Dear Mr. Makahide Kanzaki sama,
I am sorry for contacting again.
Actually, I have noticed that we would have to ask you to edit the paragraph of the explanation about the material.
Scholar in Japan pointed to our explanation of Michigan's online exhibition. We have edited the part highlighted in the below. This is about author or the story.
Cultural Japan display
Description: The Mushi no Utaawase Emaki is a 1722 cm long scroll consisting of 15 panels of text and color paintings. "Mushi" means insects in Japanese language. "Utaawase" is literally "poem match", a kind of competition in which pairs of poems composed by two teams on assigned themes are judged on the basis of their literary merit. "Emaki" is an illustrated text or narrative picture scroll. The Mushi no Utaawase Emaki is a scroll over fifty-six feet in length in which the participants in the competition are depicted as insects. The creator of the scroll is unknown, but we do know that the scroll was created during the Edo period (1600-1868) in Japan, and the accompanying text was probably composed in the first half of the 17th century. The text was written by 木下勝俊, Kinoshita Katsutoshi (1570-1650), who is also known as 木下長嘯子, Kinoshita Chōshōshi.
Revised explanation at Michigan's online exhibit:
The creator of the scroll is unknown, but the work probably dates to the
Edo period (1600-1868), and the accompanying text is thought to have
been composed in the first half of the 17th century. The author of the
text is also unknown, but scholars have suggested that it is either
細川幽斎, Hosokawa Yūsai (1534-1610), or 木下勝俊, Kinoshita Katsutoshi
(1570-1650), who is also known as 木下長嘯子, Kinoshita Chōshōshi.
This is not urgent matter.
We would greatly appreciate it if you would take time to replace the blue part in Cultural Japan explanation with the purple part updated in Michigan's online exhibition.
I am very sorry for causing you trouble.
Thank you very much for your kind attention to this matter and your time.
Sincerely,