Ando Hiroshige (aka Hiroshige),
Japanese,
(1797–1858)
Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido: Station 16, Kanbara, (reproduction), c. 1833-1834
Ink on Paper
8 3/4 in. x 13 9/16 in. (222.25 mm x 344.49 mm)
Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido: Station 16, Kanbara, (reproduction), c. 1833-1834
Ink on Paper
8 3/4 in. x 13 9/16 in. (222.25 mm x 344.49 mm)
Object Type:
Print
Technique:
Wood-block Printing
Period:
Edo (Japan, 1615-1868)
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. James W. Johnson
Accession Number:
46.1.35b
Alternate Title:
Tokaido gojusan tsugi no uchi [Hoeidoban]: Kanbara, Yoru no yuki
Commentary
Reproduction.
Edition
Second state.
Marks
Notes on piece: 46.1.35b, Reproduction of 46.1.35 by Hiroshigi. Printed in the lower left: Evening Snow at Kambara, Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858), The Metropolitan Museum of Art Acc. No. 2492.
Medium
Reproduction, poster-type.
Object Description
Color woodblock print from Hiroshige's Tokaido Road series. Kambara is the most acclaimed of Hiroshige's works; it is considered a world-class masterpiece. Hiroshige depicts a snowy night in a village sited on nearly flat land that lacks any distinguishing topographical features. Three travelers or villagers, two moving toward the right and one toward the left, laboriously walk with dragging feet. The hills, trees, and houses and heavily blanketed by the continuously falling snow. People in Hiroshige's time as well as later scholars have tried to locate, with no success, the place in Kambara that Hiroshige has depicted here. It has also been pointed out that in fact it seldom snows in Kambara. This splendid midnight snow scene, created mainly in a monotone of black and white, seems to be a creation of Hiroshige's imagination and ingenious design ability, and it has an expressiveness that is freed from the limitations of reality. The only positive color appears on the figures: the man at the left wears a blue coat and carries a red umbrella, while on the right, one man wears an orange mino (coat made of rice straw) and blue leggings, and the other wears a yellow coat and red leggings.
The print is marked by tembokashi printing, a technique by which the sky is dark above and becomes gradually lighter decending toward the horizon. The effect of gradation was created by wiping color off the inked block. Surplus wood occurs between the lines of the legs of the man on the far right on the first-state print.
Ref. "Hokusai and Hiroshige," p.178.
Publisher
Hoeido (Takenouchi Magohachi) seal.
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Your current search criteria is: Portfolio is "Johnson Collection of Japanese Prints" and [Objects]Century is "19th c" and [Objects]Display Artist is "Ando Hiroshige" and [Objects]Period is "Edo (Japan, 1615-1868)".