Yokai Art- Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons !!install!!
Have you encountered the Night Parade in modern media or art? The parade is always recruiting new demons—and new fans.
Unlike modern horror, this scroll portrays the parade with a sense of chaotic energy and dark whimsy. Creatures skip, tumble, and mock-fight across the paper. Yokai Art- Night Parade of One Hundred Demons
The number "one hundred" in Japanese, as in many cultures, often implies a vast, uncountable quantity rather than exactly Have you encountered the Night Parade in modern media or art
Working during the turbulent transition into the Meiji era, Yoshitoshi infused his yōkai prints with intense psychological horror, dark color palettes, and raw human emotion. Artistic Features and Techniques Creatures skip, tumble, and mock-fight across the paper
Heian-kyō (modern-day Kyoto) featured wide, symmetrical grids. At night, these dark, unlit avenues became the perfect, eerie stage for supernatural gatherings.
A Nure-onna (Wet Woman) slithers. She looks like a beautiful woman with the tail of a snake and a turtle’s neck. She carries a dripping, heavy bundle—often a child she uses to lure victims. This is mid-level horror. She does not dance; she hunts.