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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
한경자 (靑山學院大學)
저널정보
한국일어일문학회 일어일문학연구 일어일문학연구 제115권
발행연도
2020.1
수록면
261 - 282 (22page)

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In November 1929, Kido OKAMOTO's Kabuki "Chosen Byobu" (Korean folding screen) premiered at Kabuki-za Theater. This article examines what kind of Kabuki "Chosen Byobu" was. The term "Chosen Byobu" refers to a gold folding screen sent by the Edo bakufu to the King of Chosun as a souvenir when the Joseon tongsinsa came to Japan. In 1815, Hironobu KANO, a painter of the innermost part of the Edo period, completed a folding screen painting to be presented to the King of Korea by order of the Edo bakufu, but he refused an order from Roju (member of shogun's council of elders), who was dissatisfied with the thinness of the gold sand and committed ‘seppuku’ (suicide by disembowelment) in a palanquin on his way home from the castle. "Chosen Byobu" was Kabuki written at the request of Sadanji for a performance in which Tossho was adopted, and it was performed with ingenuity to attract the interest of painters in an atmosphere where the public interest in paintings and painters was at a height. Kido did not disclose what he covered as in "Shuzenji Monogatari" (The Tale of Shuzen-ji Temple), but it is considered that 'the bitter death of Yusen KANO' by Shugetsu KOBAYASHI, who was his friend, had some influence. Deciding to die, he said to his disciple, 'Be a town painter and draw the picture you want to draw. That's what I really want to do in painting,' says Hironobu, who can see that the conflicts that arise from sticking to his opinion are resolved by 'given-up' which is a characteristic of Kido's later works.

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