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Sudden Shower over Shin-Ohashi Bridge and Atake (Ohashi Atake noyudachi)
Price |
A$170 (unframed)) |
Status |
New reproduction |
Condition |
Excellent |
Size |
245mm x 373mm |
Availability |
For sale |
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We can almost hear the crack of thunder as the roiling black clouds burst into sheets of heavy rain, scattering the huddled shapes on the bridge below. On the blue-gray expanse of the Sumida, a solitary boatman poles his log raft downstream, impervious to the storm. This is a yudachi (an "evening descent" of the thunder god, as one etymology has it), a summer rain in which the heavens suddenly darken late in the day, releasing torrents of rain in large drops, and then quickly clear. This print is the undisputed masterpiece of the One Hundred Famous Views of Edo. It bears comparison in its universal appeal with another of Hiroshige's most famous landscapes, "Shono" in The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido, with which it shares the theme of escape from a sudden rain. Together with the view of the Kameido plum tree , it was also accorded the honor of a copy in oil by van Gogh. The immediate appeal of this dramatic composition is enhanced by finely wrought details. The irregular pattern of the black clouds above reveals to a rare degree the spontaneous hand of the printer, differing visibly from one print to another. The torrent of rain turns out on close inspection to be an overlay of black on gray at slightly different angles, some lines broken, others extending the length of the composition. The six figures on the bridge offer a lively diversity of ways to escape from the rain, in ones, twos, and threes, under hats, mats, and umbrellas, in one direction and another. Although the particular place is relatively unimportant to the appeal of this print, it is as usual a very specific site, looking northeast over Shin-Ohashi, or New Great Bridge-named on its completion in 1693 with reference to the existing Ohashi (later Ryogoku Bridge) to the north. The Atake of the title was an informal place name for the area shown on the far bank, which was named after a gigantic bakufu ship, the 1,500-ton Atake-maru, which was moored in front of the shogunal boathouses here from the 1630s until it was dismantled in 1682. The boathouses themselves remained, barely visible here to the far left. An alternate and probably earlier state of this print, featuring an additional two log rafts along the far shore, is included in the Brooklyn Museum collection.
Smith H.D and Poster A.G., Hiroshige, One Hundred Famous views of Edo., George Braziller Inc., 1st edn., 4th reprint , 1986
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