This object does not have an image.
Evening Glow on Jinmei Shrine
Evening Glow on Jinmei Shrine from the series "Eight Views of the Shiba District in the Capital City"
ca. 1839-1840
Edo Period (1600-1868)
9 3/4 x 14 5/16 in. (24.8 x 36.3 cm)
Ando Hiroshige
Japan
(Edo, 1797 - 1858, Edo)
Full Title:Evening Glow on Jinmei Shrine from the series "Eight Views of the Shiba District in the Capital City"
Object Type:
Print
Medium and Support:
Color woodcut
Credit Line:
Gift of Dr. James B. Austin
Accession Number:
1987.34.8
Location: Not currently on view
"Evening Glow on a Fishing Village" has become "Evening Glow on Jinmei Shrine." Jinmei, which literally means "God-bright," was a term used to indicate the chief of all Shintô deities, Amaterasu no Ômikami, who is enshrined here. The Jinmei Shrine, also called the Great Shrine of Shiba (
Shiba Dai Jingû), was one of Edo's most popular places for outings, and its popularity made it a favorite place as well for particularly brazen prostitutes who were parodied in poetry:
Jinmei wo Even worshipping
Ogandeiru ni mo At the Jinmei shrine—
Mosshimoshi "Well hell-lo there"