Famous Views of the Sixty odd Provinces by Utagawa Hiroshige. Part 2.

Title Page for the series Famous Places in the Sixty-odd Provinces of Japan by Hiroshige

Hiroshige was born in Edo (now Tokyo) in 1797 and grew up in a minor samurai family. His father was part of the firefighting force assigned to Edo Castle. It was here that Hiroshige was given his first exposure to art.   In 1811, young Hiroshige entered an apprenticeship with the celebrated Toyohiro Utagawa. After only a year, he was bestowed with the artist’s name Utagawa. He soon gave up in his role in the fire department to focus entirely on painting and print design. Hiroshige’s artistic genius went largely unnoticed until 1832.  In Hiroshige Utagawa’s groundbreaking series of Japanese woodblock prints.  The 53 Stations of the Tokaido which he produced between 1832 and 1833, he captured the journey along the Tokaido road, the highway connecting Edo to Kyoto, the imperial capital. With the Tokugawa Shogunate relaxing centuries of age-old restrictions on travel, urban populations embraced travel art and Hiroshige Utagawa became one of the most prominent and successful ukiyo-e artists.

Chikugo Province, The Currents Around the Weir by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

Chikugo River

The Chikugo Province can be found in southern Japan in Fukuoka Prefecture. In this print by Hiroshige, the Chikugo River can be seen flowing through the foreground, as it separates Chikugo Province on the left from Chikuzen Province to the seen in the bottom right. The village of Haki appears within the trees of the far bank, as the mountains rise above the pink clouds of sunset. The river is a much-loved spot for fishing and the choice of fish is the Ayu.  The Ayu often referred to as the is one of Japan’s best summer foods, known for its delicate flavour is found in Japan’s rivers.  It is a small, slender fish that thrives in spotless and clear water. This characteristic has earned it the elegant nickname “the queen of clear rivers” in Japan.

Satsuma Province, Bo Bay, The Two-sword Rocks by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series

In the print entitled Satsuma Province, Bo Bay, The Two-sword Rocks we are treated to a remarkable view of the “Two-sword Rocks” in Bo Bay, which are two rock pillars extend skywards from the water, as viewed from Mount Use. Two boats are depicted in the print, one a ferry which transports a couple of passengers across the river passing close to the strange rock formations.  Many other smaller rocks forming small islands can be seen in the distance as well as white-sail boats on the rosy coloured horizon.   This was another example of Hiroshige using a vertical print.

Bitchu Province, Gokei by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series

The small waterfalls in the Makadani River

The Bitchū Province was a province of Japan situated on the Inland Sea side of western Honshū, in what is today western Okayama Prefecture.  This is another of Hiroshige’s beautiful landscape prints which depicts the Gokei Valley with the Makidani River rushing through, crashing over many waterfalls on its relentless journey.  Like the previous print we see the rock formations reaching vertically towards the sky. On the left of the river, we see tiny citizens walking along the riverbank. Hiroshige forgoes the fiery shades of fall but concentrates on emphasizing the monumentality of the landscape through the scale of the travellers and trees. The minute size of the pedestrians, who walk along the riverbank, gives us a sense of how big the valley sides are and how it emphasizes the enormous granite peaks along the valley.

Izumo Province, Taisha, Depiction of Hotohoto by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series

Izumo Taisha Shrine (Izumo Grand Shrine)

Beneath a canopy of cedar, three women pass through the grounds of the Izumo Grand Shrine. The great Shrine of Izumo Taisha is one of the most important ancient shrine in Japan. It was said to be the oldest, known to have existed at least the 7th Century, according to Japan’s oldest chronicles. The main building was built on 1744 and apparently has undergone 25 reconstructions.  It was dedicated to the kami Okuninushi, the deity of earth and the harmony of nature, agriculture, and medicine. He was also believed to bring happiness and harmony to human relationships, that is why it magnetizes lots of young women who wish to be married.  In the print we see that fog has reduced most of the scene to silhouette, the women carry trays laden with auspicious symbols of the New Year. Hotohoto is a New Year’s celebration local to the region. The festival takes its name from the onomatopoeia of knocking on a door. There are different traditions associated with this festival, including leaving rice cakes (mochi) on the doorstep for a god’s messenger to replace with a straw craft, or children going door-to-door to receive mochi and small gifts. Today, the former Izumo Province belongs to modern Shimane Prefecture.

