Creation and Release of Digital Content for the Shuten-dōji Handscrolls
Following the launch in May 2025 (Reiwa 7) of digital content for the Shuten-dōji handscrolls by Sumiyoshi Hiroyuki (six scrolls, held by the Grassi Museum of Ethnology in Leipzig; hereafter, “the Leipzig version”) on a dedicated image-viewing terminal in the Library of the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (see the Monthly Report for May 2025: https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/katudo/2391511.html), we have additionally made available, on a limited basis, digital content for two Shuten-dōji handscrolls in the collection of the Nezu Museum: one attributed to Kanō Sanraku (three scrolls; hereafter. “the Sanraku-attributed version”) and another by Sumiyoshi Hironao (eight scrolls; hereafter. “the Hironao version”).
The Sanraku-attributed version vividly conveys the story of Shuten-dōji, making full use of the handscroll format through its disciplined brushwork and richly layered colors. The Hironao version, composed of an unprecedented eight scrolls, has drawn attention in exhibitions at the Nezu Museum and elsewhere, and can be regarded as a work that inherited the style of the Leipzig version. Because handscrolls are characterized by their long, continuous horizontal format, no printed publication exists that allows an overview of an entire image of a scroll from either the Sanraku-attributed or the Hironao versions. Although these digital contents are limited to on-site viewing and do not permit copying or printing, users are able to freely enlarge and examine each scene of the scrolls, which contain an abundance of pictorial detail. We hope that they will prove useful as research materials.
https://www.tobunken.go.jp/joho/english/library/library_e.html
This digital content was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP22H00623, “Study on Shuten-dōji Handscrolls.”
