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Cranes Minowa Kanasugi Mikawashima Hiroshige Fine Postcard

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Signature Matte
18 pt thickness / 120 lb weight Soft white, soft eggshell texture
-$0.18

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Size: Standard Postcard

Create your own vacation-worthy postcard! Any view you’ve seen, any monument you’ve fallen in love with, can all be added to your postcard with our personalization tool.

  • Dimensions: 5.6" L x 4.25" H; qualified USPS postcard size
  • High quality, full-color, full-bleed printing on both sides

Paper Type: Signature Matte

Our Signature Matte paper is a customer favorite—smooth to the touch with a soft eggshell texture that elevates any design. Its sturdy 18 pt weight and natural feel make it the ideal choice for timeless, sophisticated events.

  • Exclusively made for Zazzle
  • Made and Printed in the USA
  • FSC® Certified—sourced from responsibly managed forests that protect both people and planet

About This Design

Cranes Minowa Kanasugi Mikawashima Hiroshige Fine Postcard

Cranes Minowa Kanasugi Mikawashima Hiroshige Fine Postcard

Utagawa Hiroshige (1797 – October 12, 1858) was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist, and one of the last great artists in that tradition. He was born in 1797 and named "Ando Tokutaro" in the Yayosu barracks, just east of Edo Castle in the Yaesu area of Edo (present-day Tokyo). His father was Ando Gen'emon, a hereditary retainer (of the doshin rank) of the shogun. An official within the fire-fighting organization whose duty was to protect Edo Castle from fire, Gen'emon and his family, along with 30 other samurai, lived in one of the 10 barracks; although their salary of 60 koku marked them as a minor family, it was a stable position, and a very easy one — Professor Seiichiro Takahashi characterizes a fireman's duties as largely consisting of revelry. The 30 samurai officials of a barracks, including Gen'emon, oversaw the efforts of the 300 lower-class workers who also lived within the barracks. A few scraps of evidence indicate he was tutored by another fireman who taught him in the Chinese-influenced Kano school of painting. Legend has it that Hiroshige determined to become a ukiyo-e artist when he saw the prints of his near-contemporary, Hokusai. (Hokusai published some of his greatest prints, such as Thirty-six views of Mount Fuji, in 1832—the year Hiroshige devoted himself full-time to his art.) From then to Hokusai's death in 1849, their landscape works competed for the same customers. The title of this print lists three different villages northwest of the Yoshiwara pleasure quarters. The names that appear first probably represent the nearest places in the view. This would mean that it is a scene looking from Minowa and Kanasugi toward Mikawashima, to the west or northwest. Mikawashima was where the shogun's Crane Hunt occurred almost every year during the winter months, when cranes migrated to Japan. The auspicious nature of the crane made it an important ceremonial gift. Aside from the one or two birds taken on each hunt, the cranes of Mikawashima were carefully protected, as Hiroshige has depicted: the figure in the background is carrying buckets filled with rice with which to feed them. From the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo. Vintage retro cute cool beautiful elegant artistic original creative unique modern fashion decor from Asian ukiyoe animal and landscape spiritual religious Shinto and Buddhist nature fine art woodblock print.

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Very pleased with my order. All my prints were manufactured to a very high standard to my exact specifications and edited additions.
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I had never seen these classic science fiction images and most of my friends have not seen them either. They are like little treasures! Amazing quality and fun to send people!
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By Jennifer W.November 28, 2022Verified Purchase
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歌川広重安藤広重fine artutagawa hiroshigeminowa kanasugi mikawashima cranesfine artisthiroshigevintage japanese landscape with cranes
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歌川広重安藤広重fine artutagawa hiroshigeminowa kanasugi mikawashima cranesfine artisthiroshigevintage japanese landscape with cranes

Other Info

Product ID: 239300956790622239
Created on: 5/14/2009, 7:24 PM
Rating: G