

Hokusai's landscape prints beyond the Thirty-six Views span a remarkable range of viewpoints and weather conditions. Non-series landscape prints by Hokusai regularly appear in specialist Japanese print sales worldwide.
Travelers and locals animate the post-station town of Fujieda on the Tokaido highway in this [surimono](/glossary/surimono) from around 1796, produced when Hokusai was developing the landscape and travel-scene subjects that would dominate his mature output. Fujieda station in Suruga Province was a major rest point midway between Edo and Kyoto, its bustling lodging houses and tearooms a hub of the road's social life.

1821
Color woodblock print with metallic pigments; surimono shikishiban

1822
Color woodblock print; shikishiban, surimono

1822
Color woodblock print; shikishiban, surimono

c. 1832
Color woodblock print; oban

Woodblock print

1928
Color lithograph

1930
Color lithograph

1948
Woodblock print, ink and color on paper
Curated cross-cuts that include this print.
Fujieda station on the Tokaido was created by Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾北斎) in c. 1796.
Fujieda station on the Tokaido depicts urban scenes, landscapes, and travel scenes.