Hiroshige | Fucho, Reisho Tokaido

$0.00

歌川広重 Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858)

隶书东海道 府中
Fucho, from the series of The Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido Road(Reisho Tokaido)

1849

木版画 | 横绘大判 | 25cm x 36.3cm
Woodblock-print | Oban Yoko-e | 25cm x 36.3cm

早中期的版次;画面右上方有一处黄渍;两处褶皱
Early-to-mid impression with strong color; one yellow stain on the top right of the image; 2 creases

$2,200

府中宿,东海道五十三次第十九处宿场,位于今静冈县静冈市葵区,是东海道五十三次中规模最大的宿场。

作为德川家康终焉之所骏府城的城下町,府中宿有着其他大部分宿场远难比得上的繁荣景象。街灯亮起,晚风拂柳,赶路赶了一整天的你,是时候找个地方歇歇脚了。宿场门前,任你是骑马坐轿还是持杖步行,满面堆笑的艺伎们都会连连挥手,邀请你进店坐坐。相较于创作的大多风景绘,在本作中,广重较为罕见地将各色人物作为了着墨的重点,并以双对角线构图引导着观者的视线,匠心独运,却又不露斧凿痕迹。

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Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858)

Ando Hiroshige (1897-1858) revolutionized the art of landscape prints during the Edo era, building on the success of his senior, Hokusai, but taking a more poetic and naturalist approach to portraying the beauty of Japan.

The son of a low-level Samurai assigned to the fire brigade in Edo, Hiroshige became a student of the Utagawa school as a young man. His first prints focused on beautiful women (bijin), and views of Edo. But in 1833 he began work on his most famous early work, his first series depicting the Tokaido, the "Great Sea Road" between Edo and Tokyo.

Today there is some controversy about this series. Initially, it was believed that Hiroshige had travelled the route along with a local lord (Daimyo) who was making a gift of horses to the Emperor. But more recent scholarship suggests Hiroshige never travelled the road himself, at least not the entire way, and made his designs using published guidebooks.

Nonetheless, the prints were wonderful and revolutionary. They embraced the seasons with a gentle lyricism missing from Hokusai's striking but stylized depictions. In Hiroshige's work, nature is sacred -- but it is always mixed with humanity, with travelers or little inns or bridges. There is a magical harmony between man and the elements.

His depiction of the seasons and weather is especially evocative. Snow blankets some views with a hushed silence, while rain streaks down furiously in others. In some prints natured is agitated; in others, calm prevails. Produced in a horizontal oban yoko-e format, the series was a smash hit.

The Tokaido series made Hiroshige famous, and he became incredible prolific. In the 1840s he produced many strong designs, but many mediocre ones, too, including several subsequent Tokaido series of varying quality.

In 1853, however, he made a big step. He turned his landscapes sideways, embracing a bold vertical oban tate-e format. This gave his designs new energy and a modern feel. The first of these was Famous Views of the Sixty-Odd Provinces. From them on, most of his most noted series were executed in this format.

He saved his greatest for his last. In 1856 he began work on 100 Famous Views of Edo, which many consider his most exceptional work. Here his home city was portrayed with energy and passion, and in these 119 designs he created an incredible record of a vanished place. In addition to the striking vertical format, he developed exciting new compositions, often juxtaposing a strong foreground element with a distant background.

Among the many famous images in this series are Squall at Ohashi and the Plum Garden in Komeido. Both of these were copied by Vincent Van Gogh, a great admirer of Hiroshige. Thus, the great Japanese artist had a profound effect on Western art.

Alas, his beloved Edo ended his life. Hiroshige was claimed by a cholera epidemic that swept the city in 1958. His pupil Shigenobu, who took the name Hiroshige II, completed The Famous Views of Edo.