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Original file29.Ushioni
The creature dominates the frame, featuring a large, bulbous, dark grey spider-like body covered in fine, bristly hair. Its head is that of a bovine demon, complete with curved, pale horns, wide, staring eyes with yellow irises and red lids, and a gaping mouth showing sharp teeth and a red tongue. The creature is depicted with multiple spindly, sharp-tipped legs extending outward. The style is that of a Japanese scroll painting, rendered in ink and light pigments on a textured, aged paper background.
The Ushioni is a prominent yōkai in Japanese folklore, often associated with coastal regions and malevolent spirits that terrorize human settlements. This depiction belongs to the genre of 'bakemono-e' (pictures of ghosts and monsters), which flourished during the Edo period as a medium for documenting and popularizing local legends.
うし 鬼
Translation
Ushi (ox) Oni (demon/ogre)
Bakemono no e
This image is part of the tradition of scroll paintings cataloging various Japanese supernatural creatures.
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview on April 21, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.