Early Life and Training
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858), born Andō Tokutarō, emerged during a period of flourishing cultural production in Edo-period Japan. His family belonged to the samurai class, serving as fire wardens for the city of Edo (modern Tokyo). Though this gave him social status, it was not wealth, and Hiroshige’s path was shaped by personal loss. He was orphaned at the age of twelve and soon relinquished his hereditary post, turning instead toward art.
Around 1811, he entered the Utagawa school, a major training ground for ukiyo-e artists. His teacher, Utagawa Toyohiro, specialized in landscapes and genre scenes—subjects that would later define Hiroshige’s mature style. The Utagawa school emphasized bold designs, clarity of line, and popular appeal, qualities evident throughout Hiroshige’s oeuvre.
Rise to Prominence
During the early stages of his career, Hiroshige produced actor portraits, bijin-ga (images of beautiful women), and illustrations of birds and flowers. However, his true innovation came in the genre of landscape. At a time when ukiyo-e prints were largely associated with the “floating world” of theaters and pleasure districts, Hiroshige shifted focus to the natural and built environments of Japan.
His reputation was secured with the publication of The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tōkaidō (1833–34). This series illustrated scenes along the Tōkaidō, the heavily traveled road linking Edo and Kyoto. Hiroshige infused the prints with narrative elements: travelers battling storms, merchants crossing bridges, or weary pilgrims stopping at tea houses. More than topographical records, they conveyed the emotional atmosphere of the journey. Their popularity was immense—so much so that Hiroshige produced multiple versions throughout his career.
Major Series and Themes
Hiroshige’s prolific career yielded hundreds of series, though several stand out as landmarks of Japanese art:
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The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tōkaidō – His best-known work, blending landscape with human activity.
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The Sixty-Nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō (1835–38) – Produced with Keisai Eisen, depicting the alternate inland route between Edo and Kyoto.
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Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces (1853–56) – A monumental series capturing scenic spots across Japan, expanding his focus beyond Edo.
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One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856–59) – A late-career masterpiece, rich with daring compositions, bold cropping, and atmospheric effects. This series preserves a poetic vision of Edo just before Japan’s opening to the West.
Hiroshige also created numerous prints of birds, flowers, and seasonal motifs. These smaller works, often designed for collectors’ albums, reveal his sensitivity to rhythm, asymmetry, and the fleeting beauty of nature.
The Printmaking Process
Hiroshige’s art was made possible through the collaborative process of ukiyo-e printmaking. Each print involved multiple artisans, whose coordinated efforts transformed the artist’s design into a work of art available to the public.
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Design (Eshi) – Hiroshige sketched the composition in ink on thin washi paper.
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Carving (Hori) – The drawing was pasted face-down onto a cherrywood block. A master carver chiseled away the negative space, leaving the lines in relief. For multicolored prints, additional blocks were carved—one for each color.
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Printing (Suri) – Using brushes, the printer applied water-based pigments mixed with rice paste to the carved blocks. Handmade washi paper was laid onto the block and rubbed with a baren (a flat disc tool) to transfer the ink. Colors were applied sequentially, requiring precise alignment (registration).
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Publishing (Hanmoto) – Publishers financed the project, determined print runs, and distributed the finished works.
The water-based pigments used in ukiyo-e allowed for subtle gradations (bokashi) and luminous transparency. Hiroshige excelled at exploiting these effects, particularly in his renderings of mist, rain, snow, and twilight.
Materials: Pigments, Paper, and Tools
Pigments
During Hiroshige’s lifetime, printmakers used a mixture of traditional natural pigments and, increasingly, imported synthetic dyes.
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Traditional mineral and organic colors:
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Indigo (ai) for deep blues.
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Safflower red (beni) for delicate pinks and reds, though it was prone to fading.
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Dayflower blue (aobana), a fugitive plant-based pigment often used for underdrawings.
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Lampblack (soot mixed with glue) for deep, velvety blacks.
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Imported synthetic pigments:
By the 1820s–30s, imported Prussian blue (bero-ai) revolutionized ukiyo-e. Its intensity and lightfastness allowed Hiroshige to create striking, atmospheric effects—night skies, rainstorms, and the famous “blue” landscapes that distinguished his prints from earlier works.
Paper
The paper used in ukiyo-e was washi, handmade from the inner bark of mulberry trees. This fiber produced sheets that were strong, flexible, and absorbent, able to withstand multiple impressions without tearing.
Different papers were sometimes chosen for different effects. For example, thicker papers held bold colors, while thinner sheets could enhance translucency. Sizing (applying animal glue and alum) controlled absorbency, allowing pigments to sit on the surface and retain brightness.
Tools and Techniques
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Cherrywood blocks: Dense and fine-grained, ideal for carving delicate lines.
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Baren: A circular pad used by printers to press the paper evenly onto the inked block.
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Brushes: Used to apply pigments to the blocks, often blending colors directly on the surface to achieve gradation (bokashi).
Hiroshige and his collaborators were particularly skilled at bokashi, the shading technique that gave depth and atmosphere to skies, rivers, and mists. This technical mastery became one of the hallmarks of his prints.
Style and Innovations
Hiroshige’s art is distinguished by several hallmarks:
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Atmospheric landscapes – He evoked weather and mood with unparalleled subtlety, from the shimmer of evening light to the roar of waterfalls.
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Seasonal cycles – His prints often referenced seasonal change, echoing classical Japanese poetry.
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Daring compositions – Foreground objects, such as a branch or bridge railing, frequently framed distant views. This innovative use of perspective would later inspire European modernists.
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Human presence – Unlike purely scenic depictions, Hiroshige’s landscapes frequently included travelers, merchants, and townspeople, anchoring his images in the rhythms of daily life.
Hiroshige and the West
After Japan opened its ports in the 1850s, Hiroshige’s prints reached Europe, fueling the craze known as Japonisme. His compositional devices—flat color planes, diagonal viewpoints, and cropped perspectives—were eagerly studied by artists such as Claude Monet, James McNeill Whistler, and Vincent van Gogh. Van Gogh even copied several Hiroshige prints, experimenting with their bold outlines and color contrasts.
The influence of Hiroshige and his contemporaries on Impressionism and Post-Impressionism cannot be overstated; their reimagining of space and atmosphere helped reshape Western art in the late 19th century.
Final Years and Legacy
Hiroshige continued producing prints until his death in 1858 during a cholera epidemic in Edo. His last great work, One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, was completed with assistance from his students and stands as a testament to his enduring vision of the city he loved.
Today, Hiroshige is remembered not only as a master of ukiyo-e but also as a poetic chronicler of Japan’s landscapes and seasons. His prints, still widely collected and exhibited, offer viewers both an intimate glimpse of Edo-period Japan and a universal meditation on the beauty of nature.