Tanba Province, Kanegasaka by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series

Tanba Province was one of the old provinces of Japan, located in San’indo. It covered the middle part of the present Kyoto prefecture, At the bottom of Hiroshige’s print we can see a narrow path which rises sharply along the mountainside before it disappears beyond the horizon. The area is located on a connecting road to northern Kyoto.  As one can see, it is a difficult and dangerous upward climb which was ultimately thought too steep for travel.

Meiji-period tunnel

To solve the problem the Meiji-period tunnel built in its place still stands today. In the top right of the print one can see that Hiroshige has depicted the arch between two rock formations as a stone beam.  It is thought that he came to know about this structure through travel guides (meishoki) or other paintings of Kanegasaka. Today, the former Tanba Province belongs to central Kyoto Prefecture and east-central Hyogo Prefecture.

Sado Province, The Goldmines by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

In Hiroshige’s print of the Sado goldmines we see a lush green forest which gives way to the rocky entrance to the mine. Miners dot the foreground as the mountainside opens into three mining shafts, each internally reinforced with wood. While the island had been known for its gold since the 12th century, the gold from Sado became an important source of wealth for the Tokugawa shogunate during the Edo period. Though the local economy prospered from the mines in the 17th century, by Hiroshige’s time the veins were running dry and the working conditions had significantly declined. The mines finally closed in 1989. Today, the former Sado Province corresponds to Sado Island in Niigata Prefecture

Doyu no Warito goldmine on Sado Island

Doyu no Warito is a relic of opencast mining from the Edo Period (1603-1867), which is said to be a pit in the early stages of the development of Sado’s gold and silver mines. As the digging went deeper and deeper to extract more gold ore, the mountaintop was split into a V-shape. The crack on the summit reaches approximately thirty metres in width and seventy-four metres in depth. The mountain with the crack holds a mother lode of gold, stretching about ten metres wide, called the Doyu Vein, and after the Meiji Period (1868-1912), large-scale development was carried out under the Warito. Today, the former mining area is a tourist attraction and has been nominated as a World Heritage Site.

I will conclude this blog with a quote from Charles Holmes’:

“…Hiroshige can be of service to us in another way. He is perhaps the artist through whom the great Japanese masters may best be approached by Europeans. The originality and force of his design, the brilliancy of his colour, his fairly successful realism, and more than all, his evident seriousness, his open sympathy with what has seemed admirable to our romantic tastes, render him attractive at once. His great predecessors are more reticent, more abstract, more remote from us. It is hardly surprising, then, that the painter who, in our own times, has assimilated most perfectly the spirit of Japan should have received this inspiration in the main from Hiroshige. To have a share with Velasquez in the making of Mr. Whistler’s style is no slight honour, and among the artists of modern Japan – the Japan of the last fifty years – there is no other who deserves it so well...”


Apart from various Wikipedia sites the information for this blog came from:

ISSUU – Hiroshige: Famous Places in the 60-odd Provinces -Ronin Gallery

Fuji Arts

Viewing Japanese Prints

The Woodblock Prints of Utagawa HiroshigeAppreciation by Charles Holmes

Famous Views of the Sixty odd Provinces by Utagawa Hiroshige. Part 1.

Memorial Portrait of Utagawa Hiroshige by Utagawa Kunisada (c.1858) This portrait of the artist Hiroshige shows him as he looked just before his death, with the robes and shaven head of a Buddhist priest. At the age of sixty, two years before his death of an undetermined long illness, he took monks vows.

Utagawa Hiroshige or Andō Hiroshige, born Andō Tokuta in 1797 was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist, considered the last great master of that tradition.

