lively street scene featuring a female kabuki performance at L; motely crowd of men, women, and children on street, some watching the performance, others flirting, walking, dancing, wrestling, etc.; in background, men and women lounge in tea shop

Okuni Kabuki, mid 17th century

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The screen shows a raucous street scene in the entertainment quarter of Kyoto and a performance by Izumo no Okuni, the shrine priestess credited as the founder of the Kabuki theater. Okuni, dressed as a samurai, is performing one of her most famous skits, “Teahouse Entertainments” (“Chaya asobi”). She and her “male” attendant (who is played by a woman) perform a dance directed toward the owner of a teahouse. This screen could be by the hand of an artist from the school of Iwasa Matabei.

Details
Title
Okuni Kabuki
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2013.31.191
Provenance
Bumpei Usui 臼井文平 (in 1970); Leighton R. Longhi; S. Yabumoto, Ltd.; Scholten Japanese Art (until 2013); Willard G. and Elizabeth Clark (2013)
Curator Approved

This record has been reviewed by our curatorial staff but may be incomplete. These records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@artsmia.org.

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lively street scene featuring a female kabuki performance at L; motely crowd of men, women, and children on street, some watching the performance, others flirting, walking, dancing, wrestling, etc.; in background, men and women lounge in tea shop