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Bird's-Eye View

Oprah.com   |   From the June 2008 issue of O, The Oprah Magazine
Hiroshige, 100 Views of Edo
Hiroshige, 100 Views of Edo
By Melanie Trede and Lorenz Bichler
294 pages. Taschen.


Delicate in the extreme, the art of ukiyo-e—"pictures of the floating, fleeting world"—was wildly popular among both Japanese and European artists in the 19th century. When they painted moonlit water beneath a wooden bridge, or sun-dappled idlers in a Parisian park, Whistler, Monet, and other Impressionists were dipping their brushes in the sensibilities of artists like Utagawa Hiroshige, whose classic 1856–58 series of woodblock prints is now available in a lush, oversize edition. With pages as soft as petals and magnificently suffused with color, Hiroshige: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (Taschen) reveals the cultural, natural, social, and political life of a legendary city (now called Tokyo), rendered by a master's unerring hand.
Printed from Oprah.com on Saturday, May 26, 2012
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