Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of color woodblock print; yoko oban.

Abe no Nakamaro, seventh poet in the series One Hundred Poems by One Hundred Poets Explained by the Nurse

c. 1835/36

Katsushika Hokusai 葛飾 北斎 Japanese, 1760-1849

Japan

The eighth-century poet Abe no Nakamaro, accompanied by Chinese attendants, stands on a hill in China and gazes toward his home country Japan, to which he never returned. In the poem inscribed in a cartouche at the upper right, he wonders if the moon is the same as he had seen at Mount Mikasa in Nara. Nakamaro, who was sent to China as a young student and diplomat, spent more than fifty years there. Because of rough storms at sea, his two attempts to return to Japan failed. Hokusai placed only a reflection of the moon on the sea to avoid being too obvious.

Color woodblock print; yoko oban

Arts of Asia