
Long time no Blog. At last, a reason:
http://www.etsy.com/shop/ikimono
My Etsy store needed a new look. I decided to re-do the banner, and will change it every month, using the beautiful folds of a different vintage silk bolt taken from my collection.
December is Yukiwa and Broken Plate.
Yukiwa-mon is a notched roundel motif that depicts rings of crystallized snow. Snow is believed to be the omen of a bountiful harvest. On this bolt, the pale, shaded colours are truly frosted, especially as they are woven rinzu style into the design.
Sophistication, and mystique, is added into this luscious silk by overlaying a dyed design, representing broken plates. The similarity to a Japanese snowflake is not lost on us, but the colours are darker and harsher.
Enter a Japanese Ghost Story: Okiku, an unfortunate servant maid. Her tale is one of the best known and was transformed into a Kabuki play and numerous novels.
Bancho Sarayashiki
In the kabuki play Bancho Sarayashiki, Okiku is a maid at the mansion of the Japanese samurai Tessan Aoyama, who tries to seduce the young girl. She rejects his advances and Aoyama resorts to using a trick. He hides one of ten valuable Dutch plates and tells Okiku that he will accuse her in public of stealing the plate unless she agrees to become his mistress. Fearful of such denounciation and finding herself in a desperate position, Okiku throws herself into a well and drowns.
Okiku’s ghost comes out every night, counting from one to nine and then breaks out into a terrible howling and sobbing. Finally Aoyama goes insane by the daily apparitions at night.
There are other versions of the Ghost Story of Okiku, including the famous Okiku in Distress, by Yoshitaki Utagawa, a nineteenth century Japanese writer. What they all have in common is the description of her ghost coming out of the well and counting from one to nine and then breaking out into a heart-rendering sobbing.
In another version, Okiku really breaks a plate and is killed by her master and her corpse is thrown into the well. Other versions attribute the plate breaking incident to the wife of Aoyama. To hide her guilt, she throws the broken plate into the well and accuses Okiku of having it stolen. In this version she is also killed by her master for punishment and thrown into the well.
There is also an alternate version for the end of the story. To stop the nightly sobbing, a friend of the family of Aoyama is hired. He is hiding at the well during the night and after Okiku had counted from one to nine, he is stepping forward shouting loudly “ten”. From then on the ghost of Okiku was never seen again.
Even Himeji Castle claims a tourist attraction link – Okiku’s well. In the Himeji version, Okiku was a servant of Aoyama, a retainer who planned a plot against his lord. Okiku overheard the plot and reported it to her lover, a loyal warrior. The plot was averted.
When Aoyama found out that Okiku was responsible, he decided to seek revenge. He accused her of having stolen one of ten valuable dishes. She was tortured to death and thrown into the well.
But there are other contenders for the site of Okiku’s well. The Canadian embassy in Tokyo – claims it is located on its land, bought from the Aoyama family.
I have not been able to find further information about the source of the broken plate motif on kimono. I would be delighted to hear from anyone who can add more information.
Until January, the next vintage silk, and another story from Japan.
メリークリスマス
Happy Holidays
IKIMONO
Posted in broken plate, Japan, Japanese, Japanese legend, kimono, Okiku, silk, snow crystal, vintage, yukiwa
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