Hiroshige - Haneda Ferry and Benten Shrine
Hiroshige - Haneda Ferry and Benten Shrine
Ando Hiroshige
Date: 1856
Genre: Ukiyo-e, Meisho-e
Publisher: Uoya Eikichi
Medium: Woodblock Print. Oban (9.5" x 14.25")
Haneda Ferry and Benten Shrine (Haneda no Watashi Benten). No. 72, Summer section. From the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo.
This design presents the ferry crossing at Haneda, a vital point of passage at the southern edge of Edo where travelers moved between the city and the Miura Peninsula. The composition is characteristically bold: the landscape is dramatically framed by a close foreground view of the ferryman, whose figure occupies much of the pictorial space. This device creates an immediate, almost immersive vantage point, placing the viewer within the act of crossing rather than observing from afar.
Beyond the foreground figure, the eye moves toward the shoreline at left, where substantial buildings line the water’s edge. Nearby, three boats rest at anchor close to the lighthouse, while two distant sails punctuate the horizon. The calm expanse of water and the recession into open sky convey the atmosphere of early summer, aligning the print with the seasonal structure of the series.
Benten Shrine - dedicated to the deity Benzaiten, associated with water, music, and good fortune - anchors the site’s spiritual identity within an otherwise commercial and transport-oriented setting. As in many works from this late series, Hiroshige combines an unconventional compositional cropping with careful spatial layering, transforming a functional ferry crossing into a scene of quiet monumentality and seasonal clarity.
Condition: Great color and impression. Small hole in the middle of the trees on the left, small repair on the back. Not backed but tape residue on top border (see back of print).
https://www.hiroshige.org.uk/100_Views_Of_Edo/100_Views_Of_Edo.htm
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Who Was Utagawa Hiroshige?
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858) was a leading creative figure of the late Edo-period ukiyo-e tradition and is widely regarded as the foremost landscape print designer of nineteenth-century Japan. Born in Edo to a lower-ranking samurai family, he inherited his father’s position as a fire warden while still in adolescence. Around the age of fourteen, he entered the Utagawa school as a pupil of Utagawa Toyohiro. In addition to his formal training, Hiroshige absorbed stylistic elements from the Kanō and Shijō schools, aspects of Chinese literati painting, and Western linear perspective, synthesizing these influences into a distinctive and atmospheric approach to landscape design.
Hiroshige achieved widespread recognition in 1832 with the publication of Tōkaidō gojūsan tsugi (The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō), a series that redefined the landscape genre within ukiyo-e. Rather than presenting purely topographical views, he emphasized seasonal change, meteorological effects, and the presence of travelers within the natural environment, thereby infusing his compositions with lyrical and narrative qualities. Over the course of his career, he produced more than 8,000 designs encompassing a broad range of subjects - including bijin-ga, yakusha-e, and historical themes - though landscape series remained central to his artistic identity.
Hiroshige’s mature work is characterized by innovative compositional structures, expressive use of color gradation (bokashi), and a refined sensitivity to mood and spatial recession. His prints exerted significant influence not only on subsequent generations of Japanese artists, including his successors Hiroshige II and III, but also on European Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painters in the late nineteenth century. Today, Hiroshige’s oeuvre stands as a defining achievement of ukiyo-e and a critical bridge between Edo-period visual culture and global modernism.
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Collector Reviews
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It's a great looking piece which I am very happy and excited to add to my small collection! I really appreciate it.
I enjoy your YouTube videos and I look forward to picking up more prints from you in the future.
Rick
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Dear Mr. Richard, opening the package and seeing the incredible bright colours and ornamental abundance of Yoshitoshi's diptych, it was just as printed today! It will be a pleasure to get more of your fine selected prints.
L. F.
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Josh and I just opened the package and want to thank you for this amazing Hiroshige print. The condition is better than we expected. Lovely to look at, will bring the family great joy. Happy New Year and thank you again.
J.
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