Kanbara: Evening Snow (Kanbara, yoru no yuki)
Artist/Culture
Utagawa Hiroshige I 歌川 広重
(Japanese, 1797–1858)
Publisher
Sanoya Kihei 佐野屋 喜兵衛 (Kikakudō 喜鶴堂)
(Japanese)
Dateabout 1833–34
Mediumwoodblock print; ink and color on paper
DimensionsHorizontal ōban: 22.5 x 35.2 cm (8 7/8 x 13 7/8 in.)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineJohn Chandler Bancroft Collection
Object number1901.1053
DescriptionNo. 16 in the seriesLabel TextFifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō comprises views along “Eastern Sea Road,” which connected he three largest metropolitan centers in Japan: Edo, Kyoto and Osaka. By Hiroshige’s time, it had transitioned from a somewhat hazardous but utilitarian route used by the emperor to a refurbished recreational one for travelers venturing into the countryside for sightseeing, pilgrimage, and adventure. The landscape was highly variable and full of famous sites, ensuring that the Tōkaidō had a special presence in Edo period (1603-1868) visual culture. Hiroshige portrayed it many times over the course of his career, but this series—the first exploring each station on the road—launched his celebrity and was widely coveted. As demonstrated here, while each print is totally distinct from the next, they all share similarly balanced compositions and imaginative uses of perspective. This print captures the pristine stillness of a village blanketed in snow in Shizuoka Prefecture. It is most likely that this scene was imagined, not observed, as this region rarely saw as much snow as is depicted. However, the familiar name still became a vehicle for Hiroshige’s portrayal of wintry quietude. There is no discernable light source, but the white of the landscape creates planes of negative space that seem to emit their own glow. This decision allowed Hiroshige to expand on the potential of the inherently graphic qualities of woodblock prints as a medium in unprecedented ways.
On View
Not on viewUtagawa Hiroshige I 歌川 広重
1855, 7th month