The British Museum’s exhibition on the Japanese grasp printmaker Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) will embody Van Gogh’s personal copy of a print which he utilized in a portray in homage.
Hiroshige: Artist of the Open Street (1 Could-7 September) is to showcase the work of one of many Nineteenth-century’s biggest Japanese artists, with over 100 prints (many from the American collector Alan Medaugh). Though Van Gogh performs a secondary function within the London exhibition, the British Museum has secured uncommon loans which emphasise how Japanese artwork impressed avant-garde European artists.
It was whereas Van Gogh was dwelling in Paris in 1886-88 that he found Japanese artwork, shopping for over 600 prints from the vendor Siegfried Bing. Most of those survive on the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, and so they embody no fewer than 78 by Hiroshige.
Van Gogh’s tribute to Hiroshige is expressed most dramatically in two work that had been primarily based on the Japanese artist’s prints. The primary was impressed by Hiroshige’s The Plum Backyard at Kameido (1857), an early morning view of blossom in a district in Edo (now Tokyo).
Van Gogh’s personal copy of Hiroshige’s print The Plum Backyard at Kameido (1857) and Van Gogh’s broken squared-up tracing used for his portray (October-November 1887)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis)
Van Gogh’s copy of the print of The Plum Backyard at Kameido shall be on show within the British Museum exhibition, on mortgage from Amsterdam. The Dutch artist’s personal copies of Japanese prints are solely very sometimes lent by the Van Gogh Museum, for conservation causes, and this specific one has been loaned solely as soon as, when it went to Hamburg in 2002.
Van Gogh’s copy of Hiroshige’s print has way back pale, however this displays the truth that throughout the Dutchman’s time in Paris Japanese prints had been cheap and handled casually. Van Gogh paid a mean of 15 centimes—the French forex of the time—per print, not rather more than the worth of a espresso. Copies of The Plum Backyard at Kameido sometimes now promote for round £50,000.
Having acquired a replica of the print, Van Gogh made a tracing of the composition. He then squared it up, enlarging it barely for his portray. This tracing can also be coming to the British Museum.
In his portray, Van Gogh diverged from Hiroshige’s composition by including two distinguished vertical strips of Japanese characters on the edges. These are actual Japanese phrases, however taken from different prints and are unrelated to the backyard scene. Van Gogh presumably added them to emphasize that it was a Japanese-inspired work.
It ought to come as no shock that Van Gogh selected to depict a blossom scene, since they’re frequent in Japanese artwork and he himself liked flowering bushes in spring. Quickly after his transfer to Arles, in early 1888, he made greater than a dozen work of fruit blossom.

Hiroshige’s print Sudden Bathe over Ohashi and Atake (1857) and Van Gogh’s portray Bridge within the Rain (October-November 1887)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis)
Van Gogh’s different portray immediately impressed by Japanese artwork was primarily based on Sudden Bathe over Ohashi and Atake (1857), one other Edo view. Hiroshige has depicted the riverscape from three viewpoints: trying down on the bridge, throughout to the alternative shore and as much as the darkish clouds.
The ensuing portray by Van Gogh, Bridge within the Rain (October-November 1887), additionally has a border with Japanese characters. This frame-like machine, in crimson and inexperienced, is in complementary colors which Van Gogh liked to make use of. Sadly neither of the Van Gogh work primarily based on Hiroshige prints had been accessible for the British Museum exhibition (they had been final lent outdoors Amsterdam round 35 years in the past).
The inspiration continued after Van Gogh left Paris. He was in all probability pondering of Hiroshige’s streaks of falling water when be made one in all his final work, Rain – Auvers (July 1890).