In March 2023 I began a three-blog series looking at his woodcut prints of Hiroshige entitled The Tokaido Road Trip. The Tōkaidō Road,  which literally means the Eastern Sea Road, and was once the main road of feudal Japan. It ran for about five hundred kilometres between the old imperial capital of Kyoto, the home of the Japanese  Emperor  and the country’s de facto capital since 1603, Edo, now known as Tokyo, where the Shogun lived.

Today I want to start a two-blog series looking at one of Hiroshige’s great print collection series entitled Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces (Rokujuyoshu meisho zue) and whisk you away on a pictorial journey around Japan courtesy of the great Japanese master ukiyo-e print artist, Utagawa Hiroshige.   Ukiyo-e is a genre of Japanese art that flourished from the 17th through 19th centuries. Its artists produced woodblock prints and paintings of such subjects as female beauties; kabuki actors and sumo wrestlers; scenes from history and folk tales; travel scenes and landscapes; flora and fauna; and erotica.

Yamashiro Province, The Togetsu Bridge in Arashiyama by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

Togetsu Bridge

The first print I am offering depicts the Togetsu Bridge which straddles the Katsura River.  The 150-metre-long structure has been a landmark in Western Kyoto’s Arashiyama District for over four hundred years. It is known for its natural beauty. Changing colour throughout the year with blushing pink in the spring and ablaze in reds, oranges, and yellows each autumn. The bridge has often been used in historical films.  It is also the site of an important initiation for local children. Young boys and girls (the latter clad in kimono) first receive a blessing from a local temple and then make their way across the bridge under orders to do so without looking back. If one ignores this instruction, it is said to bring bad luck as a result, so the stakes are high.

Kawachi Province: Mount Otoko in Hirakata  by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

The series represents a further development of Hiroshige’s landscape print design, including some of his most modern compositions. The striking new use of a vertical format allowed Hiroshige to experiment with the foreground and background contrasts typical of his work, drawing the viewer in while at the same time implying a sense of great distance.  In the depiction we see the Yodo River curving below, the rugged peak of Mount Otoko breaks through the clouds. Mount Otoko was home to the Iwashimizu Hachimangu Shrine, one of Japan’s most important Shinto sites and a popular pilgrimage destination. The use of bokashi (color gradation) infuses the scene with a rich atmosphere. Bokashi is the Japanese term which describes a technique used in Japanese woodblock printmaking. It achieves a variation in lightness and darkness (value) of a single colour or multiple colours by hand applying a gradation of ink to a moistened wooden printing block, rather than inking the block uniformly. This hand-application had to be repeated for each sheet of paper that was printed.  The best-known examples of bokashi are often seen in 19th-century ukiyo-e works of Hokusai and Hiroshige, in which the fading of Prussian blue dyes in skies and water create an illusion of depth.   In later works by Hiroshige, an example of which is the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, most prints originally featured bokashi such as red-to-yellow-to-blue colour sunrises.

Izumi Province, Takashi Beach by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

Takashi Shrine

The high vantage point of this design allows for a sweeping panorama and an expansive view of the beautiful coastline.  In the foreground of this print, nestled amongst the pine trees on the side of a lush green hill, is the Tagashi Shrine, which  is nestled among the pine trees and pilgrims follow the track to the holy place.  Looking further down the pine-covered slope we can see Osaka Bay which reaches out to the horizon in the background whilst waves can be seen crashing onto Takashi Beach.  Hiroshige used the technique known as kimetsubushi to enhance the colours.  Kimetsubushi  was a technique used to enhance the expressive application of colours in woodblock printing and involved the intentional use of woodgrain (visible in traditional printing blocks, which were cut parallel to the grain of the tree). Called kimetsubushi (“uniform grain printing”), the process involved working the surface of the wood with stiff brushes or rubbing with pads to roughen the surface and thereby impress the paper with the grain pattern in areas of relatively uniform or “flat” colour.

