This ink study of a frog whisking tea is most often attributed in art-historical literature to Itō Jakuchū (1716–1800) rather than to Hiroshige II, though the image continues to circulate under both names. A second-tier Edo ink subject, it shows a stern, focused frog grinding green tea with a chasen whisk — domestic ritual transposed onto an animal, the kind of gentle absurdity that defined late-Edo chōjū-giga (animal caricature).
The streetart treatment keeps the brush figure intact and rebuilds everything around it as a contemporary poster: a tight circular frame, sharp typography, a generous flat field. The original ink expresses the frog with a small number of decisive marks — bulged brow, set jaw, soft belly — and the modern layout lets those marks read as pure graphic shape without redrawing anything.
It belongs in rooms with a sense of humour — studios, urban kitchens, creative work corners, places where the chasen reference will be caught and quietly enjoy . . . Read More >>
This ink study of a frog whisking tea is most often attributed in art-historical literature to Itō Jakuchū (1716–1800) rather than to Hiroshige II, though the image continues to circulate under both names. A second-tier Edo ink subject, it shows a stern, focused frog grinding green tea with a chasen whisk — domestic ritual transposed onto an animal, the kind of gentle absurdity that defined late-Edo chōjū-giga (animal caricature).
The streetart treatment keeps the brush figure intact and rebuilds everything around it as a contemporary poster: a tight circular frame, sharp typography, a generous flat field. The original ink expresses the frog with a small number of decisive marks — bulged brow, set jaw, soft belly — and the modern layout lets those marks read as pure graphic shape without redrawing anything.
It belongs in rooms with a sense of humour — studios, urban kitchens, creative work corners, places where the chasen reference will be caught and quietly enjoyed. In a Japandi-leaning room it can stand as a single warm note against pale plaster, oak and linen, where the ink line carries its own weight.
Available as a museum-grade fine art paper print, as a framed picture with shatter-resistant acrylic glazing, or as a satin-coated cotton canvas stretched on a wooden frame and ready to hang.
Frequently asked questions
Who made the original ink painting?
The image is sold here under Hiroshige II's name but is more commonly attributed to Itō Jakuchū (1716–1800); the figure circulates under both attributions.
What is the frog actually doing?
Whisking matcha tea with a bamboo chasen, the bowl set in front of it — the everyday rite of the tea ceremony transposed onto an animal subject.
Why does the frog look angry?
The grave brow is part of the joke — the seriousness of the chadō tea ritual placed on a creature whose features make full concentration look like fury.
Which rooms fit best?
Kitchens and tea corners, creative studios, hallways and small reading spaces — anywhere a single quiet visual joke can sit without competition.
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Japan historical period: Edo 江戸 (1603-1868)
Check out other artwork of Hiroshige II