The source for this poster is one of the best-loved ink frogs in Japanese art: the single toad by the late-eighteenth-century painter Matsumoto Hōji (d. 1800), who worked in Osaka as a painter and picture-framer. His toad, known from the Meika Gafu, is a Zen-style sumi-e study reduced to one calm, rounded creature on bare ground. This edition reimagines that contemplative figure as a contemporary street-art poster.
Hōji built the original from sumi ink alone, the body suggested by a few soft, deliberate strokes and a quiet pool of grey. Here that economy is carried into a graphic street-art treatment, with cleaner outlines and flat colour, often green, while keeping the toad's settled, unhurried presence. The meditative stillness of the source survives; the surface is simply more modern.
On a wall the toad reads as grounded and calm, a small companionable presence rather than a loud one. It suits a bedroom, a reading corner, a study, or an entryway, and its quiet . . . Read More >>
The source for this poster is one of the best-loved ink frogs in Japanese art: the single toad by the late-eighteenth-century painter Matsumoto Hōji (d. 1800), who worked in Osaka as a painter and picture-framer. His toad, known from the Meika Gafu, is a Zen-style sumi-e study reduced to one calm, rounded creature on bare ground. This edition reimagines that contemplative figure as a contemporary street-art poster.
Hōji built the original from sumi ink alone, the body suggested by a few soft, deliberate strokes and a quiet pool of grey. Here that economy is carried into a graphic street-art treatment, with cleaner outlines and flat colour, often green, while keeping the toad's settled, unhurried presence. The meditative stillness of the source survives; the surface is simply more modern.
On a wall the toad reads as grounded and calm, a small companionable presence rather than a loud one. It suits a bedroom, a reading corner, a study, or an entryway, and its quiet shape and green tone sit easily with natural wood, linen, and pared-back japandi rooms.
Choose fine-art paper for a soft matte surface, the framed edition behind shatter-resistant acrylic for a ready-to-hang piece, or satin-coated cotton canvas for a warmer, textile feel.
Frequently asked questions
What does this poster show?
A single calm toad on bare ground, the most famous frog image in Japanese ink painting, reimagined as a graphic poster.
Who painted the original and when?
The motif comes from the late-eighteenth-century painter Matsumoto Hōji (d. 1800), an Osaka painter and picture-framer whose Zen-style sumi-e toad appears in the Meika Gafu.
What does streetart-style mean here?
The original ink study has been redrawn as a contemporary street-art poster, with cleaner outlines and flat colour, often green. The Edo image is the source, not the historical painter's own hand.
Where does it suit best?
A bedroom, reading corner, study, or entryway; its quiet shape and green tone keep it calm beside natural wood and linen.
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Japan historical period: Edo 江戸 (1603-1868)
Check out other artwork of Matsumoto Hoji