Artwork Page for Departure from Kashima

Details / Information for Departure from Kashima

Departure from Kashima

1336–92
Measurements
Overall: 212.7 x 63.3 cm (83 3/4 x 24 15/16 in.); Including mounting: 119.4 x 41 cm (47 x 16 1/8 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

The kami Takemikazuchi from Kashima (in present-day Ibaraki Prefecture) departs on a white deer for Mount Mikasa in Nara, where he takes up residence. The five Kasuga kami are presented within a golden circle supported by the branches of a sakaki tree, from which trail five white paper streamers—indicating the purity and sacredness of the five shrine halls of the complex—as well as blossoming wisteria vines, a symbol of the Fujiwara family. The two figures walking along near the stag’s back legs are Nakatomi no Tokifū and his younger brother Hidetsura, who have followed Takemikazuchi and become priests of Kasuga Taisha.
A vertically oriented ink and color silk hanging scroll depicts a man with a light skin tone riding a white antlered deer. Facing left, he wears a red robe. Above him, a large golden circle rests on green foliage with white jagged lines below. A dark mountain rises behind muted horizontal bands of color in the distance. In the lower right, two seated men wear robes. Decorative borders frame the scene.

Departure from Kashima

1336–92

Japan, Nanbokuchō period (1336–92)

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