Surface of Lake Misaka

Surface of Lake Misaka

Unframed / 18" x 12"
£29.99
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Surface of Lake Misaka
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Surface of Lake Misaka

Katsushika Hokusai | c. 1831

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About the Artwork

Surface of Lake Misaka is a Japanese ukiyo-e print by Katsushika Hokusai, created in the early nineteenth century as part of his landmark series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji (c. 1830–1833). Set near the mountainous lakes west of Edo, the work presents Mount Fuji reflected across the still waters of Lake Misaka, its form fragmented and softened by the lake’s surface.

The composition is defined by restraint. A broad expanse of water occupies the foreground, its subtle ripples catching light and dissolving Fuji’s reflection into shifting planes of colour. Hokusai uses a limited palette - cool blues, pale greys, and gentle earth tones - to evoke a quiet, suspended atmosphere. Human presence, if at all implied, is peripheral; the scene belongs to the lake, the mountain, and the delicate movement between them.

Rather than dramatizing Fuji as a monumental force, Hokusai renders it as something transient and perceptual - seen indirectly, altered by water and light. The mountain appears not as a fixed symbol but as an image in flux, dependent on viewpoint and conditions. This subtle play between permanence and instability reflects a core concern of the series: how an eternal form is continually re-experienced through time, weather, and place.

Today, Surface of Lake Misaka resonates as a meditation on reflection and stillness. In a visual culture saturated with immediacy and spectacle, the print invites slower looking. Its power lies in what it withholds - encouraging contemplation of how meaning often emerges not from clarity, but from quiet distortion and pause.

About the Artist

Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) was one of the most influential figures in ukiyo-e, the Japanese woodblock print tradition that flourished during the Edo period.

Best known for his iconic series "Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji", Hokusai brought a dynamic energy and innovative perspective to landscapes, nature, and everyday life, blending meticulous observation with bold, expressive composition. His prints capture the swell of waves, the grandeur of mountains, and the fleeting beauty of ordinary moments, each rendered with a striking combination of precision, movement, and visual poetry.

Though classically trained in painting, Hokusai continually reinvented his style over a seventy-year career, producing work that ranged from delicate depictions of flora and fauna to vivid, almost cinematic scenes of human activity.

Over his lifetime, Hokusai created thousands of prints, paintings, and illustrated books, collaborating with prominent Edo publishers while leaving a profound influence on both Japanese and Western art. His depictions of Mount Fuji, the sea, and everyday Japanese life transformed familiar subjects into dramatic, enduring images that continue to inspire artists worldwide.

Today, Hokusai’s work stands as a testament to innovation, craftsmanship, and the power of seeing the extraordinary in the ordinary.

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