Utagawa Hiroshige.

Hiroshige is the poet of rain and snow. Where Hokusai sought structure, he sought atmosphere: the slanting downpour that streaks the sky, the evening mist, the silence of a bridge under the storm. His skies, graded from dark to light, invented a weather of their own in print.
The son of a fireman in a lord's service, he first took on his father's duty before devoting himself to engraving. His journey of 1832 along the Tōkaidō road, from Edo to Kyōto, gave him the material of the Fifty-three Stations that made his fame.
The One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, including the « Sudden Shower over Atake Bridge », closed his career in 1857. Van Gogh copied two of them in oil, fascinated by those bold framings in which a tree trunk or a bridge cuts the image in the foreground.
Galerie Yanaka has shown Hiroshige's work since 2019, attentive to the landscape series of his final years.
Works in the catalogue



Public domain reproductions, via Wikimedia Commons (MET, MFA Boston, Chester Beatty, Rijksmuseum).
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2026Le Monde
flottant.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2024Pluie
et neige.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2019Hiroshige
sur le TōkaidōGalerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2016Premier
regard.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō