Skip to main content

Visit Main Menu Block

  • Hours & Admission
  • Accessibility & Amenities
  • Tours & Group Visits
  • Visitor Guidelines

Exhibitions and Events Main Menu Block

  • Exhibitions
  • Events

Art and Design Main Menu Block

  • Collection
  • Collection Research
  • Past Exhibitions
  • Watch / Listen / Read

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum

Image

Image with id "Kzgye" not found, published, or embeddable.
  • Japanese print of a crouched woman, next to an open chest, wearing a blue patterned robe, facing away but looking at a small drawing of someone wearing a similar robe.

Keisai Eisen 渓斎英泉

Ono no Komachi at Sekidera (関寺小町 Sekidera komachi)

Description

Maker

Keisai Eisen 渓斎英泉 (1790-1848, b. in Edo, Japan)
Sanoya Kihei 佐野屋喜兵衛 (1717-1875

Title

Ono no Komachi at Sekidera (関寺小町 Sekidera komachi)
from the series Seven Komachi in the Modern Style (今やう七小町Imayō nana komachi)
Seven Modern Komachi (Imayo shichi Komachi)

Period

Edo Period

Year

ca. 1825

Medium

  • Polychrome woodblock print (nishiki-e)

Materials/Techniques

Techniques

  • Polychrome woodblock print (nishiki-e)

Materials

ink and color

Supports

  • paper

Geography

Place Made: Japan

Dimensions

Vertical ōban: 36.8 x 25.2 cm (14 1/2 x 9 15/16 inches)

Signature / Inscription / Marks

Inscription Text/Poem: Signed: Keisai Eisen ga
Censor's seal: kiwame
Publisher's seal: Sanoki
Poem: Omokage no kawarade toshi no tsumorekashi tatoe inochi ni kagiri aru tomo
Though years gone by where nothing changes, I know that life has limits

Signature: Keisai Eisen ga

Seals: Publisher's seal | Sanoki; censor's seal | kiwame

Credit / Object Number

Credit

Bequest of Isaac C. Bates

Object Number

13.1386

Type

  • Prints

Exhibition History

Exhibition History

Defying Boundaries
Women in Japanese Art
Apr 27, 2024 – Nov 04, 2024

Label copy

In each of these prints, the ninth-century poet Ono no Komachi is transformed into a young woman from the 1800s. Komachi was one of the Six Poetry Immortals (六歌仙Rokkasen) of Japanese waka poetry. Little is known of her life, but tales of her legendary beauty and wit are abundant. Today, the name Komachi has come to be synonymous with feminine beauty. In the late 1300s to early 1400s, Komachi was memorialized in several popular Nō plays known as the Seven Komachi (七小町 nana komachi). During the Edo period (1615–1868), images from the Seven Komachi were frequently parodied in prints. 

The Pleasure of Edo
Life in the Yoshiwara
Mar 24, 2000 – Jun 18, 2000

Label copy

Ono no Komachi, a 9th-century court poet, was one of the Six Poetic Sages (Rokkasen). The painting of the woman at the top of the print is labeled “Sekidera Komachi,” that is, “Komachi entering the Sekidera Temple.” In Eisen’s series the seven characteristic depictions of the famed writer are instead used to portray geisha or ordinary women.

Edo Culture II
Life in the Pleasure Quarters
Dec 16, 1994 – Mar 05, 1995
Women of the Floating World
Nov 09, 1990 – Jan 06, 1991
Courtesans of the Floating World
May 30, 1986 – Aug 30, 1986

Use & Feedback

Image use

The images on this website can enable discovery and collaboration and support new scholarship, and we encourage their use.

This object is in the Public Domain and available under a CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication

Tombstone

Keisai Eisen 渓斎英泉 (1790-1848, b. in Edo, Japan)
Sanoya Kihei 佐野屋喜兵衛 (1717-1875
Edo, Japan), publisher
Ono no Komachi at Sekidera (関寺小町 Sekidera komachi); from the series Seven Komachi in the Modern Style (今やう七小町Imayō nana komachi); Seven Modern Komachi (Imayo shichi Komachi), ca. 1825
Polychrome woodblock print (nishiki-e)
Vertical ōban: 36.8 x 25.2 cm (14 1/2 x 9 15/16 inches)
Bequest of Isaac C. Bates 13.1386

To request new photography, please send an email to imagerequest@risd.edu and include your name and the object's accession number.

Feedback

We view our online collection as a living documents, and our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you have additional information or have spotted an error, please send feedback to curatorial@risd.edu.

RISD Museum

  •  Facebook
  •  Twitter
  •  Instagram
  •  Vimeo
  •  Pinterest
  •  SoundCloud

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum

Footer Secondary

  • Image Request
  • Press Office
  • Rent the Museum
  • Terms of Use