
TheHikone screen (彦根屏風,Hikone byōbu) is a Japanese paintedbyōbu folding screen of unknown authorship made during theKan'ei era (c. 1624–44). The 94-×-274.8-centimetre (37.0 × 108.2 in) screen folds in six parts and is painted on gold-leaf paper. It depicts people in the pleasure quarters of Kyoto playing music and games. The screen comes from the feudalHikone Domain, ruled by the screen's owners, theIi clan. It is owned by the city ofHikone inShiga Prefecture, in the Ii Naochika Collection.
The work is seen as representative of early modern Japanesegenre painting; some consider it the earliest work ofukiyo-e. In 1955 it was designated aNational Treasure of Japan and given the official nameShihon Kinjichaku-shoku Fuzoku-zu (紙本金地著色風俗図).
The 94-×-274.8-centimetre (37.0 × 108.2 in)byōbu screen[1] depicts a scene in which eleven male and female figures amuse themselves. On the left, a blind man and some women playshamisens before a four-panelbyōbu screen with a landscape painted on it. To their right a group of men and women play asugoroku board game.[2]

The manner of brushstrokes indicate the anonymous painting is in the style of theKyō Kanō [ja] school. The activities of the figures in the Hikone screen display the traditionalfour arts of the Chinese scholar. The clothing and personal items of the figures suggest the four seasons, as in traditional "four seasons pictures" (四季絵,shiki-e).[2]
The work is anonymous, which would have been typical of such genre works; further, if the artist were of the Kanō or similar schools, the common subject matter would have been considered beneath the artist's dignity and thus would likely not have been signed. The screen was probably a commission, and it was customary for artists not to sign works made for those of high rank.[1]
At times the work was attributed to the painterIwasa Matabei (1578–1650);[3] Until 1898 it was not known that Matabei had signed his paintings with the nameKatsumochi, thus comparison with his actual works was not possible, and many anonymous works such as the Hikone screen were attributed to him.[4] His nickname was "Ukiyo Matabei", which was assumed to link him to theukiyo demimonde and theukiyo-e genre of art.[5] Works such as theUkiyo-e Ruikō implied Matabei was the founder of the ukiyo-e,[3] and early Western scholars includingErnest Fenollosa also considered the screen a work of Matabei and an early work of ukiyo-e.[6] This attribution came to an end in 1898 with the discovery of Matabei's art name and the fact that the meaning of the wordukiyo bore different meanings beforeAsai Ryōi's use of it in 1661 to refer to the demimonde.[5] Paintings now known to be Matabei's are in the elegant, aristocraticYamato-e tradition and show little of the liveliness and rich colouring associated with ukiyo-e.[7] His general association with the work nevertheless continued for generations.[8]
As with almost allbyōbu screens of theearly modern period, no record remains of who commissioned the Hikone screen, nor of who executed it. It is thought most likely the commission came from someone of the upper ranks of society, from thekuge aristocracy, abuke samurai house, or amachishū [ja] business leader.[9]
Ukiyo-e artistHanegawa Chinchō [ja] (c. 1679–1754) depicted a man leaning against a panel of the Hikone screen; the caption states the screen was on display in theShitaya neighbourhood of Edo in about 1745.[a] A record made states the painterShibata Zeshin (1807–91) discovered the screen in the collection of an old Edo family, and later made a copy or derivative of it. The discovery is conjectured to have beenc. 1833–36, and Zeshin's derivativec. 1840.[9]

The screen came into the collection of theIi clan of the city ofHikone—its modern namesake—in what is nowShiga Prefecture no earlier than thelate Edo period (1853–67). There is no record of the screen having been at the Ii residence in Edo,[b][9] though as it neither appears in the family records in Hikone it is presumed it remained in the capital until theShōwa period.[10]
Tea masterTakahashi Yoshio [ja] (1861–1937) recorded aNoh event at the Ii residence on 30 June 1912 at whichIi Naotada [ja] (1881–1947, fifteenth head of the family) had numerous art objects on display, including the Hikone screen; an unnamed member of the family told him "the famous ukiyo Matabei's Hikone screen" had first been obtained byIi Naosuke (1815–60, thirteenth head of the family), who interested himself in curios and objets d'art.[10]

The work has been considered a masterpiece of Japanese genre painting since at least the mid-17th century. It has been widely copied, sometimes with variations, and some of the copies themselves have found renown.[1] In 1955 it was designated aNational Treasure of Japan and given the official nameShihon Kinjichaku-shoku Fuzoku-zu (紙本金地著色風俗図).
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