Ir directamente a la información del producto
1 de 5

Shinagawa | Hilltop Village in Bloom

Shinagawa | Hilltop Village in Bloom

Precio habitual €3,85 EUR
Precio habitual Precio de oferta €3,85 EUR
Oferta Agotado
Impuestos incluidos.

Japanese Landscape Ukiyo-e Printable Art (1848)

Add a touch of Edo-period elegance to your decor with Shinagawa – Hilltop Village in Bloom, a charming digital art print from the series 53 Stations of the Tōkaidō as Potted Landscapes (1848). This high-resolution vintage ukiyo-e features a peaceful hill with blooming trees and traditional Japanese houses, all artistically arranged in a bonsai-style ceramic pot.

Perfect for lovers of Japanese art, bonsai aesthetics, and tranquil landscape prints.

➤ Instant digital download
➤ Traditional Japanese woodblock print
➤ Ideal for zen, vintage, or minimalist wall decor

Pixartiko Collective – Usage License

Prints allowed for personal use and resale only as physical products in local shops. Use in other physical goods permitted if pixartiko.com is credited when possible.
Digital resale, sharing, or publishing is strictly forbidden.
Designs are not public domain and cannot be distributed online.

© pixartiko.com – All rights reserved.

Print Sizes

🖼 Included Print Sizes (No Cropping Needed)

This high resolution digital file is optimized for printing at the following standard sizes, no cropping or borders required. Just download, print, and frame:

Inches Centimeters Suggested Use
20 x 30 50.8 x 76.2 Gallery posters, premium wall art
16 x 24 40.6 x 61.0 Exhibition prints, home decoration
12 x 18 30.5 x 45.7 Standard posters, frame-ready prints
10 x 15 25.4 x 38.1 Photo enlargements, studio portraits
8 x 12 20.3 x 30.5 Portfolio prints, photo books
6 x 9 15.2 x 22.9 Small art prints, promotional material

 

🖨️ All sizes are print-ready at 300 DPI, maintaining the original image ratio. No cropping or borders required.

📂 Your download includes:

  • 1 high resolution JPEG file (Aspect Ratio: 2:3 - Portrait).
  • Artistic Declaration Certificate in PDF.
  • Free gift: The Ages of Painting guide — a visual journey through the history of painting.

🎨 Need a different size or format?
No problem! Just send me a message and I’ll be happy to adapt it for you.

🎧 Art Review

“Shinagawa” by Utagawa Yoshishige: A Delicate Ode to Thresholds and Transitions.

In Utagawa Yoshishige’s Shinagawa, from the series 53 Stations of the Tōkaidō as Potted Landscapes (1848), we witness a sublime evocation of threshold—between sea and land, nature and settlement, stillness and passage. This particular print, like its companions in the series, miniaturizes the grand into the intimate: a bonsai-like rendering of a Japanese coastal village wrapped in symbolic narrative and meticulous craft.

The focal composition—a sloping hill crowned with golden foliage and flanked by subtle architectural elements—rises from the patterned basin like a memory carved in porcelain. Below, a string of rooftops mirrors the shore’s gentle curvature, grounding the composition with human presence. The effect is that of a diorama of everyday life, distilled through Yoshishige’s poetic lens.

The interplay of textures—gravel-like earth, darkened cliff, delicate tree canopies—reinforces the artist’s ability to suggest movement and layering within a static form. The bowl itself, decorated with floral motifs, is not merely a container, but an extension of the artwork’s theme: that beauty, order, and impermanence can all coexist within a bounded space.

As the starting point of the Tōkaidō journey, Shinagawa is both literal and symbolic departure. Yoshishige captures this sense of first steps with subtle melancholy and reverent quiet. This is not the loud clamor of embarkation, but its quieter emotional twin: the awareness of what is being left behind. It’s a farewell rendered in pigment and line, and one that resonates far beyond its porcelain borders.

In Shinagawa, Yoshishige once again proves that in the miniature lies the monumental.


Ver todos los detalles