Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Chomu here presented a summer scene with a paper figure of Shojo floating in a water basin and reflected on its surface. Shojo are mythical, sake-loving water sprites that live on the ocean’s floor. They often appear in Japanese art and are usually shown dancing drunkenly around a sake cask. Like the parrot prints by Tanaka Shutei , these two prints have the same artist, design, and host, Hayama Kiitsu. Kiitsu, an Osaka haiku poet, may have recycled this charming design by an otherwise unknown artist in order to save trouble, time, or expense.
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Torii Kiyonaga — The One-Page Preface and Colophon from the
Yagi Oshuku — Bamboo
Kamisaka Sekka (Japanese, 1866–1942) — Flowers of a Hundred
Soshu — Egoyomi with Rabbits
Yabu Chosui — Shamisen and Box
Yōshū (Hashimoto) Chikanobu — 千代田の大奥|The Inner Palace of Chi
Kubo Shunman
Moriki Rosetsu — Smoking Dragon
Shibata Zeshin — Two formally dressed rats about to execute
Soga Shohaku — Handwritten Letter
Kurinara Gyokudo — Inro and Netsuke in the shape of a Boar
Kamata Gensen — New Year Gift