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Shuten Dōji ('Yorimitsu and the drunken monster of Mount Ibuki'), a handscroll painting

1600/1699

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

This handscroll illustrates the legend of how an ogre called Shuten Dōji ('The Drunken Boy') was killed by the warrior Minamoto Yorimitsu (who actually lived AD 948-1021).

Shuten Dōji lured young women to his lair in the mountains where he kept them prisoner and sometimes ate them. Yorimitsu and his four companions deceived the monster by disguising themselves as yamabushi ('mountain monks'). They made him drunk, then cut off his head, freeing the district from this terrible peril. In this scene the warriors, disguised as monks, cross a ravine by way of a fallen pine trunk. They carry portable shrines on their backs. Some locals point and welcome them with obvious pleasure and relief. The historical Yorimitsu was a warrior who served the Heian court by getting rid of robbers and pirates, suggesting why this legend was attached to him.

The composition of the scroll is based on a famous set of scrolls attributed to Kanō Masanobu (1476-1559). The lively detail and energy are clearly Kanō' in style, but the earthy vigour suggests that it was commissioned by a rich townsman rather than by a daimyō.

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  • Title: Shuten Dōji ('Yorimitsu and the drunken monster of Mount Ibuki'), a handscroll painting
  • Date Created: 1600/1699
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 26.80cm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: painted
  • Subject: myth/legend
  • Registration number: 1881,1210,0.383
  • Production place: Painted in Japan
  • Producer: Painted by Okunobu, Kano. Attributed to the Manner of Motonobu, Kano
  • Period/culture: Edo Period
  • Material: paper
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Anderson, William
British Museum

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