The Tale of Genji- A Visual Companion

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The Tale of Genji- A Visual Companion Page 3

by Melissa McCormick


  “Genji province-name renga” ( Genji kokumei renga), in

  which poets composed verses based alternately on

  the names of provinces throughout the realm and

  the titles of the fi fty-four Genji chapters.30 At the same

  time it would be a mistake to overstate the infl uence

  of renga over waka in terms of medieval Genji reception, and the album’s creation. Waka remained the

  dominant poetic form when it came to the creation

  of new poetry inspired by Murasaki’s tale, and Gensei

  and renga masters like him left countless examples.31

  Fig. 5 Portrait Sketch of Sanjōnishi Sanetaka. By Tosa

  Mitsunobu. Dated 1501. Single sheet, ink on paper, 41.2 × 25.8

  As the analyses of the texts and images in the pages

  cm. Historiographical Institute, The University of Tokyo.

  that follow will attest, an emphasis on the use of

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  specifi c semantic units (derived from waka as well as eighth month of 1509 bearing calligraphy papers

  renga) to represent Genji scenes and the calligraphy

  ( shikishi) to accompany a set of Genji pictures.

  of Genji texts helped shape the appearance of the

  These correspond to the fi fty-four colorful papers

  leaves in the 1510 album. At the same time, Gensei’s

  that make up half of the album today. Sanetaka’s

  expertise extended to the entire content of the tale.

  diary does not mention the preparation of the

  Like Sanetaka, he was well versed in Genji commen-

  shikishi, but they were certainly decorated by the

  taries and borrowed volumes of a commentary by

  time Sue Saburō handed them over, painted in

  Yotsutsuji Yoshinari (1326–1402), Gleanings from the

  fi ve diff erent colors — red, blue, yellow, pink, and

  Rivers and Seas [of Genji Commentaries] ( Kakaishō, four-

  green — and embellished with “dragon borders”

  teenth century) at the start of the album project, no

  that appear above, and on the right or left, of each

  doubt to help facilitate conversations with the album’s

  rectangular sheet (fi g. 6).35 The colored papers

  patron or to provide him with instruction on the tale.32

  emulate high-quality imported Chinese paper

  Renga masters like Gensei typically rose from hum-

  with similar dragon motifs that had been used pri-

  ble backgrounds and proved valuable as instructors

  marily in Zen circles since the fourteenth century.

  to aristocrats as well as members of the military elite

  Such Chinese-style paper is an interesting choice

  like the Ōuchi and Sue; they assisted their patrons

  for the inscription of The Tale of Genji, a work of

  in the successful navigation of poetry gatherings prose fi ction ( monogatari) and waka poetry written and regularly corresponded with them, correcting

  in kana, the phonetic Japanese script, usually con-

  or sending advice on their written poems.33 As they

  sidered antithetical to Chinese logographs, which

  were not subject to the protocol that accompanied

  were employed for offi

  cial writing. The pairing of

  court rank or military status, they could function as

  the fi ve-colored Chinese-style dragon papers with

  mediators, moving among disparate social groups as

  kana calligraphy in fact embodies the aesthetic of

  go-betweens for a variety of transactions, and trav-

  wa-kan, a form of creative expression in art and lit-

  eling throughout the country transporting texts and

  erature that deliberately juxtaposed Japanese ( wa)

  off ering their services in distant provinces. Gensei

  and Chinese ( kan) cultural objects and practices.36

  was a disciple of Sōgi (1421–1502), the medieval In the case of Sue Saburō’s Genji Album, this aes-period’s most famous renga poet, who had traveled

  thetic choice may refl ect his family’s identity as

  to the Ōuchi domains in 1480, and again in 1489,

  Ōuchi retainers, men engaged in foreign trade,

  and had forged strong ties to the daimyo and their

  with claims to continental culture.

  retainers, including Sue Hiroaki. Sōgi even counted

  Inherent in the juxtaposition of wa and kan is

  among his disciples Sanetaka himself; although also an underlying societal and cultural gender Sanetaka had been educated since early childhood in

  structure that associated offi

  cial Sinitic writing

  the Chinese and Japanese classics, it was Sōgi who

  with the masculine gender and vernacular writing

  trained him in a closely guarded tradition of exegesis

  in kana with the feminine. The latter was literally

  of the fi rst imperial waka anthology, the Kokinshū, as

  called “the female hand” ( onna-de), a gendered

  well as The Tale of Genji.34 The shared connection of

  mode of writing that, ironically, counted men as

  Gensei, Sanetaka, and Sue Hiroaki to the venerable

  some of its most celebrated practitioners.37 Certain

  Sōgi allowed Gensei to introduce his warrior patron

  leaves in the 1510 album employ some of the tropes

  to Sanetaka, which he did within six months of Sue

  of classical onna-de such as “scattered writing”

  Saburō’s arrival in the capital.

