Jumantsubo Plain at Fukagawa Susaki(Digital Download)
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Hiroshige painted a tranquil tidal flat landscape. On the wide, low-tide beach, fishermen can be seen in the distance, with the sky and clouds reflected on the water's surface.
In a tranquil setting where even the sound of the wind can be heard, Edo's nature and people's lives coexist in harmony. The light of twilight bathes the water's surface in gold, and the stillness of night soon descends—this is the passage of time you can sense. Hiroshige is an artist who portrays not glamour but the "beauty of everyday life."
This work quietly captures the kindness of the Edo people who lived in harmony with nature.
The artist, Utagawa Hiroshige, was a late Edo-period ukiyo-e artist and a master of landscape painting. His masterpiece, "The Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido," depicts scenes rich with travel emotion with delicate use of color, conveying the joy of travel to people. He excelled in depicting natural elements such as rain and snow, and many of his works are filled with tranquility and emotion. His soft depictions of landscapes have had a profound influence on artists around the world.