Changes

From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No change in size ,  09:51, 8 May 2017
no edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:  
*''Japanese'': 笠森お仙 ''(Kasamori Osen)''
 
*''Japanese'': 笠森お仙 ''(Kasamori Osen)''
   −
Kasamori Osen was a waitress at the Kagiya teashop near Kasamori [[Inari]] Shrine in Yanaka, a neighborhood of Edo; the shop was owned by her father, Kagiya Gohei. Osen was made famous as a local beauty by a number of ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artists of the time, [[Suzuki Harunobu]] first among them, who took her as the subject of their prints.
+
Kasamori Osen was a waitress at the Kagiya teashop near [[Kasamori Inari Shrine]] in Yanaka, a neighborhood of Edo; the shop was owned by her father, Kagiya Gohei. Osen was made famous as a local beauty by a number of ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artists of the time, [[Suzuki Harunobu]] first among them, who took her as the subject of their prints.
    
Along with [[Ofuji]] of the Hon'yanagi toothpick shop and [[Oyoshi]] of the Tsutaya teahouse, she was apparently categorized as one of "The Three Beauties" in at least one publication of the times (the 1779 ''Ameuri Dohei-den'' <!--売飴土平伝--> by [[Ota Nampo|Ôta Nampô]], who had also mentioned her in a work nine years earlier). Over time, her fame grew, and she appeared not only in single-sheet prints, but also in woodblock printed books, [[kabuki]] plays such as "''[[Kaidan tsuki Kasamori]]''"<ref>"Kasamori Osen." ''Nihon kokugo dai jiten'' 日本国語大辞典. Shogakukan, Inc. Accessed via JapanKnowledge online resource, 25 February 2011.</ref>, and in doll form.<ref>"[http://www.aisf.or.jp/~jaanus/deta/k/kasamoriosen.htm Kasamori Osen]". JAANUS. 2001. Accessed 24 Feb 2011.</ref> Some ''[[Nihonga]]'' painters, such as [[Masuda Gyokujo]], even painted her in the 20th century, harkening back to Harunobu.
 
Along with [[Ofuji]] of the Hon'yanagi toothpick shop and [[Oyoshi]] of the Tsutaya teahouse, she was apparently categorized as one of "The Three Beauties" in at least one publication of the times (the 1779 ''Ameuri Dohei-den'' <!--売飴土平伝--> by [[Ota Nampo|Ôta Nampô]], who had also mentioned her in a work nine years earlier). Over time, her fame grew, and she appeared not only in single-sheet prints, but also in woodblock printed books, [[kabuki]] plays such as "''[[Kaidan tsuki Kasamori]]''"<ref>"Kasamori Osen." ''Nihon kokugo dai jiten'' 日本国語大辞典. Shogakukan, Inc. Accessed via JapanKnowledge online resource, 25 February 2011.</ref>, and in doll form.<ref>"[http://www.aisf.or.jp/~jaanus/deta/k/kasamoriosen.htm Kasamori Osen]". JAANUS. 2001. Accessed 24 Feb 2011.</ref> Some ''[[Nihonga]]'' painters, such as [[Masuda Gyokujo]], even painted her in the 20th century, harkening back to Harunobu.
contributor
26,977

edits

Navigation menu