Hirosaki Castle
- Medium:
- Woodblock print
- Source:
- Honolulu Museum of Art
- Image courtesy of
- Honolulu Museum of Art
Description
A second Hirosaki Castle composition in Yoshida's catalog likely presents the keep from an altered perspective or atmospheric condition, a practice consistent with his serial approach to landmark subjects. This variant may depict the castle under an overcast sky in early spring, when the cherry blossoms are partly open and the light is cool and even — conditions that flatten perspective into subtle tonal planes rather than strong shadows, a quality Yoshida achieved through carefully controlled ink density rather than heavy keyblock outlines. Alternatively, this composition may foreground the reflection of the castle in the moat, making water the dominant compositional element. The interplay between the red-brown wooden structure of the upper keep and the gray stonework of the lower fortifications would require several distinct color blocks to achieve the architectural specificity that distinguishes Yoshida's castle prints.







