Three Poems from the Collection of Poems Ancient and Modern (Kokin wakashū), one of the Araki Fragments (Araki-gire)

Attributed to Fujiwara no Yukinari (Kōzei) Japanese

Not on view

The long strands of calligraphy were inscribed without lifting the brush from the paper. Such “unbroken-line” (renmentai) brushwork, considered de rigueur for ladies of the palace during the age of Genji, came to characterize much of the period’s poetic inscriptions.



The “cloud paper” (kumogami), moreover, recalls the type popular in the Heian court from the tenth century onward. Indigo-dyed pulp was used when fabricating the paper, resulting in abstract undulating patterns of blue or purple—especially striking across the wide expanse of a handscroll—that were favored as an attractive backdrop for presenting poems.



On view from August 28, 2021–December 6, 2021

Three Poems from the Collection of Poems Ancient and Modern (Kokin wakashū), one of the Araki Fragments (Araki-gire), Attributed to Fujiwara no Yukinari (Kōzei) (Japanese, 972–1027), Page from a booklet mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper, Japan

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