Van Gogh’s Rain – Auvers (July 1890)
Nationwide Museum Wales, Cardiff
Hiroshige prints additionally function in Van Gogh’s portraits of Père Julien Tanguy, a buddy in Paris who bought paint provides. All of the works within the background of the portray are Japanese photographs. The blossom scene within the upper-right nook is Hiroshige’s Ishiyakushi: The Yoshitsune Cherry Tree close to the Noriyori Shrine (1855). The higher centre picture of Mount Fuji is an amalgam of two Hiroshige prints: Yoshiwara: The Subject of Floating Islands within the Fuji Marsh (1855), with its flock of birds, and The Sagami River (1858). Van Gogh owned copies of all three prints. In a drawing of Tanguy (October-December 1887), a Mount Fuji scene seems within the background.

Van Gogh’s portray Portrait of Père Tanguy (October-December 1887), with Japanese prints, and drawing Portrait of Père Tanguy (October-December 1887), with a Hiroshige print of Mount Fuji within the background (neither are within the British Museum exhibition)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis) and Musée Rodin, Paris (Alamy inventory picture)

Hiroshige’s Yoshiwara: The Subject of Floating Islands within the Fuji Marsh (1855), The Sagami River (1858) and Ishiyakushi: The Yoshitsune Cherry Tree close to the Noriyori Shrine (1855)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis)
The British Museum exhibition will embody one in all Van Gogh’s drawings from its personal assortment which was influenced by Japanese artwork, The Countryside seen from Montmajour (July 1888). Van Gogh wrote of this drawing: “It does NOT look Japanese, and it’s truly essentially the most Japanese factor that I’ve executed.”
Van Gogh’s The Countryside seen from Montmajour (July 1888)
British Museum, London
Because the British Museum curator Alfred Haft explains, the drawing pulls the viewer by way of a “vary of viewpoints”, suggesting that “European perspective just isn’t the one approach to endow a panorama image with a way of sweeping depth”.
Van Gogh was amongst many avant-garde artists to be impressed by Hiroshige within the late-Nineteenth century. Others included James Whistler, Auguste Rodin, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Edgar Degas, Henri Rivière, Théo van Rysselberghe and Arthur Dow. Claude Monet owned no fewer than 48 Hiroshige prints, together with Sudden Bathe over Ohashi and Atake.
Gauguin’s early masterpiece Imaginative and prescient of the Sermon (1888) was in all probability influenced by the cropped tree in The Plum Backyard at Kameido. He could effectively have seen Van Gogh’s copy of the Hiroshige—and the Dutchman’s portray in homage.

Hiroshige’s The Plum Backyard at Kameido and Paul Gauguin’s Imaginative and prescient of the Sermon (1887)
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Basis) and Nationwide Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh
Martin Bailey is a number one Van Gogh specialist and particular correspondent for The Artwork Newspaper. He has curated exhibitions on the Barbican Artwork Gallery, Compton Verney/Nationwide Gallery of Scotland and Tate Britain.

Martin Bailey’s current Van Gogh books
Martin has written various bestselling books on Van Gogh’s years in France: The Sunflowers Are Mine: The Story of Van Gogh’s Masterpiece (Frances Lincoln 2013, UK and US), Studio of the South: Van Gogh in Provence (Frances Lincoln 2016, UK and US), Starry Night time: Van Gogh on the Asylum (White Lion Publishing 2018, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale: Auvers and the Artist’s Rise to Fame (Frances Lincoln 2021, UK and US). The Sunflowers are Mine (2024, UK and US) and Van Gogh’s Finale (2024, UK and US) are additionally now accessible in a extra compact paperback format.
His different current books embody Dwelling with Vincent van Gogh: The Properties & Landscapes that formed the Artist (White Lion Publishing 2019, UK and US), which offers an outline of the artist’s life. The Illustrated Provence Letters of Van Gogh has been reissued (Batsford 2021, UK and US). My Pal Van Gogh/Emile Bernard offers the primary English translation of Bernard’s writings on Van Gogh (David Zwirner Books 2023, UKand US).
To contact Martin Bailey, please e-mail [email protected]
Please observe that he doesn’t undertake authentications.
Discover all of Martin’s adventures with Van Gogh right here