Komagata River Bank

Komagata River Bank

Unframed / 18" x 12"
£44.99
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Komagata River Bank
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Komagata River Bank

Katsushika Hokusai | c. 1831

£44.99
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About the Artwork

Komagata Embankment is a Japanese woodblock print by Kawase Hasui, created in 1919 during the early years of the shin-hanga movement. Set along the Komagata River in Asakusa, the work depicts a bamboo yard on a summer afternoon, transforming an unremarkable riverside scene into a study of heat, stillness, and seasonal mood.

The composition is dominated by towering stacks of bamboo arranged like a half-opened fan, their vertical lines forming a dense green screen across the picture plane. In the foreground, a horse stands motionless, its head lowered, while a drayman lies slumped on his wagon, asleep in the heavy air. Through a narrow opening between the bamboo stalks, a wedge of blue water and sky appears in the distance - cool in colour, but unreachable in space. This contrast structures the entire image: enclosure and openness, heat and relief, stasis and escape.

Hasui’s handling of colour and line reinforces the sensory experience of summer. The bamboo absorbs light rather than reflecting it, creating a feeling of weight and humidity. The figures are not animated; they endure. Nothing happens in the scene, and that absence of action is its subject. As Hasui himself noted, it was the listlessness of the horse and the sleeping worker that made the scene feel unmistakably summer-like.

Today, Komagata Embankment resonates as a meditation on pause and bodily fatigue within the city. In contrast to images that celebrate movement or productivity, this print honours inactivity as a natural response to environment. Its modern relevance lies in its attention to physical sensation - the way heat slows thought, bends posture, and suspends time - reminding viewers that stillness, too, is part of urban life.

About the Artist

Kawase Hasui (1883–1957) was one of the leading figures of the shin-hanga movement and is widely regarded as its greatest landscape artist.

Best known for his serene depictions of towns, temples, coastlines, and rural Japan, Hasui’s prints evoke a profound sense of stillness and atmosphere. Snowfall muffles village streets, rain softens distant rooftops, and twilight settles gently over bridges and waterways. His landscapes are not grand spectacles but quiet encounters, moments suspended in time where nature and human presence exist in careful balance.

Trained under Kaburagi Kiyokata, Hasui combined classical ukiyo-e composition with a modern sensitivity to light, weather, and mood. He traveled extensively across Japan, sketching directly from life, and translated these observations into prints that feel both deeply personal and universally resonant. Subtle gradations of color and meticulous carving give his works a lyrical, almost meditative quality.

Throughout his career, Hasui worked closely with publisher Watanabe Shōzaburō, producing hundreds of prints that helped define the visual language of shin-hanga. In 1956, he was officially recognized by the Japanese government as a Living National Treasure for his contributions to woodblock printmaking.

Today, Kawase Hasui’s work is celebrated for its quiet poetry and emotional restraint. His landscapes invite slow looking, offering a contemplative vision of Japan shaped by memory, atmosphere, and the passing of time.

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