Owari Province, Tsushima, Tenno Festival by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

Festival Owari Tsushima Tenno

Festival Owari Tsushima Tenno

The setting of this print is the Tenno River and we see from above, as night begins to fall over the mountains and hills, the river is illuminated by the hundreds of lanterns decorating the boats which are part of the Tenno Festival.  The festival, which has existed for more than five hundred years, is held on the fourteenth and fifteenth days of the sixth month on the lunar calendar and the highlight of the celebration is the sailing of the illuminated boats. It is one of the three major river festivals in Japan and nationally renowned. To cater for the crowds visiting the festival, temporary teahouses have sprung up on the riverbank.

Sagami Province, Enoshima, The Entrance to the Caves by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

On the left edge of the print we can just see the side of Mount Fuji.  In the foreground waves can be seen crashing against the rugged cliffs of Enoshima, a small offshore island, about 4 km in circumference, Below the lush green of the cliffs above, the cave entrance in the lower right temps the viewer into the darkness of the cave. Hewn by the waves over time, this cave system housed a shrine to Benzaiten, a goddess associated with fortune and artistic success.  The caves attracted many pilgrims, and the entire island was considered a sacred site. In addition to the usual travellers, this small island attracted many celebrities and ambitious individuals.

Pilgrimage to the Cave Shrine of Benzaiten by Hiroshige (c. 1850)

Three year before Hiroshige embarked on his Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series he completed another woodcut print of Cave Shrine of Benzaiten at Enoshima.

Hida Province, Basket Ferry by Hiroshige Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series.

Detai; of Hida Province Basket Ferry

The Basket Ferry (detail) by Hiroshige

The Hida Province, Basket Ferry is illustrated in one of Hiroshige’s woodcut prints.  Travellers are ferried above a swift flowing river using an ingenious rope and basket system which is fixed between two sheer cliffs.  In the depiction we see the jagged cliffs rise up all around as the sun sets behind the mountain range beyond. It is a beautifully coloured print which once again is detailed with fine bokashi shading.  It is not thought that Hiroshige ever tried this “ferry” but it is more likely that he found these details in the designs of others, perhaps an illustration by his teacher Utagawa Toyohiro in his 1809 novel The Legend of the Floating Peony.

Shinano Province, The Moon Reflected in the Sarashina Paddy-fields, Mount Kyodai by Hiroshige. Print from Hiroshige’s Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces series

As clouds encircle the base of Mount Kyodai reflections of the full moon seem to leap through the paddy-fields, each watery surface reflecting its likeness in this atmospheric composition. The Just above the fields, Choraku Temple sits in the shadow of “Granny Rock.”  This place is also significant in that it was the location of the signing of the Treaty of Shimoda in 1855, which officially established diplomatic relations between Bakumatsu Japan, the final years of the Edo period when the Tokugawa shogunate ended, and the Russian Empire.

………to be continued.


Apart from various Wikipedia sites the information for this blog came from:

ISSUU – Hiroshige: Famous Places in the 60-odd Provinces -Ronin Gallery

Fuji Arts

Viewing Japanese Prints

Maxamilian Kurzweil

Self Portrait by Max Kurzweil

The artist I am looking at today is the Austrian painter and printmaker, Maximilian Franz Viktor Zdenko Marie Kurzweil who was born on October 12th 1867 in Bzenec, a small town in the South Moravian Region, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and now part of the Czech Republic,  He was the son of Kurt and Maria Kurzweil and he had a brother, Karl and two sisters, Marie and Berthe.   In 1879, at the age of twelve, Max and his family moved to the outskirt of the Austrian city of Vienna. Vienna was a major cultural center at the time. It likely exposed the young Max Kurzweil to art and music. This early move to Vienna shaped his future artistic path.

The Cushion by Max Kurzweil (1903)

Max Kurzweil studied art at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna under Christian Griepenkerl, a German painter and professor, who was best known for rejecting Adolf Hitler’s application to train at the Academy and Leopold Carl Müller, an Austrian genre painter noted for his Orientalist works. It was here that Max was encouraged to develop a solid foundation in classical  painting techniques.  Max Kurzweil’s artistic voyage of discovery was a continuous search for new forms of expression and his profound attention to the avant-garde movements of his time. One of his great interests was the Symbolist movement, which emphasized the emotional and mystical aspects of art, focusing on themes of love, fear, death with a highly stylized and decorative approach.  In painting, Symbolism was looked upon as a restoration of some mystical trends in the Romantic tradition.

