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Kitano Tenjin, the God of Learning, Visiting China (Totō Tenjin 渡唐天神)

Artist/Maker (Japanese, ca. 1697–1756)
Datelate 1750s
MediumWoodblock print (benizuri-e); ink and limited color on paper
DimensionsHashira-e; overall: 27 3/4 × 4 1/8 in. (70.5 × 10.5 cm)
Credit LineMary A. Ainsworth Bequest
Object number1950.165
Status
Not on view
More Information
Sugawara no Michizane 菅原道真 (845–903), a nobleman of the Heian Period (794–1185), was a scholar, poet, and statesman who rose to high rank at the imperial court. Embroiled in a power struggle, he was demoted and exiled to a distant province, where he died. Various calamities then struck the capital and were determined to be the vengeance of Sugawara’s angry spirit. To appease him, he was deified as Kitano Tenjin 北野天神. Originally understood to be a storm god, by the Edo period Tenjin had become known as the God of Learning.

Here, he appears in a popular form based on a Zen Buddhist legend known as Tenjin Visiting China (Totō Tenjin 渡唐天神), identified by the Chinese scholar’s cap and robe he wears. The blossoming plum branch is a more frequent symbol of Tenjin—in exile, Sugawara wrote a famous poem about the plum tree at his home back in the capital.
Exhibition History
Forty-eight Japanese Prints from the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection
  • University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN ( 1954-02 - 1954-02 )
  • University of the South, Sewannee, TN ( 1954-03 - 1954-03 )
Japanese Prints from the Ainsworth Collection
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 18, 1979 - October 21, 1979 )
Japanese Prints from the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (May 20, 1986 - July 20, 1986 )
A Life in Prints: Mary A. Ainsworth and the Floating World
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 3, 2015 - June 7, 2015 )
Collections
  • Asian