  ( chirashi gaki), in which the kana do not appear in

  syntactical order in regular right-to-left columns

  Calligraphers: Aristocratic Traces

  but are distributed across the paper in meandering

  patterns. Chapter Sixteen in the album is the most

  The album’s production began in earnest when

  conspicuous example, with a prose excerpt that

  Saburō arrived at Sanetaka’s residence early in the

  begins in the center and zigzags across the sheet

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  in a dizzying manner. But such leaves are relatively

  the need to remain discernible when viewed across

  rare in the album. The calligraphy of the 1510 a room.

  album is not in the quintessential onna-de style of

  It was up to the coordinators of the project to

  Heian calligraphy, characterized by gossamer thin

  ensure variety in the graphic design of the album’s

  brushstrokes that vertically connect multiple pho-

  calligraphy. Sanetaka and Gensei both played a role

  nemes into long fl owing ligatures of contiguous

  in the organization of the album’s texts, which

  lines of script. The writing is of the Muromachi

  involved selecting the excerpts, procuring the par-

  period, and the six calligraphic hands of the album

  ticipation of the six calligraphers, and collecting

  represent distinct calligraphic lineages of the early

  and collating the sheets of writing. They began

  sixteenth century.38 Even across these distinctive with t
he fi rst of these tasks, the selection of texts, and identifi able stylistic lineages, however, there

  which they sent to the various calligraphers, along

  is a certain consistency in the use of bold strokes

  with instructions or templates.39 The calligraphers

  brushed in dark, voluptuous ink. The calligraphers

  were probably not, in other words, left entirely to

  primarily limit themselves to the kana syllabary,

  their own devices in terms of the layout of their

  but strategically employ darkly inked and densely

  calligraphic assignments. Manuals on protocols

  tectonic Sinitic logographs to great visual eff ect.

  for inscription of shikishi existed for just this pur-

  The ink traces on these shikishi represent asser-

  pose, which the calligraphers themselves may have

  tive calligraphic expressions brushed with clarity

  used.40 The calligraphers did have some artistic

  for maximum legibility, perhaps for screens, and

  leeway, for example, in the way they responded

  to the dragon borders of each leaf in a diff erent

  manner, sometimes ignoring and transgressing

  them, and other times skillfully using the borders

  to off set words or phrases of signifi cance. The

  coordinators did, however, carefully orchestrate

  the color coordination of the sheets. They sent

  each of the six calligraphers a total of nine leaves

  and distributed the colored sheets in such a way

  that minimized repetition between calligraphic

  hand and paper hue in the sequence of the com-

  pleted album.41 As will be seen in the chapters

  ahead, the color of a calligraphy leaf often comple-

  ments the subject matter of the text inscribed on

  its surface in ways that must have been more than

  mere coincidence.

  The calligraphy of the Genji Album is brimming

  with visual appeal, and yet this eff ect was no doubt

  secondary in importance to the sum of the cal-

  ligraphic and courtly lineages it represented, the

  “aristocratic body” that is inscribed into the work

  itself. Each of the hands were as indicative of the

  identity of the calligraphers as their names and

  court rank, which in fact endowed the leaves with

  Fig. 6 Sanjōnishi Sanetaka (1455–1537), calligraphy for Leaves

  value. The album becomes, through the hands of

  of Wild Ginger (Aoi), Chapter Nine f rom The Tale of

  its six calligraphers, both a manual reproduction

  Genji Album. 1510. Ink on paper, 24.3 × 18.1 cm. Harvard Art

  Museums, Cambridge.

  of the Genji and a calligraphic representation of

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  courtly society that the Sue household could use to

  gorgeously represented, their faces, namely those of

  possess “the capital,” even in the distant provinces.

  elites, are depicted with an economy of means. The

  preferred vocabulary that has developed to describe

  Painters: Tosa Mitsunobu

  them refers to the “lines” employed for the eyes and

  and the Painting Bureau

  the “hooks” that delineate the noses ( hikime kagi-

  hana). One of the most striking elements of these

  Although Sanetaka’s diary does not mention the paintings is their abundant use of wafting gold paintings for the Genji Album, there is no doubt that

  clouds to f rame and order each composition, and

  they were entrusted to the artist Tosa Mitsunobu (act.

