:"East Meets West: Hiroshige at The Phillips Collection" will
present the exquisite "Tokaido Road" landscape series by Japanese
master printmaker Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858), who dominated
popular art in Japan for decades and inspired many Nineteenth and
early Twentieth Century Western artists.
On view June 25 through September 4, "The Fifty-three Stations of
the Tokaido" series (Hoeido edition) will be displayed along with
works from the museum's permanent collection by European and
American artists influenced by Hiroshige, including Pierre
Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, John Twachtman, Maurice Prendergast, Oskar
Kokoschka, Morris Graves and Milton Avery.
The series is on loan to The Phillips Collection from a private
collection in Japan.
"Hiroshige's work is considered to be among the greatest of all
Japanese landscape prints," said Jay Gates, director of the
Phillips. "Not only did Hiroshige have a great impact on Western
art in general, his work also helped shape museum founder Duncan
Phillips' aesthetic sensibility, especially as it related to
landscape painting. We are delighted to offer viewers a chance to
see these stunning prints with works from our collection."
To be shown in its entirety, this poetic and world-renowned set
of 55 woodblock prints was the first of Hiroshige's picture sets
about the Tokaido Road and the one that catapulted him to fame in
his native Japan. The series depicts stops along the fabled
Tokaido Road, the Eastern Coast highway linking Edo - present-day
Tokyo - with the imperial city of Kyoto. In the Nineteenth
Century, the nearly 300-mile road was dotted with inns, teahouses
and souvenir shops and had become associated with the "floating
world" of travel and the pursuit of transient pleasure.
Depictions of the Tokaido prior to Hiroshige focused on people
engaged in familiar activities with conventional landscape views
relegated to background scenery. Hiroshige revolutionized the
approach to these scenes by showing the lyricism of the landscape
as the true subject. For the first time, the whole range of
Japan's scenic beauty was depicted, emphasizing the changing
aspects of nature - the effects of time of day, weather and the
seasons - rather than merely recording topography.
"Hiroshige was the first Japanese artist to express the humor of
travel," said exhibition curator Susan Behrends Frank, assistant
curator at the Phillips. "His prints include amusing and fanciful
distortions and exaggerations of the people depicted, as well as
of the landscape itself."
In 1910, at the age of 24, museum founder Duncan Phillips
traveled to the Far East, his first foreign trip. While in Japan,
he visited many of the places depicted in Hiroshige's famous
Tokaido series, experiencing the beauty and variety of the
landscape firsthand. He also saw works by Hiroshige and other
ukiyo-e print masters, later acquiring some for his private
collection. Phillips became strongly attracted to the Japanese
aesthetic and to Hiroshige in particular, adding books about the
artist to his personal library.
He was captivated by Hiroshige's use of aerial perspective, his
depiction of different times of day (especially twilight and
moonlight), and his fascination with the many nuances of the
changing seasons and weather conditions on landscape. Hiroshige's
influence can be seen in Phillips' passion for landscapes and
particularly for views that included bridges - a favorite
Hiroshige motif -moonlit nights and scenes spanning the four
seasons. In a 1913 essay, Phillips lauded Hiroshige as the
Japanese artist who had most influenced many Western artists.
The museum is at 1600 21st Street, NW, at Q Street, in the
historic Dupont Circle neighborhood. For information,
202-387-2151 or www.phillipscollection.org.