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A beauty playing koto
A beauty playing koto

A beauty playing koto

Artist (Japanese, 1712 - 1772)
Place of OriginJapan
Dateapprox. 1720
PeriodEdo period (1615-1868)
CultureJapanese
MaterialsInk and colors on silk
DimensionsH. 54 in x W. 29 3/4 in (knob to knob), H. 137.2 cm x W. 75.6 cm (overall)
Credit LineGift of Alexander and Cornelia Calhoun
Object number2006.56
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsPainting
On View
Not on view
InscribedYamatoeshi Furuyama Moromasa
More Information

 古山師政筆 琴を弾く美人図

Attended by a female servant, a young woman plays a Japanese zither (koto) by the light of a full moon. Arranged around the women are various accoutrements of upper-class daily life: elegant lacquered trays with smoking utensils and incense, a lampstand, and rolled bamboo blinds. This work belongs to a genre popular in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in which women in contemporary fashions are shown engaging in elegant pastimes. Here the setting recalls an aristocratic villa, while seasonal elements of a full moon and red maple tree, both associated with autumn, call to mind the traditions of classical poetry.

Furuyama Moromasa seems to have been an artist of distinction who painted and designed woodblock prints, mostly focused on the pleasure quarter. His works are now rare.

Subject
  • woman
  • kimono
  • koto
  • balcony
  • stream