
Plum Garden at Kamata
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858)
Year
1857
Medium
Woodblock print; ink and color on paper
Seen at
The Met, New York
From Hiroshige's late series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo. A single plum branch slices the picture plane in foreground; behind it, a teahouse, distant trees, walking figures. Van Gogh copied this composition in oil. The radical idea — that a tree branch could be the foreground subject and the human story merely a backdrop — became a foundational lesson for the Impressionists.