- Hiroshige - Wikipedia
Hiroshige is best known for his horizontal-format landscape series The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō and for his vertical-format landscape series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo
- Hiroshige | Japanese Ukiyo-e Artist Printmaker | Britannica
Hiroshige was a Japanese artist, one of the last great ukiyo-e (“pictures of the floating world”) masters of the colour woodblock print His genius for landscape compositions was first recognized in the West by the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists
- Utagawa Hiroshige - The Art Institute of Chicago
Utagawa Hiroshige is recognized as a master of the ukiyo-e woodblock printing tradition, having created 8,000 prints of everyday life and landscape in Edo-period Japan with a splendid, saturated ambience
- Utagawa Hiroshige Paintings, Bio, Ideas | TheArtStory
Hiroshige is known as the last great master of Japanese traditional woodblock printing, imbuing the Japanese landscape with a magnificent lyricism
- Utagawa Hiroshige - A Journey in Print
Utagawa Hiroshige, one of Japan’s most celebrated ukiyo-e artists, is renowned for his evocative and poetic landscape prints that captured the natural beauty of Edo-period Japan
- Who Was Hiroshige, the Artist Behind Japan’s Most Iconic Prints?
Thanks to the medium of mass-produced woodblock prints, his masterful, uniquely exquisite designs spread rapidly, becoming widely beloved throughout his native Japan and, towards the end of the 19th century, the rest of the world
- Hiroshige - 205 artworks - painting - WikiArt. org
Hiroshige is best known for his landscapes, such as the series The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō and The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō; and for his depictions of birds and flowers
- Hiroshige: Artist of the Open Road | The Arbuturian
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) is a masterful Japanese artist Born in Edo (now Tokyo) into a samurai family, he is one of Japan’s foremost painters in the early-mid nineteenth century, toward the end of Japan’s samurai era
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