Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves ca. 1750 Okumura Masanobu Japanese In one scene of The Tale of the Heike, Emperor Takakura happens upon servants who have swept up maple leaves to make a fire to heat sake. The emperor remarks that they seem to be aware of a poem by the Tang poet Bo Juyi alluding to just such a scene. In this parody of the episode, one of the servants plays a three-stringed shamisen, which is anachronistic, since the instrument was not used in Japan until the seventeenth century. Beside the scene the artist has added a hokku (seventeen-syllable seasonal poem), perhaps of his own compositionIrozuku ya momiji o takite sake no kanHow colorful!Burning crimson leavesto heat rice wineTrans. John T. Carpenter. Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves 51993

Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves ca. 1750 Okumura Masanobu Japanese In one scene of The Tale of the Heike, Emperor Takakura happens upon servants who have swept up maple leaves to make a fire to heat sake. The emperor remarks that they seem to be aware of a poem by the Tang poet Bo Juyi alluding to just such a scene. In this parody of the episode, one of the servants plays a three-stringed shamisen, which is anachronistic, since the instrument was not used in Japan until the seventeenth century. Beside the scene the artist has added a hokku (seventeen-syllable seasonal poem), perhaps of his own compositionIrozuku ya momiji o takite sake no kanHow colorful!Burning crimson leavesto heat rice wineTrans. John T. Carpenter. Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves 51993
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves ca. 1750 Okumura Masanobu Japanese In one scene of The Tale of the Heike, Emperor Takakura happens upon servants who have swept up maple leaves to make a fire to heat sake. The emperor remarks that they seem to be aware of a poem by the Tang poet Bo Juyi alluding to just such a scene. In this parody of the episode, one of the servants plays a three-stringed shamisen, which is anachronistic, since the instrument was not used in Japan until the seventeenth century. Beside the scene the artist has added a hokku (seventeen-syllable seasonal poem), perhaps of his own compositionIrozuku ya momiji o takite sake no kanHow colorful!Burning crimson leavesto heat rice wineTrans. John T. Carpenter. Parody of Palace Servants Heating Sake over a Fire of Maple Leaves 51993 by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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