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Oshie Hagoita (Decorated Wooden Panel) Portraying Shiokumi

Motozo Isoya, Hiromi Takase, Hisamitsu Yamamoto1967 - 1977

Saitama Prefectual Museum of History and Folklore

Saitama Prefectual Museum of History and Folklore
Saitama City, Japan

In Japan, a traditional badminton-like game called hanetsuki is played during New Years. Hanetsuki players use a rectangular wooden panel called a hagoita as a racket. Hagoita are often decorated with painted pictures of famous roles or actors from kabuki (traditional Japanese theater). Oshie hagoita are special hagoita created for indoor display purposes only. Instead of a painted picture, these hagoita feature three-dimensional portrayals of their subjects created by arranging cotton on a mounting board attached to the wood and then covering the cotton arrangements with woven cloth (often silk). Oshie hagoita are produced in Tokyo, Saitama Prefecture, and a few other parts of Japan and are often given as congratulatory gifts. This oshie hagoita portrays a performer of shiokumi, a famous kabuki dance. Oshie hagoita depicting kabuki plays and actors were first created in Edo (present-day Tokyo) during the Bunka-Bunsei Period (1804-1829), which saw a rapid growth of an extravagant urban culture, and are still produced today. Cultural Properties Designated by Saitama Prefecture.

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  • Title: Oshie Hagoita (Decorated Wooden Panel) Portraying Shiokumi
  • Creator: Motozo Isoya, Hiromi Takase, Hisamitsu Yamamoto
  • Date: 1967 - 1977
  • Physical Dimensions: w33 x h75.5 x d10 cm
  • Type: Industrial art object
  • External Link: http://www.saitama-rekimin.spec.ed.jp/
Saitama Prefectual Museum of History and Folklore

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