The Fisherman by Max Kurzweil (1910)

After leaving the Vienna Academy, Max travelled to Paris and attended the Académie Julian in Paris from 1892.  It was whilst he was living in the French capital that he exhibited his first painting at the Paris Salon in 1894.  Whilst living in France he visited the Breton harbour town of Concarneau and fell in love with the area, its vivid sunrises and sunsets, its people and the busy port with its sailing ships and fishing fleet.  In 1894 he returned to Vienna and the Academy and studied the art of portraiture.  He began to be influenced by French art especially Impressionism and plein-air painting which showed him the way to use lighter – much brighter colours than those he used before.

The artists wife Martha Kurzweil on the shore in Pont-Aven, France (c1900)

In 1895 Max married Maria-Josephine Marthe Guyot a woman from Brittany and they used to spend their summers in Brittany and their winters in Vienna.  In 1896, at the age of twenty nine he became a member of the Künstlerhaus in Vienna.

Members of the Vienna Secession at the group’s 14th (“Beethoven”) Exhibition (1902). Left to right: Anton Stark, Gustav Klimt (in the chair), Koloman Moser (before Klimt with hat) Adolf Böhm, Maximilian Lenz (lying), Ernst Stöhr (with hat), Wilhelm List, Emil Orlik (seated), Maximilian Kurzweil (with cap), Leopold Stolba, Carl Moll (horizontal), Rudolf Bacher

A year later in 1897 he was one of the founders of the Vienna Secession, along with Josef Hoffman, Koloman Moser, Otto Wagner and Gustav Klimt. The Vienna Secession was formed as a counter-response to the conservatism of the artistic institutions in the Austrian capital The objectives laid down at the founding of the Movement encompassed the establishing contact and an exchange of ideas with artists from outside Austria, and thus condemning artistic nationalism, renewing the decorative arts; creating a “total art”, that unified painting, architecture, and the decorative arts; and, in particular, opposing the domination of the official Vienna Academy of the Arts, the Vienna Künstlerhaus, and official art salons, with its traditional orientation toward Historicism, which comprises artistic styles that draw their inspiration from recreating historic styles or imitating the work of historic artists and artisans. 

The Vienna Secession Building, Vienna

The Vienna Secession Movement consisted of a number of artists who decided to break away from the association that ran the city’s own venue for contemporary art to form their own, progressive group and built a venue to display their work.  The Secession’s building created the first dedicated, permanent exhibition space for contemporary art of all types in the West.

Cover of First Issue of Ver Sacrum

Max Kurzweil was also editor and illustrator of the influential Secessionist magazine Ver Sacrum (Sacred Spring).  The magazine, founded by Gustav Klimt and Max Kurzweil was the official journal of the Vienna Secession. It was published from 1898 to 1903 and featured drawings and designs in the Secession style along with literary contributions from distinguished writers from across Europe. Max was also professor at the Frauenkunstschule, an academy in Vienna for female artists.  

Woman in a Yellow Dress by Max Kuzweil (1899)

Kurzweil’s completed one of his best-known paintings entitled Woman in a Yellow Dress in 1899.  It is a truly stunning painting of his beautiful wife Martha.  Her arms are draped over the back of a chaise longue, which is upholstered in a green patterned fabric, as she gazes out at us in a languid and relaxed pose.  There is a supreme look of contentment in her expression.  The yellow dress with its many tones is in total harmony with the sofa and compliments her pale limbs.

Martha Kurzweil before an Easel by Max Kurzweil l(1902)

Kurzweil won the prestigious Villa Romana Prize in 1905. This award allowed him to spend time in Florence, Italy, furthering his artistic development. His time there influenced his later works. Max Kurzweil’s portraiture was outstanding and a good example of this is his portraits of two young girls Mira and Bettina Bauer.  Max had been a close friend of Eugen and Lily Bauer and their two daughters and he had  taught the mother of the Bauer sisters painting and was a frequent guest at the Bauer household.  In 1907 they asked him to complete two separate portraits of the girls and he was invited to their summer residence located on the corner of Largo San Grisogono and the Palatucci Gardens, known at the time as Villa Bauer.

