 3.                           275. Yamanobe, Kamiya, and Ogasawara
225. Okada, Matsuda, and Arakawa 1978-       1980.
   1979, vol. 4.                           276. Yamanobe, Kamiya, and Ogasawara
226. Kumamoto 1983.                          1980.
227. Arakawa, Komatsu, and Haino 1986.     277. Hosokawa 1978; Tokyo 19803; Oda
228. Okayama 1984; Arakawa, Komatsu,         1986.
  and Haino 1986.                          278. Hosokawa 1978; Murai 1979.
229. Kumamoto 1983.                        279. Kansai hikki, 196; Kumamoto 1979^
230. Okada, Matsuda, and Arakawa 1978-       New York 1979; Tsutsui 1980.
  1979, vol. 4.                            280. Hosokawa 1978.
231. Okayama 1984.                         281. Kumamoto 1979^ Varley and Elison
232. Okayama 1984.                           1981; Hikone 1987.
233. Kumamoto 1983.                        282. Kumamoto i979b.
234. Kumamoto 1983.                        283. Hosokawa 1978.
237. Okada, Matsuda, and Arakawa 1978-     284. Sanjônishi 1977-1978; Kumamoto
  1979, vol. 3; Okayama 1984.                i979b; New York 1979; Chanoyu Quar-
238. Kumamoto 1983.                          terly 1980.
239. Kumamoto 1983.                        285. Kumamoto 1979^ New York 1979;
240. Kawahara 1977; Mitsuoka and Okuda       Tokyo 19803; Cort 1985.
  1977; Narasaki 1977; Cort 1979.          286. Haysshiys 1976; Kumamoto i979b.
241. Mitsuoka and Okuda 1977; Tokyo        287. Kumamoto 1979^ New York 1979;
1985b.                                       Tokyo 19803; Suzuki 1981.
242-247. Seattle 19723; Hayashiya 1976;    288. Tokyo 19803; Yoshimura 1978.
  Oxford 1981; Tokyo 1985!).               289. Tokyo 19803; Yoshimurs 1978.
248-249. Seattle 19723; Hayashiya 1980;    290. Kumamoto 1979^ New York 1979;
  Becker 1986; Cort 1986; Tokyo 1985!);      Hirots 1980; Tokyo 19803; Tsutsui 1985.
  Tokyo 19860.                             291. Hosokawa 1978; Kumamoto i979b.
250. Hayashiya 1980; Tokyo 1985!); Kyoto   292. Kumamoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
  1986; Fukuoka 19873.                     293. Tokyo 1977.
251. Haysshiys 1980; Fukuoka 1981;         295. Kumamoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
  Fukuoka 1987!).                          296. Kumamoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
252. Seattle 19723; Sato 1978; Hayashiya   297. Tokyo 1977.
  1980; Tokyo 1985!?.                      299. Tokyo 19873.
253. Hayashiya 1980; Yamaguchi 1981;       300. Tokyo 1982.
  Tokyo 19853.                             301. Tokyo 1982.
254-255. Hayashiya 1976; New York 1979;    302. Kumamoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
   Kyoto 1985!).                           303. Kumamoto 1977.
256-257. Seattle 19723; Mitsuoka 1975;     304. Kumsmoto 1977.
   Kyoto 1981!); Tokyo 1985!).             305. Kumsmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
258-259. Nsgstske snd Hayashiya 1978;      306. Tokyo 1977.
   Tokyo 1985!?; Yokohama 1987.            307. Kumsmoto 1977.
260-261. Seattle 19723; Mik3mi and Ha-     308. Kurrmmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
   yashiya 1983; Tokyo 19851); Kanazawa    309. Tokyo 1977.
  1987.                                    310. Tokyo 1977.
262. Jûyô Bunkszsi Hensan linkai 1980-     311. Kurrmmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
  1984, vol. 5.                            312. Kumsmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
263. Jüyó Bunkszsi Hensan linkai 1980-     314. Kumsmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
  1984, vol. 5.                            315. Tokyo 1977.
265. Yamanobe, Kamiya, and Ogasawara       316. Kumsmoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
  1980; Sendai 19863.                      317. Kumamoto 1977; Tokyo 1977.
266. Yamanobe Tomoyuki. Museum no.         318-333. Noma 1943; Kaneko 1975; Kyoto
  162 (1964): 24-27; Yamanobe, Kamiya,        1982; Tanabe 1987.
  snd Ogasawara 1980.
