File:Sode no maki 袖の巻 (Handscroll for the Sleeve) (BM OA+,0.135.6).jpg

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Sode no maki 袖の巻 (Handscroll for the Sleeve)   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Title
Sode no maki 袖の巻 (Handscroll for the Sleeve)
Description
English: Woodblock print, shunga. Lovers.
Date circa 1785
date QS:P571,+1785-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
Medium paper
Dimensions
Height: 12.70 centimetres
Length: 66.60 centimetres
institution QS:P195,Q6373
Current location
Asia
Accession number
OA+,0.135.6
Notes This is the most celebrated shunga work by Torii Kiyonaga. Within the strikingly long, horizontal format, very narrow in height, are presented eleven scenes of sexual coupling and in the twelfth, close-ups of three female sex organs within round windows. The title Handscroll for the Sleeve was taken by shunga scholar Hayashi Yoshikazu from a phrase in the printed preface: ‘The charms of a beautiful woman... captured in a handscroll for the sleeve’ The figures of the couples are cropped in an extraordinary and memorable way within the unusually long, narrow format, and the undulating lines that express their bodies, as well as the richness and variety of their expressions are truly beautiful. This is certainly one of the great masterpieces within the shunga tradition. A rich variety of types is portrayed, and in many different bodily poses: a young couple dressed in the courtly costumes of Ushiwakamaru (the future warrior hero Yoshitsune) and Princess Jo- ruri; a maid from a warrior mansion with her distinctive ‘horn-hiding’ (tsuno-kakushi) head-cloth; a young female firewood-seller, from the village of Ohara near Kyoto, and her lover using her bundle of sticks as a pillow (see Clark et al 2013, p. 156, fig. 2); a middle-aged couple relaxing in a pleasurable drowse after sex; young adolescents who have forgotten all about their calligraphy practice; a woman wearing a special white narrow sash to support her pregnant stomach, and so on. There are quite a few examples of shunga being made in the formats of small handscrolls and books. In fact, the special term ‘sleeve treasure’ (shu-chin) was used to describe small things that were slipped inside the breast or hanging sleeve of a traditional kosode kimono. No doubt people enjoyed them in this way, carrying them around, or hiding them in the small drawer on the side of a pillow-stand in the bedroom. [YY]
Source/Photographer https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_OA-0-135-6
Permission
(Reusing this file)
© The Trustees of the British Museum, released as CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

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current20:47, 12 May 2020Thumbnail for version as of 20:47, 12 May 20201,600 × 650 (150 KB)Copyfraud (talk | contribs)British Museum public domain uploads (Copyfraud/BM) Eroticism in the British Museum 1785 #1,433/1,471