Even if the identify Utagawa Hiroshige doesn’t ring a bell, “Hiroshige” by itself probably does. And on the off likelihood that you’ve never heard so much as his mononym, you’ve still almost certainly viewed one of his portraits of Tokyo — or rather, one of his portrayals of Edo, as the Japanese uppercase, his hometown, was known during his lifetime. Hiroshige lived in the 19 th century, the end of the classical period of ukiyo-e, the artistry of woodblock-printed “pictures of the swim world.” In that time he becomes one of the form’s last captains, having cultivated not just a high level of artistic science but a formidable productivity.

In total, Hiroshige induced more than 8,000 jobs. Some of those are accounted for by his well-known series of publishes like The Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido, The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kisokaido, One Hundred Famous Views of Edo. But his supremacy encompassed more than the urban and urban terrains of his homeland, as evidenced by this much humbler project: a planned of omocha-e, or instructional representations “for childrens”, explaining how to offset dark puppets.

Hiroshige justifies in clearly defined and vivid likeness “how to twist your hands into a snail or rabbit or comprehend a mat to imitative a bird roosted on a diverge, ” writes Colossal’s Grace Ebert. “Appearing behind a translucent shoji screen, the intelligent digits range in difficulty from simple swine to sparring fighters and are complete with prop suggestions, written instructions for representing the beasts move –‘ open your paws within your sleeve to move the owl’s backstages’ or’ pull up your knee for the fox’s back’ — and leader for full-body contortions.” The difficulty curve does seem to rise instead aggressively, starting with dolls necessitating little more than one’s entrusts and dissolving with full-body concerts surely intended more for delight than imitation.

But then, babies make their amusing wherever they find it, whether in 2021 or in 1842, when these likeness were originally published. Though it was a somewhat late date in the life of Hiroshige, at that time modern Japan hadn’t even begun to emerge. The children who entertained themselves with his darknes marionettes against the shoji screens of their homes would have come of age with the arrival of United Regime Commodore Matthew C. Perry’s “black ships, ” which began the long-closed Japan’s process of re-opening itself to world trade — and went off a typhoon of civilizational transformation that, well over a century and a half later, has yet to settle down.

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Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and programmes on cities, usage, and cultural activities. His assignments include the Substack newsletter Books on City, the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21 st-Century Los Angeles and the video succession The City in Cinema. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Facebook.

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