Emishi paying homage to Shōtoku Taishi (1321–4), a precursor to Ainu genre painting; detail from the Pictorial Biography of Prince Shōtoku (ICP ), Jōgū-ji (上宮寺 ) , kept at Ibaraki Prefectural Museum of History [ 1] [ 2]
Ainu genre painting (アイヌ風俗画 , Ainu-fuzokuga ) or (アイヌ絵 Ainu-e ) is the Japanese art historical term for depictions of Ainu by Wajin , prevalent from the mid-Edo period to the early Meiji period (eighteenth and nineteenth centuries).[ 3] [ 4] The preliterate Ainu had no painting tradition of their own.[ 5]
Typical subjects include myths and legends , rituals, encounters with wajin , hunting , fishing, and forms of entertainment.[ 5] Artists active in the genre include Chishima Shunri (千島春里 ) , Hayasaka Bunrei (早坂文嶺 ) , Hirasawa Byōzan (平沢屏山 ) , Kakizaki Hakyō , Kodama Teiryō (小玉貞良 ) , Matsuura Takeshirō (松浦武四郎 ) Murakami Shimanojō (村上島之允 ) , Murakami Teisuke (村上貞助 ) , and Tani Gentan (谷元旦 ) .[ 5]
See also
References
^ Shinmyō Hidehito (2011). 「アイヌ風俗画」の研究 — 近世北海道におけるアイヌと美術 [Study of Ainu Genre Painting ] (in Japanese). Nakanishi Shuppan. ISBN 978-4-89115-223-9 .
^ 紙本著色聖徳太子絵伝 [Pictorial Biography of Shotoku Taishi, colour on paper] (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs . Retrieved 27 October 2016 .
^ Sasaki Toshikazu (2004). アイヌ絵誌の研究 [A Study of Depictions of the Ainu ] (in Japanese). Sōfūkan. ISBN 978-4-88323-141-6 .
^ Takakura Shin'ichirō, ed. (1973). アイヌ絵集成 [Collected Ainu-e ] (in Japanese). Banchō Shobō.
^ a b c Shinmyō Hidehito (2011). 「アイヌ風俗画」の研究 — 近世北海道におけるアイヌと美術 [Study of Ainu Genre Painting ] (in Japanese). Nakanishi Shuppan. pp. 268– 270. ISBN 978-4-89115-223-9 .