Fukusa with figures in a bamboo grove

Collections
1599892
Title
Fukusa with figures in a bamboo grove
Year/Period
Late Edo or Meiji period, 19th century
Region
Japan
Object Type
Dimension
Object size: 78.0 x 65.6 cm (without tassels),
Object size: 98.0 x 84.0 cm (with tassels)
Accession No.
2024-01224
Credit Line
Gift of Chris Hall.

In Japan, the practice of formally presenting gifts with silk covers called fukusa began in the Edo period (1603–1868), around the late 17th or early 18th century. These covers were draped or folded over gifts for a variety of occasions, from seasonal festivities to important personal events. Each fukusa was carefully chosen to evoke the circumstance of the gift and to convey a message to the recipient through its design. Fukusa designs often feature symbolic objects or allusions to Japanese and Chinese stories. The choice of fukusa also reflected the giver’s wealth, taste, erudition, and cultural sensitivity. The use of fukusa continued into the early 20th century. Today, they are used in parts of Japan for weddings and corporate events. The Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove (Chikurin Shichi Kenjin) were a group of learned men from third-century China. During this politically fraught period, they distanced themselves from government service and gathered in a bamboo grove to enjoy rustic pleasures and conversation, poetry, music, and wine. In China, Japan, and Korea they served as role models for the literati. Fukusa with the Seven Sages would have been presented to a superior or when a child entered a new school (nyūgaku).This fukusa depicts three elderly figures in a bamboo grove, accompanied by attendants carrying books and flowers, which suggests their scholarly nature. This fukusa may have been part of a pair, with the other four sages embroidered on the other cover.