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Bamboo in Wind and Rain - Shitao (Zhu Ruoji)
Bamboo in Wind and Rain - Shitao (Zhu Ruoji)
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Sudden Shower over Shin-Ōhashi Bridge and Atake (1857) is one of the most celebrated designs from Utagawa Hiroshige's landmark series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, a monumental achievement of Japanese woodblock printing completed in the final years of his life. The composition captures a torrential summer downpour descending upon commuters crossing the Shin-Ōhashi Bridge over the Sumida River in Edo — the city that would later become Tokyo. Figures huddle and rush beneath the relentless diagonal streaks of rain, rendered with extraordinary graphic force against a sky of deep, atmospheric blue.
Hiroshige employed the ukiyo-e technique at its most refined, using bold outlines, flat planes of color, and dramatic cropping to distill a fleeting moment of urban life into timeless visual poetry. The rain itself — depicted as a dense web of fine parallel lines — was a revolutionary device that influenced Western artists including Vincent van Gogh, who made his own painted copy of this very composition. The work reflects the Edo period's fascination with seasonal phenomena and the transient beauty of everyday experience.
This museum-quality stretched canvas reproduction is printed on premium matte canvas and hand-wrapped over a 0.75-inch solid wood frame with a classic gallery wrap finish, bringing this iconic masterpiece to your walls with lasting elegance.
| 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 |
