
Keika hyakugiku Pl.07 1893 by Keika Hosegawa
Plate 7 from the 1893 Hyakugiku series shows chrysanthemums in a more complex, multi-stem arrangement than the earlier plates — blooms at different stages of opening, from tight bud to fully expanded flower, coexisting on a single arching branch. Hosegawa's line varies between hair-fine for the smallest petals and broad and gestural for the leaves, creating a rhythmic contrast across the composition. The palette is cooler here: white blooms against a celadon-tinged ground, the ink a deep blue-black.
The contrast of pale blooms against a cool ground gains remarkable presence on canvas — the woven texture adding a quiet warmth that softens the precision without losing it. A canvas print draws the eye into the layered arrangement in a way no flat reproduction can. Finished in our Berlin studio to archival standard.
Plate 7 from the 1893 Hyakugiku series shows chrysanthemums in a more complex, multi-stem arrangement than the earlier plates — blooms at different stages of opening, from tight bud to fully expanded flower, coexisting on a single arching branch. Hosegawa's line varies between hair-fine for the smallest petals and broad and gestural for the leaves, creating a rhythmic contrast across the composition. The palette is cooler here: white blooms against a celadon-tinged ground, the ink a deep blue-black.
The contrast of pale blooms against a cool ground gains remarkable presence on canvas — the woven texture adding a quiet warmth that softens the precision without losing it. A canvas print draws the eye into the layered arrangement in a way no flat reproduction can. Finished in our Berlin studio to archival standard.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
Plate 7 from the 1893 Hyakugiku series shows chrysanthemums in a more complex, multi-stem arrangement than the earlier plates — blooms at different stages of opening, from tight bud to fully expanded flower, coexisting on a single arching branch. Hosegawa's line varies between hair-fine for the smallest petals and broad and gestural for the leaves, creating a rhythmic contrast across the composition. The palette is cooler here: white blooms against a celadon-tinged ground, the ink a deep blue-black.
The contrast of pale blooms against a cool ground gains remarkable presence on canvas — the woven texture adding a quiet warmth that softens the precision without losing it. A canvas print draws the eye into the layered arrangement in a way no flat reproduction can. Finished in our Berlin studio to archival standard.























