Kamis, 12 Agustus 2010

hantu di jepang

19th-century ghost scrolls

Every August, as Japanese spirits return en masse from the otherworld, Tokyo's Zenshoan temple (map) exhibits a spine-chilling collection of 19th-century ghost scroll paintings. Here are a few. (Click the "+" under each image to enlarge.)

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost [+] // Sea Monster [+]

"Ghost" by Iijima Koga is a portrait of a floating, kimono-clad female apparition with all the ghastly physical features you hope to find in an undead spirit -- bony hands, a head of stringy hair, and a pained grimace revealing a mouth full of black teeth. "Sea Monster" by Utagawa Hoen depicts an umi-bozu lurking near a boat anchored at shore, with the moon located precisely where the monster's mouth should be.

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
The Ghost of a Blind Female Street Singer [+]

Utagawa Hiroshige's "Ghost of a Blind Female Street Singer" portrays the restless spirit of a street performer, one white unseeing eye wide open, carrying a shamisen as she drifts above the surface of a river on the way to her next performance.

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Kohada Koheiji [+] // Willow and the Moon [+]

Utagawa Kunitoshi's "Kohada Koheiji" shows the main character of a famous Edo-period novel (published 1803) by Santo Kyoden. In the story, after Koheiji is killed by his wife and her lover, his gangly ghost returns to haunt them by peering through the mosquito netting surrounding their bed. (This character is also the subject of ukiyo-e artist Hokusai's famous print "The Ghost of Kohada Koheiji.") "Willow and the Moon" by Koson might at first glance appear as nothing more than a peaceful moonlit scene at the water's edge, but look again -- the moon and clouds form a menacing face in the sky, and the bare willow branches form a scraggly head of hair.

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Kaidan Chibusa Enoki: The Ghostly Tale of the Wet Nurse Tree [+]

This painting by Ito Seiu, the godfather of Japanese bondage (kinbaku), depicts a scene from Kaidan Chibusa Enoki, an old horror story in which the ghost of a dead painter returns to protect his baby from his murderer, a wandering samurai who fell in love with his wife while he was away painting. This scroll shows the ghost holding the baby while standing under a waterfall at Juniso (where Tokyo's Shinjuku Chuo Park is now located).

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost [+] // Ghost of the Wharf [+]

The subject of "Ghost" by Rinrin is a spirit with an eerie blank stare and gaunt ribs visible under its clothing, and who appears to be melting away. Shibata Zeshin's "Ghost of the Wharf" depicts a feeble-looking apparition relaxing on a pier, casually glancing at something over its shoulder.

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost in the Rain [+] // Ghosts of Husband and Wife [+]

Ikeda Ayaoka's "Ghost in the Rain" shows a forlorn-looking female apparition outside in a storm, with flames rising up from where her feet should be. "Ghosts of Husband and Wife" by Otai is a portrait of what appears to be an undead married couple -- a subject rarely seen in ghost scroll paintings. The sinister pair are pictured clutching a human skull. The husband is wearing a traditional Buddhist funerary headdress worn by the dead, and he has blood smeared on his face.

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Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost with a Severed Head [+] // Ghost [+]

Kawakami Togai's "Ghost with a Severed Head" shows a female apparition lovingly cradling a man's decapitated head. The subject of "Ghost" by Gyoshin is a pathetic, emaciated figure with thinning hair and blackened teeth. There seems to be a hint of humor in his expression.

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These and dozens more hanging scroll paintings of ghosts are on display throughout the month of August at Zenshoan temple, located near Nippori station in Tokyo (map).

[Images from Yureiga-shu: Zenshoan/Sanyutei Encho Collection, published by Zenshoan, 2000]




15 Responses to “19th-century ghost scrolls”

  1. trazer

    Thanks for the info! I had been to the display yesterday. Kohada Koheiji and the ume bozu have to be seen up close. Many more nice scrolls to be seen, and sheets of ancient kanji like you wont beleive.
    As for the access, if you dont like walking in the heat, you can take the chuo line from Nishi-Nippori to Sendagi (???), much closer.

    [Reply]

  2. gullevek

    Went there last week on Saturday, was really awesome. Best thing was, that I met another foreigner there who found this show also on Pink Tentacle ...

    [Reply]

  3. Silence

    I liked the artist's concept of ghosts. But I didn't find any of them scary. I found these ghosts to be sad and confused, may be a little lost in their own world.
    I do get scared by the subject of Ghosts otherwise, but the pictures above make me feel that they are another creation of some energy (divine energy, may be, like God). And they have their own set of problems that they are trying hard to solve. They are not happy for sure so the best we can do for them is to understand them and let them "BE". At least not get scared of them and make things more difficult for them.

    [Reply]

  4. I am a scientist planning a series of projects with collaborators in Kyoto on supernatural beliefs. I find these images haunting in both an aesthetic and psychological way.

    Once again pink tentacle achieves excellence in its portrait of Japan.

    http://www.brucemhood.com

    [Reply]

  5. Wow, thanks for sharing! I just found your site and have bookmarked and tracked back to it. I especially like the horrific husband and wife!

    [Reply]

  6. siljah

    i love this stuff...thanxxx. favorite being the severed head one- love, blood, lust.

    [Reply]

  7. aya

    The artwork is beautiful.

    [Reply]

  8. Dagger

    WOW kewl Thanks.

    [Reply]

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