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UTAGAWA TOYOHARU (1735-1814)*

Details
UTAGAWA TOYOHARU (1735-1814)*

Amagoi Komachi "Komachi praying for rain"

Hanging scroll, ink and color on silk, 38.7 x 69.8cm., signed Ichiryusai Toyoharu and sealed, mounted on brocade

Lot Essay

A story is told that during a period of severe drought that ravaged the country the Emperor Junna (823-33) asked Ono no Komachi to write a poem praying for rain. In the Shinsen-en, the imperial garden in Kyoto, she recited her poem and hurled it, written on a poem slip, into the pond. Three days of heavy rain ensued. Her celebrated poem inscribed on this painting reads:

Kotowariya
hi no moto nareba
teri mo sen
saritote wa mata
ame ga shita to wa


This may be the land
that lies beneath the sun, but
its light torments us.
Surely what we call this earth
lies also under the rain.[1]

A version of this painting by Toyokuni (1769-1825), Toyoharu's foremost student, is illustrated in Nikuhitsu Ukiyo-e Meihinten (Tokyo: Itabashi Museum, 1989) no. 17. A horizontal version of this image by Toyokuni was once in the Fukuba Collection and is illustrated in Katalog ofver Fukuba's Kollektion af Ett Hundra Ukiyo ye Malningar (Stockholm: Broderna Lagerstrom, 1911) no. 75.
[1] David Waterhouse, Harunobu and his Age (London, 1964) p. 82.