Kaminohashi Bridge, Fukagawa, from the series "Twelve Scenes of Tokyo"
東京十二題 深川上の橋
Artist
KAWASE, Hasui 川瀬 巴水
Birth Year
1883
Death Year
1957
Date
1920
Technique, Material, Format
woodblock
Dimension
24.2 x 36.3 cm
Category
Print by Japanese Artist
Inventory Number
91-PRJ-007
Kawase Hasui studied with Ito Shinsui and was greatly impressed by his colleague’s landscape prints. After a meeting with Watanabe Shozaburo, a publisher who sought to revive the Edo Period (1603–1868) tradition of ukiyo-e and its system of collaboration between dedicated artists, engravers, and printers, Hasui chose the path of ukiyo-e artist. It was this series, dubbed Twelve Scenes of Tokyo and made from the summer of 1919 to the spring of 1921, that established his reputation. Born and raised in Tokyo and with an easygoing sensibility, Hasui weaved his nostalgia for Edo Period life and culture into twelve refreshing views that weren’t confined to the city’s established landmarks.
Kaminohashi was a wooden bridge built at the confluence of the Fukagawa and Sumida rivers (in the present-day district of Kiyosumi in Tokyo). This summer evening scene, with old-style sailing boats and traditional houses on the far side of the river—with a noticeable absence of any Western-style buildings—must have suggested to Hasui a vista from the time of Katsushika Hokusai.
Kawase Hasui studied with Ito Shinsui and was greatly impressed by his colleague’s landscape prints. After a meeting with Watanabe Shozaburo, a publisher who sought to revive the Edo Period (1603–1868) tradition of ukiyo-e and its system of collaboration between dedicated artists, engravers, and printers, Hasui chose the path of ukiyo-e artist. It was this series, dubbed Twelve Scenes of Tokyo and made from the summer of 1919 to the spring of 1921, that established his reputation. Born and raised in Tokyo and with an easygoing sensibility, Hasui weaved his nostalgia for Edo Period life and culture into twelve refreshing views that weren’t confined to the city’s established landmarks.
Kaminohashi was a wooden bridge built at the confluence of the Fukagawa and Sumida rivers (in the present-day district of Kiyosumi in Tokyo). This summer evening scene, with old-style sailing boats and traditional houses on the far side of the river—with a noticeable absence of any Western-style buildings—must have suggested to Hasui a vista from the time of Katsushika Hokusai.
(SAKAMOTO Kyoko)
* You can see other works from this series.