  the interplay between the organic shapes of these

  ca. 1462–1525), who had been Director of the Painting

  clouds and the straight lines and zigzagging diago-

  Bureau ( edokoro azukari) since 1469.42 Mitsunobu held

  nals of the architectural components. The paintings

  that title (bestowed on him by both emperor and

  are divided between outdoor scenes in which typi-

  shogun) for over fi fty years. It was a coveted post for

  cally a group of fi gures takes part in a courtly ritual

  a professional painter that ensured a certain amount

  or activity, and indoor scenes in which the roofs are

  of fi nancial stability and a steady stream of com-

  “blown off ” ( fukinuki yatai) to provide full visual

  missions from a varied clientele beyond the court

  access to interiors. This technique of direct access

  and shogunate for paintings of all kinds, including

  to a scene f rom a high vantage point is part of a

  Buddhist icons, mortuary portraits, narrative hand-

  mode of representation that diff ers f rom paintings

  scrolls, fans, and of course Genji paintings. The that employ a one-point perspective, or that orga-number of extant works by Mitsunobu show him

  nize a composition along an imagined horizon line.

  to be one of the most prolifi c and successful artists

  Thus, rather than depicting the action of narrative

  of medieval Japan, and his name is associated with

  scenes within a f ramework of illusionistic space,

  several artistic innovations of the period.43 As Chino

  in which characters and motifs decrease in size

  Kaori fi rst demonstrated, the unsigned paintings and placement according to a coherent, if unseen of the 1510 Genji Album are stylistically a perfect fi t

  grid of seemingly quantifi able spatial relationships,

  with Mitsunobu’s other known works.44 Mitsunobu

  these paintings demonstrate other organizational

  was in many ways the most logical artist to entrust

  priorities. A fi gure’s larger size or prominence in any

  with such a task. His prestigious title and relatively

  given painted scene is often indicative of a textual

  high court rank endowed his paintings with a cer-

  emphasis on their interiority in the corresponding

  tain cachet, and to the members of the Sue house his

  narrative passage, or their centrality to the action

  works would have epitomized court culture itself.

  of the scene. This sliding scale of visual emphasis

  Mitsunobu was also the painterly counterpart to weighted according to narrative content has been calligraphers and poets such as Sanetaka and Gensei

  described as a system of “psychological perspec-

  and had in fact collaborated with both men before.45

  tive,” which emerged out of the symbiosis of word

  Mitsunobu’s interactions with this coterie of court-

  and image in Heian period literature.48 Such a picto-

  ier-scholars, which included discussions concerning

  rial system provides an appropriate counterpart to

  The Tale of Genji and frequent participation in poetry

  the reading experience of Genji, which aff ords rel-

  gatherings, resulted in paintings that exhibit a sophis-

  atively unmediated access to characters’ thoughts.

  ticated understanding of the literary canon that he

  It continued to be the primary mode of Genji rep-

  was so often asked to visualize.46

  resentation with modifi cations in style and format

  The painted leaves of the 1510 album evoke
narra-

  over the centuries. The paintings in the 1510 album

  tive paintings of the earlier Heian period, with their

  thus employed long-standing techniques of courtly

  vibrant palette of mineral pigments, shell white for

  narrative painting and established a Genji Album tra-

  the powdered faces of aristocrats, and fi ne ink lines

  dition that would continue with members of the

  for details (fi g. 7).47 While the clothing of fi gures is

  Tosa and Sumiyoshi schools among others.

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  Mitsunobu’s paintings stand out, however, as obscure the artist’s hand in narrative paintings and qualitatively diff erent f rom all Genji album paintings

  put them at a remove conceptually f rom ink paint-

  that come afterward. These diff erences are manifest

  ings, which aim to connect viewers viscerally with

  in their use of pigments (relatively light and transpar-

  the energy and persona of the artist through the

  ent in certain areas), the sketchy quality of faces and

  vitality of exposed calligraphic line. The hand of the

  other details, and the prevalence of a wavy line to

  master artist could reemerge, however, through the

  defi ne rocks, hills, and trees. The approach is unique

  addition of fi nishing touches in black ink after the

  within so-called yamato-e ( Japanese-style pictures)

  color had been applied to the paintings. At this stage,

  of the era, and it signals an artist interested in incor-

  Mitsunobu introduced his signature artistic feature,

  porating certain characteristics of Sino-Japanese the tremulous lines that resonate with the indexical ink painting, calligraphic line and wash eff ects, into

  brushwork of the ink painting tradition, and they

  the realm of polychrome narrative paintings. The

  imbue Mitsunobu’s paintings with an individuality

  very process by which narrative paintings are made,

  that seems lacking in many other Genji pictures.

  however, renders this a diffi

  cult endeavor. They con-

  Mitsunobu’s formal Sinitic pictorial infl ections

  sist of “built-up pictures” ( tsukuri-e), for which the

  tend to appear only on the margins of the paintings,

  lead artist provides a master drawing in ink, usually

 

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