Edmund Dulac’s Tanglewood Tales: Jason Choosing Tiphys for the Voyage of the Argo Edmund Dulac’s illustration...
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"Surugachō" from Utagawa Hiroshige’s One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (1856–1858), is one of the most visually arresting and symbolic prints in the entire series. It captures a rare, breathtaking moment in the heart of Edo, where urban life, commerce, and the distant grandeur of nature intersect in a single frame.
Set in the bustling Surugachō district, which was a center of commerce and official merchant activity near Nihonbashi, Hiroshige presents a perfectly clear view of Mount Fuji rising far in the distance, its snowcapped peak sharply silhouetted against a cloudless blue sky. The clarity of the view is both literal and symbolic: this was known as one of the few spots in Edo where, on a crisp day, the view of Fuji—revered and almost mythic—was completely unobstructed by other buildings.
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