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]

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]

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

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ 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.
  3. ^ 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.
  4. ^ Takakura Shin'ichirō, ed. (1973). アイヌ絵集成 [Collected Ainu-e] (in Japanese). Banchō Shobō.
  5. ^ 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.