The Temple Zōjōji in Shiba, from the series Twenty Views of Tokyo

Kawase Hasui 川瀬巴水 Japanese

Not on view

This print by Kawase Hasui depicts a lone woman, mostly hidden by her umbrella, walking through snow before a Buddhist temple. One of a series of prints of sites around the city of Tokyo designed by Kawase and published in the late 1920s, this image shows Zōjōji, a Pure Land temple located in the Shiba neighborhood of central Tokyo. The structure in the background is the temple’s main gate, the Sangedatsumon, which was constructed in 1622 and is today the oldest standing wooden building in the capital. Kawase was a leading figure of the early twentieth-century print movement known as Shin-hanga (literally, “new prints”), which focused on traditional techniques and subject matter.

The Temple Zōjōji in Shiba, from the series Twenty Views of Tokyo, Kawase Hasui 川瀬巴水 (Japanese, 1883–1957), Woodblock print (vertical ōban); ink and color on paper, Japan

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