Flowers, Moon, and Genji, vol. 2

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Flowers, Moon, and Genji, vol. 2

Koikawa Shōzan

Date
c. 1861–63
Medium
Woodblock-printed book, ink and color with metallic pigments
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Tale of Genji, arguably the most famous Japanese novel, was written by Murasaki Shikibu, an early eleventh century noblewoman. The story centers around Hikaru Genji, the handsome son of an Emperor, and his romantic life. The tale’s implicit eroticism provided fertile ground for explicitly erotic adaptaions. In the late Edo period, writer Ryūtei Tanehiko wrote a parody of the tale titled A Fraudulent Murasaki’s Rustic Genji (1829), which set off a string of Genji-inspired erotic illustrated books. Kagetsu Genji is an example of an erotic adaptation of the Tale of Genji. The first volume covers the plot in chapters 1 (“The Paulownia Pavilion”) to 11 (“Falling Flowers”); the second from chapters 12 (“Suma”) to 23 (The Warbler’s First Song”); and the third from chapters 24 (Butterflies) to 35 (“Spring Shoots II”). The remaining 18 chapters are not included. Each volume includes 12 pages of illustrations depicting men and women in various positions of sexual intercourse, framed by red and purple. A shell-shaped cartouche at the top right of each page contains a poem from Genji, connecting the erotic rendering back to the original text. Following the illustrations, 18 to 22 pages of text follow. Readers were thus visually and intellectually stimulated. Asia

The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.