ARTIST: Utagawa Hiroshige (Ando), Japanese, 1797-1858
TITLE: Plum Garden at Kameido.
SUBJECT: Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art-Israel.
SIZE: 26.5" H. x 18" W (woodblock print)
POSTER: 32"H. x 21"W (Overall)
Vincent Van Gogh famously used this work as inspiration for his Flowering Plum Orchard (after Hiroshige).
Hiroshige brings us face to face with the celebrated "Sleeping Dragon Plum" of Kameido. This tree, the most famous in Edo, was known for the purity of its double blossoms, which, according to one Edo guidebook, were "so white when full in bloom as to drive off the darkness." We are so close that we can almost smell the tree's powerful fragrance, reputed to have lured the shogun Yoshimune as he passed nearby in the early eighteenth century.
View of the "Sleeping Dragon Plum" (Garyubai), the most famous tree in Edo. The unusual pattern of the tree's growth is seen by the low branches entering the soil and re-emerging at a distance to create new trunks, thus, the tree was constantly rejuvenated and had spread over an area of some 50 feet square. The image of the "sleeping dragon" came from the way the branches looped across the ground. It was surrounded by a low fence to keep people from pressing too near. This print was one of two in the seires (together with pl. 58) that attracted Vincent van Gogh and he painted a copy of this print, in oils, in 1877. There are striking color contrasts between the copy and the original, whereas van Gogh's colors show "passion" and youthfulness, the original with its shading of the gnarled trunks gives a sense of greater age. The "sleeping dragon plum" survived in Kameido until 1910, when it was killed by a great flood. View of the Kameido plum orchard as seen through the branches of a plum tree. The artist has depicted the scene with a reddish pink sky and green ground.