

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.
Mount Fuji crowned with spring blossoms against a brilliant sky, its slopes mirrored by the flowering cherry trees that frame the composition. Produced as a [surimono](/glossary/surimono) around 1801–05, the pairing of the sacred mountain with cherry blossoms — both transient and eternal in Japanese aesthetic thought — creates a meditation on renewal that would have resonated with Hokusai's poetry-circle patrons.

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

Wakasa Kugushiko
1920
Color woodblock print; oban
Woodblock print

1934
Color woodblock print; oban

n.d.
Woodblock print; ishizuri-e, section of harimaze sheet
Curated cross-cuts that include this print.
Mount Fuji with Cherry Trees in Bloom was created by Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾北斎) in c. 1801/05.
Mount Fuji with Cherry Trees in Bloom depicts landscapes, cherry blossoms, and mount fuji, set at Mount Fuji.