Hell prostitute who brought the underworld to the Japanese
Many people don’t like to accept preaching about sin, morality, and religion, but it has been going on for centuries, so we may have stuck with it. At least Japan has enough meaning to see some of their religious lessons as visual and badass, with the emphasis on hell.
During the Edo and Meiji periods, a character appeared in Japanese art that represented the dream from condemning prostitution to reminding us of everything we see, just dreams in dreams. She was called Jigoku Dayu, Or hell. This is her story.
“Jigoku Dayu” by Toyohara Kunichika (1876)
The devil wears prada, but hell wears cool kimono
For centuries, Japanese artists have used paintings, drawings and woodcut prints to explore hell. If you wear strong perfume or cologne on a crowded train, instead of changing your name to a prostitute in the afterlife basement.
Pure artistic invention, legend of hell (Jigoku) said she was kidnapped by bandits and sold to a brothel in Sakai – modern Osaka Prefecture – where she concluded that according to Buddhist teachings, her misfortune was the result of bad karma.
To remind herself of her own curse or attempt to achieve redemption (depending on the version), she wears a kimono with images of condemned souls, kings of hell, demons and other scenes of hell.
Every artist tends to place his spin on the hell’s bosand-style wardrobe. Some people added Japanese deities to her wearable tapestries. For example, Utagawa Kuniyoshi features Amida Buddha, welcomes the dead to heaven on Obi Sash in hell. Kuniyoshi loves back to the theme of hell so much that he once drew himself in a replica of his kimono.
very good. In his days, this kind of thing did not frown. Have you been prostitution? This view tends to fluctuate in Japanese society, and so is the purpose of hell.

“Hell’s Prostitute” by Utagawa Kunisada II (c. 1850S)
Preach to the Everchanging Choir
In the earliest version of Jigoku Dayu Theme, Hell wears a kimono, featuring the soul of a man cursed by engaging in prostitution. At that time, Japanese society temporarily believed that prostitution was wrong and was influenced by the revival of Confucian doctrine.
A few years later, they returned to romanticization. Then, the stock of prostitutes fell again, and was connected from all directions. You can actually track these changes through the portrayal of hell.
She was initially used as a symbol of social illness, but then her legendary population was established until she became a disciple of Zen monk Iqki. The Buddhist version of Ikkyu is a fascinating reality, including railings against the monastery institutions by eating meat, drinking and making love.
In 19th-century art, there is a description of him encountering hell while participating in these three people, and telling her that prostitution is not shameful, and that she can achieve enlightenment. Dedicating her own religious studies, until then she shaped her famous hard rock kimono, which would go backwards in later seats.

Kawanabe Kyosai (1871-89) “Hell Prostitute and Ikkyu”
Dance Markle of Japan
Hell is sure that she peeks at Ikkyu having a party with other prostitutes, only after seeing him dancing and singing with the bones, her earthly life goes to no avail. However, after entering the room, everything was fine. Then, Ikkyu explains that in fact, we are all bones. It’s just that some of us still have some meat around.
He said that everyone is destined to die, and our lives are like dreams: short, short, not actually real or that important. His messaging may be unorthodox, but it’s a good summary of some Buddhist schools.
As time goes by, this Japanese version of Memento Mori becomes more common in Jigoku Dayu Art. Many hell portraits like Kawanabe Kyosai and Ogata Gekko have diluted her clothes.
Sometimes it walks around the cane in the form of a playful bone or ikkyu to remind everyone of their destiny. No one specified where he got his skull, but given his wild and unpredictable nature, it might be better not to solve this problem.
A happy ending
Another common element in the later description of hell was the ritual stirring, a shorthand of Zen Buddhism, and a sign that through her study and dedication, hell finally achieved enlightenment, and hell never went to her same name after her death.
Jigoku Dayu Therefore, trends are an interesting study of the duality of Japanese art. Hell is all low, but worth redemption. Her clothes were beautiful and terrifying at the same time. After meeting Ikkyu, she exists between the two worlds, embodying sin and enlightenment. This is a complex portrayal that only appears at the end of the Edo period, when the world completely changed the Japanese people.

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