Hiroshige "Sudden Shower over Ohashi Bridge at Atake" -One Hundred Famous Views of Edo-
Hiroshige "Sudden Shower over Ohashi Bridge at Atake" -One Hundred Famous Views of Edo-
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“Sudden Shower over Ohashi Bridge at Atake” is one of Hiroshige's late series, "Meisho Edo Hyakkei (One Hundred Famous Views of Edo)", which depicts various landscapes in and around Edo (present-day Tokyo). It is known to have been copied by Van Gogh, a famous Impressionist painter.
The Ohashi Bridge, which spanned from Hamacho in Nihonbashi to Fukagawa Rokumabori, was also called "Atake" because it housed the storehouse of the Ataketomaru, a ship used by the shogunate. The bold composition looking down on the bridge poetically depicts the intensity of a sudden summer evening shower in this realistic masterpiece.
Print Size: W 8.5" × H 13.3" / W 21.7 cm × H 33.8 cm
Paper: Echizen Kizuki Hosho Washi made by Living National Treasure, Ichibei Iwano
歌川広重「名所江戸百景 大はしあたけの夕立」Ōhashi Atake no Yūdachi
Package Includes
Package Includes
- AREA original frame (13.75"× 18.5") with a matching matboard
- Paulownia wood box
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