Buson yōkai emaki

The whereabouts of the original work are presently unclear; its contents are known from a reprinting released by the Kitada Shisui Collection in 1928.

[2] It is thought that the collection was made during the period between 1754 and 1757, when Buson was studying painting in Miyazu, Tango Province, at the Kenjōji (見性寺) temple.

[2][4] Buson, who excelled in the haiga-style, forsook realism, and instead painted his yōkai in a manner that uniquely resembles modern Japanese manga.

[2][4] Most traditional paintings of yōkai from Japan's mediaeval period (1185–1568) portrayed them as supernatural beings, the fearful harbingers of disaster, but works from the Edo period (1603–1868), including Buson's, paint them as familiar, funny, creatures that can be enjoyed as fiction.

This trend continues in modern yōkai manga, which have their origins in Edo period works like Buson's.

A drawing of the spirit of the giant ginkgo tree at Tsurugaoka Hachimangū temple. According to the attached story, this ginkgo was involved in the assassination of shōgun Minamoto no Sanetomo . It warns that the spirit is known to shape-shift, taking the form of a monk with a golden bell, and can be seen wandering around the temple. [ 1 ]