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This woodblock print is a 'parody
picture'
(mitate-e) which reworks
the subject 'Monk Saigyō gazing at Mt Fuji'
(Fuji-mi Saigyō). Saigyō
was the pen-name of Satō Norikiyo (1118-90), a warrior in the
service of Emperor Toba, who in 1140 took religious vows and left
his family at court to travel the country and compose some of the
greatest
One common depiction of an episode from Saigyō's life shows him as an aged man in monk's black robes, with walking stick and travelling hat, pausing on his journey to gaze in wonder at Mt Fuji. Here Fuji is used to express a Buddhist message of detachment from worldly concerns, mediated by the heightened poetic sensibility of an individual, creative imagination.
This is certainly the scene parodied here, the woman's long pipe suggesting Saigyō's stick. She can be identified as a courtesan by her sash (obi) tied at the front. She sits admiring a free-standing screen (tsuitate) painted with a view of Mt Fuji and Miho-no-Matsubara, leaning back as if overwhelmed.