
Fuji from Narusawa village by Hasui
Fuji from Narusawa Village presents Kawase Hasui's Mount Fuji at a considered remove — not the mountain as monument but as presiding presence in a landscape that has its own foreground life. Village rooftops and winter trees occupy the lower register, establishing human scale before the eye travels to the great cone rising clean against a pale sky. The tonal handling is characteristic of Hasui's mature shin-hanga work: gradations achieved through layered woodblock printing create atmospheric depth that feels neither photographic nor stylised, but occupies its own careful territory between observation and abstraction.
Produced as a fine art print, the delicate tonal graduation of Hasui's woodblock technique — the soft atmospheric sky, the precise silhouette of bare branches — is rendered with the clarity and subtlety this composition demands.
Fuji from Narusawa Village presents Kawase Hasui's Mount Fuji at a considered remove — not the mountain as monument but as presiding presence in a landscape that has its own foreground life. Village rooftops and winter trees occupy the lower register, establishing human scale before the eye travels to the great cone rising clean against a pale sky. The tonal handling is characteristic of Hasui's mature shin-hanga work: gradations achieved through layered woodblock printing create atmospheric depth that feels neither photographic nor stylised, but occupies its own careful territory between observation and abstraction.
Produced as a fine art print, the delicate tonal graduation of Hasui's woodblock technique — the soft atmospheric sky, the precise silhouette of bare branches — is rendered with the clarity and subtlety this composition demands.
Original: $17.65
-65%$17.65
$6.18Description
Fuji from Narusawa Village presents Kawase Hasui's Mount Fuji at a considered remove — not the mountain as monument but as presiding presence in a landscape that has its own foreground life. Village rooftops and winter trees occupy the lower register, establishing human scale before the eye travels to the great cone rising clean against a pale sky. The tonal handling is characteristic of Hasui's mature shin-hanga work: gradations achieved through layered woodblock printing create atmospheric depth that feels neither photographic nor stylised, but occupies its own careful territory between observation and abstraction.
Produced as a fine art print, the delicate tonal graduation of Hasui's woodblock technique — the soft atmospheric sky, the precise silhouette of bare branches — is rendered with the clarity and subtlety this composition demands.























