

A print from the "Scenes of Famous Places along the Tokaido" series depicting Nachi Waterfall in Wakayama Prefecture — one of the three great waterfalls of Japan, a sacred site of Shugendo mountain religion where ascetics practiced meditation under the falling water. The falls plunge nearly 130 meters in a single drop, making them among the most dramatic natural features in the Japanese landscape, and Kyosai renders the cascade with the vertical energy and misting spray that define waterfall imagery in Japanese printmaking.
Woodblock print
Woodblock print
Woodblock print
Woodblock print

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.
Nachi Waterfall (Nachi no taki), from the series Scenes of Famous Places along the Tôkaidô Road (Tôkaidô meisho fûkei), also known as the Processional Tôkaidô (Gyôretsu Tôkaidô), here called Tôkaidô meisho no uchi was created by Kawanabe Kyosai (河鍋暁斎).
Yes — Nachi Waterfall (Nachi no taki), from the series Scenes of Famous Places along the Tôkaidô Road (Tôkaidô meisho fûkei), also known as the Processional Tôkaidô (Gyôretsu Tôkaidô), here called Tôkaidô meisho no uchi is part of the Scenes of Famous Places along the Tôkaidô Road series by Kawanabe Kyosai.
Nachi Waterfall (Nachi no taki), from the series Scenes of Famous Places along the Tôkaidô Road (Tôkaidô meisho fûkei), also known as the Processional Tôkaidô (Gyôretsu Tôkaidô), here called Tôkaidô meisho no uchi depicts landscapes, waterfalls, and rivers & lakes.