
Wave and boat with Mount Fuji by Utagawa Hiroshige
Wave and boat with Mount Fuji depicts the dramatic coastline at Satta in Suruga Province, where towering waves crash against rocky cliffs while Mount Fuji rises serenely in the distance. Created in 1858 as part of Hiroshige’s vertical series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, the composition juxtaposes nature’s violence with its calm — churning sea set against the mountain’s stillness. Pine trees cling to the steep cliff face, and a flock of plovers scatters across the sky like flecks of spray. The print is a deliberate response to Hokusai’s famous Great Wave, reinterpreting the theme of sea and mountain through Hiroshige’s more atmospheric, contemplative lens.
As a canvas print, this piece takes on a tactile, gallery-ready presence, with rich depth and texture that brings the original artwork to life, ready to hang.
Wave and boat with Mount Fuji depicts the dramatic coastline at Satta in Suruga Province, where towering waves crash against rocky cliffs while Mount Fuji rises serenely in the distance. Created in 1858 as part of Hiroshige’s vertical series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, the composition juxtaposes nature’s violence with its calm — churning sea set against the mountain’s stillness. Pine trees cling to the steep cliff face, and a flock of plovers scatters across the sky like flecks of spray. The print is a deliberate response to Hokusai’s famous Great Wave, reinterpreting the theme of sea and mountain through Hiroshige’s more atmospheric, contemplative lens.
As a canvas print, this piece takes on a tactile, gallery-ready presence, with rich depth and texture that brings the original artwork to life, ready to hang.
Original: $51.39
-65%$51.39
$17.99Description
Wave and boat with Mount Fuji depicts the dramatic coastline at Satta in Suruga Province, where towering waves crash against rocky cliffs while Mount Fuji rises serenely in the distance. Created in 1858 as part of Hiroshige’s vertical series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, the composition juxtaposes nature’s violence with its calm — churning sea set against the mountain’s stillness. Pine trees cling to the steep cliff face, and a flock of plovers scatters across the sky like flecks of spray. The print is a deliberate response to Hokusai’s famous Great Wave, reinterpreting the theme of sea and mountain through Hiroshige’s more atmospheric, contemplative lens.
As a canvas print, this piece takes on a tactile, gallery-ready presence, with rich depth and texture that brings the original artwork to life, ready to hang.























