One of five fan prints from the series The Pride of Edo Compared to the Five Elements [
Edo jiman mitate gogyo].
Artist:
Utagawa Hiroshige [歌川 広重] a.k.a. Andō Hiroshige [安藤 広重] (Japanese, 1797 – 1858).
Publisher:
Ibaya Kyubei [伊場屋 久兵衛] (Japanese, fl. 1804 – 1851).
Signed: Hiroshige ga
Censor’s seal: Muramatsu
Publisher's seal: Kinseido (Ibaya Kyubei)
The text in the fan-shaped cartouche reads: "Water: The Square Aqueduct that Crosses by Suido Bridge Suggests the comparison of Ochanomizu to Water [Mizu: Ochanomizu josui no himasu Suidobashi areba gogyo no uchi mizu ni nazorau]".
Ref: Rupert Faulkner. Hiroshige Fan Prints. Victoria and Albert Museum. Far Eastern Series. Hardcover - Harry N. Abrams, Inc. - 2001 [
LIB-1344.2017] № 22, p. 51.
Comment from Sebastian Izzard: This series of five prints features full-length figures of women set in landscapes around Edo compared to the five natural elements: fire, water, earth, wood, and metal. A preparatory drawing for the “Wood” image, featuring a woman crossing a bridge in the snow at the timber yards of Fukagawa, is owned by the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of History in Yokohama. A preparatory drawing also exists for the “Earth” image, which portrays a woman seated on a bench at Nakabashi, for which no print is extant. Two examples exist of the “Fire” subject, which pictures a woman holding a lantern at night on an embankment, while in the river behind her fishermen employ fire to trap their catch. The “Water” image depicts a woman on a pleasure boat on the Ocha-no-mizu waterway. One example of the “Metal” subject is known, which was included in Izzard's
Important Japanese Prints 1830–1860 March 14–20, 2020 exhibition [
LIB-2398.2020], as №. 51.
Metal. Izzard, 2020.
Fire. Faulkner, 2001.