Description
Here, a woman dressed as a man replaces Fugen, a bodhisattva—a being among those considered enlightened in Buddhism—who symbolizes learning as a path to awakening and typically rides an elephant. The painting teaches the lesson of impermanence through the petals falling from the lotus flower the woman holds. It also alludes to the legend of Eguchi, a 12th-century courtesan who, following an encounter with a Buddhist monk-poet called Saigyō, revealed herself to be a manifestation of Fugen.
Provenance
(Nathan Chaikin, Switzerland, sold to Mr. and Mrs. Kelvin Smith); The Kelvin Smith Collection, Cleveland, OH, given by Mrs. Kelvin [Eleanor Armstrong] Smith [1899–1998] to the Cleveland Museum of Art (?–1985); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1985–)
Accession Number
1985.277
Medium
hanging scroll; ink and color on silk
Dimensions
Painting only: 114.3 x 56.2 cm (45 x 22 1/8 in.); Including mounting: 186.7 x 76.2 cm (73 1/2 x 30 in.)
Classification
Painting
Credit Line
The Kelvin Smith Collection, given by Mrs. Kelvin Smith
Related Artworks
Perspective Pictures for The Treasure House of Loyalty
Kitao Masayoshi
Chushingura: Act I (from the series Perspective Pictures for The Treasure House of Loyalty)
Kitao Masayoshi
Chushingura: Act X (from the series Perspective Pictures for The Treasure House of Loyalty)
Kitao Masayoshi
Chushingura: Act XI (from the series Perspective Pictures for The Treasure House of Loyalty)
Kitao Masayoshi