@article{oai:tobunken.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006188, author = {江村, 知子 and Emura, Tomoko}, issue = {394}, journal = {美術研究, The bijutsu kenkyu : the journal of art studies}, month = {Mar}, note = {This article introduces Scenes from the Tale of the Soga Brothers, a pair of six-panel screens by Tosa Mitsuyoshi, today in the Watanabe Art Museum (Tottori city). These works have long been of interest but for many years their whereabouts were unknown. Their appearance now is a long-awaited event. These screens are considered the oldest extant painting example of Scenes from the Tale of the Soga Brothers and they are an important work in the study of Tosa Mitsuyoshi, whose overall oeuvre is not yet fully understood. The works are in particularly fine condition and their intricately elegant and lovely depiction reveals the high standard of Tosa school narrative painting expression. This article examines the iconography in the screens in line with the text of the Tale of the Soga Brothers while comparing the faces of the figures depicted in the scenes. Further, the article indicates the resemblance between Tosa Mitsuyoshi's expression and painting style with that of paintings by such later generation artists as Sôtatsu and Kôrin. This painting must be considered as a creation at the point where the Tosa style of expression and depictive methods changed, while also indicating how this transformed style became an important aspect of pre-modern Yamato-e painting.}, pages = {102--109}, title = {研究資料 土佐光吉筆「曽我物語図屏風」について}, year = {2008} }