Image is an example from the Art Institute of Chicago
KATSUSHIKA HOKUSAI (B. 1760, d. 1849)
Women in a boat, gathering lotus leaves.
Now dew-drops sparkling o’er the moor are seen, / The autumn gust sweeps howling by, / Scarce lurks an instant ‘mid the reeds I ween, / In timid show’r the dew drops fly, / And, scattered o’er the grass, there lie. HYAKUNIN ISSHU URAGAWA ETORI The Hundred Poems Explained by the Nurse. [From a] complete set of the twenty-seven prints of this series, being all that were published, though Hokusai drew designs for the others. The meaning of many of these ancient poems, which are written in the old Yamato language and contain allusions to things not now recognizable, is obscure, and numerous commentaries upon them have been written. For two of the metrical versions here given the compiler of this catalogue is indebted to Mr. Will H. Edmunds; the others are by Mr. F. V. Dickens.Yoko-e. Signed: Zen Hokusai Manji.
Purchaser: Kano Oshima
Price: $70.00
Literature
Morse, Peter, Hokusai Katsushika, and 北斎(1760-1849) 葛飾. 1989. Hokusai, One Hundred Poets. . Translated by Clay MacCauley. New York: G. Braziller.
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