Mira Bauer by Max Kurzweil (1908)

In his half-length painting of Mira Bauer, which Kurzweil completed in 1908, we see a very young girl portrayed standing next to a dark wooden piece of furniture on which is a vase of colourful flowers ranging from white to orange and purple.  Mira has long dark brown hair. She carefully stares towards Kurzweil who is portraying her. Her gaze appears serious, serene and yet at the same time imparts a lot of sweetness towards the observer.

Bettina Bauer by Max Kurzwill (1907)

Bettina Bauer, who at the time of the portrait was four years old, became a well-known painter and illustrator of numerous children’s books, many of which she also wrote. On November 27th 1930 she married the sculptor Georg Ehrlich. Georg Ehrlich frequently depicted children and young people in his sculptures, often as symbols of hope. This cast of ‘Two Sisters‘ was completed in 1944. The inscription suggests that it was originally cast as a private memorial to his wife Bettina’s sister, Mira Marie Bauer, later Mira von Gutman, who died in 1944. The figure on the right is Ehrlich’s wife Bettina and the figure on the left is Mira, his sister-in-law Mira.

Two Sisters. Sculpture by Georg Ehrlich

Georg Ehrlich was born in Vienna but because of the post-War economic depression in Austria he moved to Munich and then to Berlin.  He returned to Vienna in 1924, and his interest turned almost exclusively to sculpture.  On November 27th 1930 he married the artist Bettina Bauer, who like him, was Jewish. After the Nazi Anschluss in March 1938, it was too dangerous for them to be living in Austria. He decided to stay in London, where he was at the time and his wife joined him there in July 1938, bringing many of his works.  Mira Bauer was already living in London and organised the paperwork needed to bring Georg and Bettina to join her in London. Mira died in 1944. In June 1940 Ehrlich was interned as a so-called ‘enemy alien’ in Hutchinson Camp on the Isle of Man.  He became a British citizen in 1947 and was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1962.

Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I by Gustav Klimt (1907)

Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer II by Gustav Klimt (1912)

Mira and Bettina’s aunt was Adele Bloch Bauer.  She was a Viennese socialite, salon hostess, and patron of the arts from Austria-Hungary, who was married to sugar industrialist Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer. She is most well known for being the subject of two of artist Gustav Klimt’s paintings. She has been called “the Austrian Mona Lisa”.

Ein Lieber Besuch (A dear visit) by Max Kurtzweil (1894)

My last work by Max Kurzweil I am showing is my favourite.  He completed Ein Lieber Besuch in 1894.   We are looking  through the open door which leads to a winter snowy barracks courtyard, and see a horse led by a soldier entering a sickroom.  The patient is propped up in bed by another soldier. The sick person’s eyes are closed, but his hand is raised in a loving greeting. Max Kurzweil beautifully depicts this poignant and heart-rending scene in a narrative way. The condition of the patient seems serious and it could be that the ‘dear visit’ mentioned in the title is also a farewell forever. Kurzweil’s depiction of the soldier’s life aligns with a realistic conception of art.

A Walk in the Garden by Max Kurzweil (1896)

Kurzweil was highly thought of by his contemporaries for his contributions to the Vienna Secession. Along with Gustav Klimt, he remains to the most significant representatives of the Viennese Secessionist movement.  Over the years his work continued to change and develop.

Despair by Max Kurzweil

Sadly, all was not well with him financially or with his personal life and as a consequence of these problems which worsened his inborn sense of melancholy, he committed suicide, at the age of 48, on May 9th 1916, together with his student and lover, Helene Heger.


Information for this blog came from Wikipedia and three excellent websites:

The Art Bog

The Art Story – Vienna Secession

Catherine la Rose – The Poet of Painting