
The Tiger of Ryokoku by Hirokage
Utagawa Hirokage stages a scene of magnificent disorder: a tiger — almost certainly a man in a tiger costume, or perhaps a rumoured beast — has sent the inhabitants of Ryokoku into full comic panic. Figures flee in every direction with the exaggerated urgency that defines Hirokage's Comical Views of Famous Places in Edo series. The composition is dense and kinetic, every corner occupied by someone in the process of escaping, the joke played completely straight in the deadpan visual language of ukiyo-e woodblock printing.
On canvas, the kinetic energy of Hirokage's scene gains warmth and solidity. The bold ink lines hold with clarity against the textured ground, and the flat colour fields develop a pleasing depth. A canvas print that delivers both visual wit and genuine graphic quality.
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The Tiger of Ryokoku by Hirokage
Utagawa Hirokage stages a scene of magnificent disorder: a tiger — almost certainly a man in a tiger costume, or perhaps a rumoured beast — has sent the inhabitants of Ryokoku into full comic panic. Figures flee in every direction with the exaggerated urgency that defines Hirokage's Comical Views of Famous Places in Edo series. The composition is dense and kinetic, every corner occupied by someone in the process of escaping, the joke played completely straight in the deadpan visual language of ukiyo-e woodblock printing.
On canvas, the kinetic energy of Hirokage's scene gains warmth and solidity. The bold ink lines hold with clarity against the textured ground, and the flat colour fields develop a pleasing depth. A canvas print that delivers both visual wit and genuine graphic quality.
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Utagawa Hirokage stages a scene of magnificent disorder: a tiger — almost certainly a man in a tiger costume, or perhaps a rumoured beast — has sent the inhabitants of Ryokoku into full comic panic. Figures flee in every direction with the exaggerated urgency that defines Hirokage's Comical Views of Famous Places in Edo series. The composition is dense and kinetic, every corner occupied by someone in the process of escaping, the joke played completely straight in the deadpan visual language of ukiyo-e woodblock printing.
On canvas, the kinetic energy of Hirokage's scene gains warmth and solidity. The bold ink lines hold with clarity against the textured ground, and the flat colour fields develop a pleasing depth. A canvas print that delivers both visual wit and genuine graphic quality.





















