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Hiroshige's original woodblock print and Van Gogh's copy in oil Vincent van Gogh was a collector of Japanese prints, [ 14 ] decorating his studio with them. He was heavily influenced by these prints , particularly those by Hiroshige, and in 1887 painted copies of two of the One Hundred Famous Views of Edo , Sudden Shower over Shin-Ōhashi ...
Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (Japanese: 富士三十六景, Hepburn: Fuji Sanjū-Rokkei) is the title of two series of woodblock prints by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Hiroshige, depicting Mount Fuji in differing seasons and weather conditions from a variety of different places and distances.
Hiroshige: 1797–1858 Ukiyo-e painter and woodblock print artist, Sixty-nine Stations on the Kiso Kaidō, Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō and 100 Famous Views of Edo: Konishi Hirosada: 1810–1864 Printmaker of the Osaka school [12] Utagawa Kunisada II: 1823–1880 Printmaker of the Utagawa school: Hokuei: d. 1837 Printmaker Kunimasu ...
[17] [18] The exhibition subsequently toured to The Aberdeen Art Gallery Scotland, [19] and then formed his solo exhibition in Japan ‘Portraits from Edo to the Present’ [20] [21] [22] at The Shizuoka City Tokaido Hiroshige Museum, where the paintings were exhibited alongside Hiroshige's original The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō ...
Hiroshige's original woodblock print and Van Gogh's copy in oil. Vincent van Gogh was a major collector of Japanese prints, [14] decorating his studio with them. He was heavily influenced by these prints, particularly Hiroshige, and made copies of two from the One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, Plum Park in Kameido and this one.
Hiroshige based many of his designs on old Japanese guidebooks called meishō zue. In particular, at least 26 of the designs are believed to have been based on drawings from the 8 volume series of guidebooks called Sansui Kikan (Exceptional Mountain and Water Landscapes) written and illustrated by Fuchigami Kyokkō ( 淵上旭江 ) (1753–1816 ...
Work by Hiroshige II; not always included in collections of One Hundred Famous Views of Edo; variously thought to be replacement print for no. 52, The Paulownia Garden at Akasaka, although its woodblock prints show significant wear indicating age. Alternatively a work on commission by Sakanaya Eikichi, celebrating Hiroshige II's adoption of his ...
Suō Iwakuni, woodblock print, 1859, from the series One Hundred Views of Japan. Hiroshige II (二代目 歌川広重, Ni-daime Utagawa Hiroshige, 1826 – 17 September 1869) was a Japanese designer of ukiyo-e art. He inherited the name Hiroshige II following the death in 1858 of his master Hiroshige, whose daughter he married