Minowa, Kanasugi at Mikawashima

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Important notice: colors on screen always differ a littlebit from reality, so the colors of the physical wall arts will never look exactly the same as what you see on your screen. Our products are reproductions.

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Utagawa Hiroshige : Minowa, Kanasugi at Mikawashima, 50x70cm Framed Art Reproduction With Black Frame

Minowa, Kanasugi at Mikawashima

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The Artwork: Minowa, Kanasugi at Mikawashima

On the northern edge of Edo, where the city gave way to paddies and marsh, lay the fields of Minowa, Kanasugi and Mikawashima — kept open as a feeding ground for cranes, the birds associated with the shogun's falconry hunts. Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858) recorded the place in winter for One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856–1858), his late masterwork of ukiyo-e landscape. Cranes command the scene: one sweeps down across the sheet while the flat fields stretch quietly toward the horizon.

The print was pulled from carved cherry-wood blocks, one for each colour, pressed by hand with water-based pigments onto paper. Hiroshige's printers worked with bokashi — gradation wiped by hand directly on the block — which gives sky and field their soft passages of tone. The bold cropping of the bird at the picture's edge is a signature of the series.

In Japanese tradition the crane stands for long life and good fortune. On the wall, the sheet brings a wide, cold-air openness i . . . Read More >>


Japan historical period: Edo 江戸 (1603-1868)

Check out other artwork of Utagawa Hiroshige


#Bird#Birds#Crane#Cranes#Dusk#Japan#Japanese Art#Japanese Woodblock Print#Kacho-E#Landscape#Marsh#Nature#Rice Field#Sunrise#Sunset#Traditional#Ukiyo-E#Utagawa Hiroshige#Wildlife#Winter

The Artist: Utagawa Hiroshige

Memorial portrait of Utagawa Hiroshige by Kunisada

 

Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858), also known as Andō Hiroshige, was one of the last great masters of Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints, particularly celebrated for his poetic and atmospheric landscapes.

Born in Edo (now Tokyo) into a samurai family, he inherited his father's position as a fire warden but was drawn to art from a young age. Around 1811, he joined the studio of Utagawa Toyohiro, a respected Ukiyo-e artist. Hiroshige initially created prints of traditional subjects like beautiful women (bijin-ga) and actors (yakusha-e), but he found his true calling in landscape art. His breakthrough came with the series 'The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō' (Tō . . . Read More >>

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Our prints are made with the highest quality 12-color Japanese water-based printing technology and pigment ink. We print on acid-free, archival quality, FSC®-certified paper.

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