
Sudden Shower over Shin-Ōhashi Bridge and Atake
Utagawa Hiroshige
$63.00
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- 380g/m² cotton canvas — certified museum quality
- Solid wood stretcher bar with 0.75” gallery wrap
- HD Giclée print — colour-true to the original
- Ready to hang — hanging hardware included
Sudden Shower over Shin-Ōhashi Bridge and Atake (1857) is among the most celebrated prints in Utagawa Hiroshige's landmark series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, a masterwork of the Japanese ukiyo-e tradition that captured the fleeting moods and landscapes of Edo — the city now known as Tokyo. Completed in the final years of Hiroshige's life, this composition depicts pedestrians and boatmen caught in a sudden downpour on the Shin-Ōhashi Bridge, their forms bent against the driving rain rendered as bold diagonal lines slashing across the composition.
Hiroshige's genius lies in his ability to transform an ordinary urban moment into something profoundly atmospheric. The vertically streaked rain, the muted indigo sky, and the compressed spatial arrangement create a sense of immediacy rarely achieved in printmaking. The design had an extraordinary influence on Western art — Vincent van Gogh famously copied this very composition in oil, recognizing its revolutionary approach to depicting weather and movement. The print stands as a cornerstone of Japanese Art and a testament to the expressive power of the woodblock medium.
This museum-quality stretched canvas reproduction is printed on premium matte canvas and hand-wrapped around a solid 0.75-inch wooden frame with a clean gallery wrap finish — ready to hang and built to last.
| Artist | Utagawa Hiroshige |
| Year | 1857 |
| Medium | Woodblock print; ink and color on paper |
| Dimensions | 13 3/8 x 9 1/2 in. (34 x 24.1 cm) |
| Collection | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
| Movement | Japanese Art |