                                                                                       393
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 "Jingoji zo den Takanobu hitsu no gazô         toshite no Jôdoji engi" (Origin of the Jo-       fusuma-e no yôshikiteki kenkyü" (Stylis-
 ni tsuite no utagai" (Some remarks on          doji as an artistic material). In Akdmdtsu       tic study of the sliding door paintings at
 the date of the portraits by Takanobu,         Toshihide Kyôju tdikdn kinen kokushi             Shinjuan). In Tanaka 19713, 87-117.
 1142-1205, preserved in the monastery          ronshù (Collection of historical studies
 Jingoji). Yamato bunka no. 13 (1954):                                                         Nakamura 1971: Nakamura Tanio, ed. Ses-
                                                in honor of the retirement of Professor
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                                                Akamatsu Toshihide), 477-491. Kyoto,
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Minamoto 1972: Minamoto Toyomune.                                                               No. 63 oí Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Ja-
 "Sogaha to Asakura bunka" (Soga               Mori 1974: Mori Hisashi. "Chórakuji no           pan). Tokyo, 1971.
 school and the culture of Asakura clan).       Jishü shôzô chôkoku" (Statues of the
 Kobijutsu no. 38 (1972): 29-39.                                                               Nakamura 1976: Nakamura Tanio. Sesshù.
                                                priests belonging to the Ji-shu sect of
                                                                                                Vol. 4 of Nihon bijutsu kdigd zenshû (Jap-
Minamoto 1980: Minamoto Toyomune.               Buddhism owned by the Chórakuji).
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 Soga Dasoku. Vol. 3 of Nihon bijutsu           Bukkyô geijutsu no. 96 (1974): 3-33.
 kaiga zenshû (Japanese paintings).                                                            Nakamura 1978: Nakamura Tanio, éd. So-
 Tokyo, 1980.                                  Mori 1977: Mori Hisashi. Japanese Portrait       jûga: Ryùko enkd (Paintings of running
                                                Sculpture. Trans, and adapted by W.             animals: Dragons and tigers, monkeys
Mishima 1985: No no sekdi ten: Hosoka-          Chië Ishibashi. Vol. 2 of Japanese Arts         and gibbons). Vol. 16 of Nihon bydbu-e
 wake denrai ni yoru (The world of No:          Library. Tokyo, New York, and San Fran-         shûsei (Japanese screen paintings).
 Objects in the Hosokawa family collec-         cisco, 1977.                                    Tokyo, 1978.
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                                                shi kenkyù (Studies in the history of Jap-      Hoitsuhd kachdgafu (Edo—Rimpa and
Mitsuoka 1975: Mitsuoka Tadanari, ed. Edo       anese Buddhist sculpture). Kyoto, 1980.         artists surrounding Sakai Hôitsu).
 i (Edo period i: Kyôyaki—Kyoto ware).                                                          Kyoto, 1979.
 Vol. 6 of Sekdi tôji zenshû (Ceramic art      Mori 1987: Mori Hisashi. Busshi Kdikei
 of the world). Tokyo, 1975.                    ron: Zdhoban (A study of the Buddhist          Nakamura 1980: Nakamura Kóya. Toku-
                                                sculptor Kaikei: Enlarged edition).             gawa leyasu monjo no kenkyü teiseiban
Mitsuoka and Okuda 1977: Mitsuoka Ta-           Tokyo, 1987.                                    (Research on the documents of Toku-
 danari and Okuda Naoshige, eds. Mo-                                                            gawa leyasu, rev. éd.). 3 vols. Tokyo,
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                                               Morris 1975: Morris, Ivan. The Nobility of       ety. London, 1970.
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Miyama 19643: Miyama Susumu. "Jufu-            Murai 1979: Murai Yasuhiko. Cha no                chûsei (Japanese medieval period). Vol. 3
 kuji Eisai Zenji zo to Kamakura busshi"        bunkashi (Cultural history of tea).              of Sekdi tôji zenshû (Ceramic art of the
 (Statue of the priest Eisai at the Jufukuji    Tokyo, 1979.                                     world). Tokyo, 1977.
 Temple and Buddhist sculptors active in
                                               Murashige 1982: Murashige Yasushi.              Naruse 1977: Naruse Fujio. Shozdn,
 the Kamakura area). Museum no. 155             "Hôitsu yôkenzu ema no genga ni
 (1964): 22-26.                                                                                 Ndotdke. Tdyô bijutsu sensho (Selected
                                                tsuite" (Original design of the votive          themes in Oriental art). Tokyo, 1977.
