Parrot Komachi (Omu Komachi), from the series The Seven Fashionable Aspects of Komachi (Furyu yatsushi nana Komachi)

Art Institute of Chicago

Parrot Komachi (Omu Komachi), from the series The Seven Fashionable Aspects of Komachi (Furyu yatsushi nana Komachi)

Suzuki Harunobu 鈴木 春信

Date
Edo period (1615–1868), 1751/64
Medium
Color woodblock print; hosoban
Culture
Japan
Department
Arts of Asia
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

According to legend, poet Ono no Komachi received a letter from the emperor asking if she missed being at court. By changing only one character, Komachi was able to answer the question with an emphatic yes. This story is referred to as “Parrot Komachi” because of the bird’s talent for repetition. Here a courtesan hands a letter to her assistant, while a parrot is pictured on the standing screen behind her. As with many of the prints in this gallery, this image is a mitate-e (parody picture), in which the actions of modern figures refer to famed episodes in Komachi’s life. The poem written above reads: The cloud-capped palace Where I lived long ago Has not changed at all: But I saw through my bead curtains— Yes, I think fondly of that! (Translation by Louise Virgin

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Object type
AAT300041273

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