
Katsushika Hokusai, (1760–1849); woodblock print; color on paper; S2004.3.210
The five ghosts from the published designs of a series titled One Hundred Ghost Tales (Hyaku monogatari) reflect an Edo custom of telling ghost tales in the dark. The ghosts are among the eeriest of Hokusai’s commercially published prints, and they express Hokusai’s interest in imagining the supernatural world, which began in his youth with a print of a haunted house.
Here, a woman’s head with a serpentine neck made up of a stack of dishes represents the ghost of Okiku, whose master threw her into a well because she had broken his favorite dish. At night the sound of smashing porcelain and a voice counting “one, two, three…” emanated from the well.
Happy Halloween from Freer|Sackler. And try not to break any dishes…
I enjoy reading about Japanese ghost and I believe this website got some really useful stuff on it! .
great!