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Michail Uspensky

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Hiroshige and artworks

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Michail Uspensky

HIROSHIGE

© 2014, Confidential Concepts, Worldwide, USA

© 2014, Parkstone Press USA, New York

© Image-Barwww.image-bar.com

All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world.

Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers. Despite intensive research, it has not always been possible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case, we would appreciate notification.

ISBN: 978-1-78160-864-7

Contents

Biography

Spring

Summer

Autumn

Winter

List of Illustrations

Foreword

I leave my body in the East

And set forth on my journey.

I shall see the famous places in the Western Land.

The Suido Bridge and Surugadai(Suidobashi Surugadai)

May 1857. Woodblock print, 36.2 x 23.5 cm. Gift of Anna Ferris, Brooklyn Museum, New York

Biography

1797:

Ando Hiroshige was born under the name of Ando Tokutaro. He was the son of the warden of the fire brigade assigned to the Edo Castle. Various episodes indicate that the young Hiroshige was fond of sketching and it is most likely that a fireman, who had studied under a master of the traditional Kano school of painting, oversaw his tutelage.

1809:

His mother died. Shortly after, his father resigned his post, passing it on to his son. Early the following year, his father died as well. Hiroshige’s actual daily duties as a fire warden were minimal, and his wages were small.

1811:

At the age of fourteen, the young Hiroshige had the chance to join the famous Utagawa painting school and became a pupil of Utagawa Toyohiro, a famous Japanese ukiyo-e artist.

1812:

He obtained a school license and was rewarded with the name Utagawa Hiroshige. In the ukiyo-e literature he is usually referenced as Hiroshige Ando.

1818:

His first published work appeared.

1830s:

Hiroshige did not immediately begin to produce landscape prints. His main output consisted of prints of beautiful women (bijinga) and actors (yakushae). He gradually gave up figure prints for landscapes. He started, under the influence of the great Hokusai, the series that made him famous.

1832:

He travelled between Edo and Kyoto along the famed highway called the Tokaido; he stayed at the 53 overnight stations along the road and made numerous sketches of everything he saw. He published a series of 55 landscape prints entitled the Fifty-three Stations on the Tokaido – one for each station, as well as the beginning of the highway and the arrival in Kyoto. The success of this series was immediate and made Hiroshige one of the most popular ukiyo-e artists of all time.

1850s:

Some vertical-format compilations of landscape prints date from this period such as Viewsof Kyoto (1835), Eight Views ofŌmi (1857), Sixty-nine Stations of the Kisokaido (1834-1842), and One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856-1858).

1858:

Hiroshige died of cholera and was buried in a Zen temple in Asakusa, Tokyo.

Monkey, Chicken, etc.

From the Shellwork Exhibition at Okuyama, Asakusa, 1820. Colour print from woodblocks, on paper, 36.3 x 25.5 cm. Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Between the 17th and 19th centuries in Japan, the Edo period (1603-1868), a new tendency in urban art developed and it is to this style, known as ukiyo-e, literally “pictures of the floating world”, that the woodblock print belongs.

Ando Hiroshige is quite possibly the most famous Japanese print artist beyond his native shores. In 1811, he joined the pupils of one of the prominent print artists of the day, Utagawa Toyohiro. From the turn of the 1830s, Hiroshige’s thoughts were more and more concentrated on the landscape, which subsequently became the chief theme of his creative work. Over the course of more than twenty years, the artist produced several series of prints, which demonstrated most vividly his talent in that sphere of art. In the 1850s, Hiroshige’s work underwent a radical change: the earlier smooth narrative manner gave way to abrupt compositional and chromatic contrasts.

Hiroshige’s landscapes represented a new and final stage of development in the ukiyo-e landscape print and, more broadly, in the traditional art of Japan. For him, there were no vulgar objects, and in his work any landscape motif reflected in human perception is a means of penetrating the essence of nature, its spirit.

Kanbara, Evening Snow

From the series The Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido RoadTokaido Goju-san Tsugi: Kanbara, 1832/1834. Colour woodblock print; yoko oban, 24.1 x 36.8 cm. Clarence Buckingham Collection, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago

Nihonbashi, Clearing after Snow

Nihonbashi Yukibare. May 1856. Woodblock print, 33.7 x 22.5 cm

The Outpost of the Mists

Kasumigaseki, January 1857. Woodblock print, 33.7 x 21.9 cm. Gift of Anna Ferris, Brooklyn Museum, New York

Spring

The Nihonbashi (“Bridge of Japan”) here functions as a symbol of Edo, then the capital of Japan, and indeed of the country as a whole.

In the year following the construction of the bridge, 1604, Tokugawa Ieyasu issued a decree that assured the importance of the Nihonbashi for posterity: the middle of the bridge became the point from which all distances in the country were to be measured. The area around the Nihonbashi was one of the most important commercial centres in Edo.

This view of sailing boats against the dawn background is the one obtained from the tall eminence called Kasumigasekizaka – the Hill of the Outpost of the Mists.

After Edo was made the capital, Tokugawa Ieyasu allocated Kasumigaseki for the residences of powerful members of the feudal hierarchy (tozama-daimyo). The prevailing atmosphere on the street is one of merry-making. Hiroshige’s depiction of The Outpost of the Mists is indeed set in a festive period, during the New Year celebrations.

This print depicts one of the most aristocratic areas of the Eastern Capital – the place known as Hibiya, in the Soto-Sakurada district. Hiroshige places us directly opposite this estate, and the red gates of the house are the first thing to catch our attention. This is considered the most detailed image of a daimyo estate in ukiyo-e art. Two further details catch one’s attention: the traditional and most common New Year decoration, kadomatsu, a decorated pine in front of the entrance in the foreground, and the kites fluttering in the sky. These are indisputable signs that the start of the New Year is depicted here.

Here the viewer is placed in a boat passing beneath the Eitai Bridge. Eitaibashi is the largest bridge and one of the oldest across the Sumidagawa. It was constructed in 1698. The panorama from the bridge developed into one of the traditional themes of Japanese poetry in the Edo period. The bridge was frequently damaged by floods and had to be repaired at considerable expense. Finally, the government decided to give up the struggle and abandon the Eitaibashi.

The white summit of Mount Fuji rises from a scarlet strip of dawn sky. The even line of houses belonging to common people that forms the background of the print is disrupted only by the slight curve of the bridge built across the Yagenbori canal, at the point where it joins the Sumidagawa. This bridge is known as Moto-Yanagibashi – the “True Willow Bridge”. At this early hour, boats are passing along the Sumidagawa loaded with goods for the numerous markets that open while it is still dark.

In the early Edo period this spot, like the whole of the Bakuro Quarter, was the scene of lively horse-dealing. In front of the area of hostelries lay the Hatsune racetrack, the oldest in Edo. The site was directly connected with the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, which brought the Tokugawa house to power. With time, the character of the place changed. Together with Bakuro-cho, it became a centre for working and selling fabrics.

From the second half of the 17th century, merchants trading in fabrics began to concentrate their businesses in this quarter. Hiroshige shows us First Street from the gate which closed off the quarter. From the moment the new capital was founded, gates like these were installed in all the quarters of Edo for crime prevention and, most importantly, fire prevention.

A street as straight as an arrow runs right to the very foot of Mount Fuji, which is depicted in the centre of the print. The mountain is separated from the cityscape by a strip of stylised clouds that Hiroshige “borrowed” from the repertoire of classical painting: Fuji seems to exist in a different world. It reigns above the urban bustle of the commercial quarter near the Nihonbashi, without coming into contact with it.