Miyama 1964^ Miyama Susumu. "Kama-              tablet with Western dog painted by
 kura jidai no bushi zokutai shózó chó-         Hôitsu: Introduction of copy work of           Nedachi 1986: Nedachi Kensuke. "Nan-
 koku" (Kamakura-period secular portrait        Tôshuku's "Paired dogs"). Museum no.            zen'in no Issan Ichinei zô ni tsuite"
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 (1964).                                                                                        of Nanzen-in). Museum no. 420 (1986):
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Miyama 1981: Miyama Susumu. Kamdkurd            (Selected old maps of Japan). Tokyo,
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 of Kamakura sculpture). Yokohama,             Nagahara 1967: Nagahara Keiji. Ddimyd
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MOA Art Museum 1982: MOA Art Mu-                main system). Tokyo, 1967.                       sity of California, Berkeley, 1972.
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                                                no doran (The age of wars). Tokyo, 1975.         bition from Japanese Collections. Exh.
 Chinese and Japanese paintings).
 [Tokyo], 1982.                                Nagatake and Hayashiya 1978: Nagatake             cat. by Shin'ichi Tani and Tadashi Su-
                                                Takeshi and Hayashiya Seizó, eds. Edo 3          gase. Japan House Gallery, New York,
Mori 1950: Mori Tôru. "Minamoto Yori-           (Edo period 3: Imari and Nabeshima               1973; St. Louis Art Museum, 1973;
 tomo zo ni tsuite" (On the portrait of         wares). Vol. 8 of Sekdi tôji zenshû (Ce-         Honolulu Academy of Arts, 1973.
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 (1950): 28-39.                                                                                New York 1975: Momoyama: Japanese Art
                                               Naitô 1981: Naitô Takashi. "Shaseicho no          in the Age of Grandeur. Exh. cat. The
Mori 1957: Mori Hisashi. "Akana Hachi-          shikó: Edo chüki no konchü zufu ni               Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
 mangü shinzô" (The Akana Hachi-                tsuite" (The thought behind albums of            York, 1975.
 rnangu Shinto sculptures). Kokkd no.           natural studies: Regarding the mid-Edo
 789 (1957): 402-409.                                                                          New York 1975-1976: Japanese Art: Selec-
                                                albums of insect studies). Hikaku shisd          tions from the Mary and Jackson Burke
Mori 1961: Mori Hisashi. Busshi Kdikei          zdsshi no. 4 (1981): 35-58.                      Collection. Exh. cat. by Miyeko Murase.
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 Kaikei). Tokyo, 1961                            "Sesshükei kachózu byóbu kenkyü"                York, 1975-1976; Seattle Art Museum,
                                                (Study of flower-and-bird screens by Ses-        1977; Minneapolis Institute of Art, 1977.
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  Exh. cat. by Walter A. Compton et al.         kenkyü" (A study on the portrait of Ta-      (Arts of Japan). Tokyo, 1968.
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                                                family). Kokka no. 906 (1967): 7-22; no.    Ozaki and Sato 1970: Ozaki Motoharu and
New York 1979: Chanoyu: Japanese Tea                                                          Sato Kanzan. Katchü to token (Armor
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New York 1983: Emaki: Narrative Scrolls        Oishi 1977: Oishi Shinzaburô. Edo jidai        from American Collections: The Muro-
  from Japan. Exh. cat. by Miyeko                (The Edo period). Tokyo, 1977.               machi Period, an Exhibition in Honor of
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  New York, 1983.                              Oishi 1978: Oishi Shinzaburô. Edo to chihô
                                                 bunka (Edo and provincial culture).          Shimizu and Carolyn Wheelwright. The
New York 1984: Kosode: i6th-icth Century         Tokyo, 1978.                                 Art Museum, Princeton University,
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  cum, Monica Bethe, and Margot Paul.           Okada Jo, Matsuda Gonroku, and Ara-
                                                kawa Hirokazu, eds. Nihon no shitsugei        Kimonos of the i6tn-zoth centuries.
  Japan House Gallery, New York, 1984.                                                        Exh. cat. by Hayao Ishimura, Nobuhiko
                                                (Japanese lacquer). 6 vols. Tokyo, 1978-
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New York 1985: Spectacular Helmets of Ja-                                                    ton, 1982.
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        This book was produced by the editors
            office, National Gallery of Art
          Editor-in-Chief, Frances P. Smyth
             Senior editor, Mary Yakush
Editors, Naomi Noble Richard and Virginia Wageman
           Translations by Kyoko Selden
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