Showing posts with label Benzaiten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benzaiten. Show all posts

Saturday, 6 May 2017

62 - Utamaro II: Benzaiten Playing Lute


Ukiyo-e. Utamaro II. Biwa. Benzaiten.
Utamaro II: Benzaiten Playing Lute


Kitagawa Utamaro II, (1753?-1831?) first called himself Koikawa Shunsho, but adopted the name Kitagawa Utamaro II when his teacher, the first Utamaro, died. He also married his teacher's widow.

Utamaro II continued to create prints in the style of his predecessor, and even signed them in the same way. Today it is impossible to say with certainty where the first Utamaro ends and the second starts.

I like this little black and white print by Utamaro II, Benzaiten Playing Lute. Colour would just be a distraction from the graceful lines.

The musical instrument is a biwa, a traditional Japanese lute, commonly associated with Benzaiten, the goddess of music.


Saturday, 14 May 2016

11 - Keisei: Benzaiten Seated on a White Dragon


Ukiyo-e. Benzaiten. Aoigaoka Keisei,
Keisei: Benzaiten Seated on a White Dragon - 1832-1833

Aoigaoka Keisei was active during the 1820s and 1830s. He was Hokkei's student, possibly also Hokusai's, and his prints, mainly surimono and book illustrations, are of a very high technical standard.

This print is named "Benzaiten sitting on a White Dragon". It is also called "The Goddess Benzaiten Appears to Hôjô Tokimasa at Enoshima". But that title is misleading, unless one sees the whole vertical diptych, of which this is the top print. The bottom print is missing here.

Benzaiten is a Japanese Buddhist goddess of everything that flows: water, words, music, time, and knowledge - and she is one of the Seven Gods of Good Fortune. She is also considered a Shinto kami and a protector deity of Japan, and she is associated with dragons. Her origin can be traced back to the Hindu goddess Saraswati.

The musical instrument she holds is a biwa, a traditional Japanese lute.