Title : (Quail and Poppies)
Artist : Utagawa Hiroshige
Date : 1830-1858
Details : More information...
Source :
Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Browse all 2123 prints...
Description : Japanese artists have long paired quail and ripe grain in their autumn paintings. The quail's cry is thought to suggest the melancholy mood of that season. In this print, however, Hiroshige seems to be having some lighthearted fun with this tradition. In Japanese, young quail are called mugiuzura (literally, wheat-quail), since they hatch in fields of springtime grasses. Here, however, a young quail looks up at a poppy (a flower associated with summer), but as the poem suggests, it may be yearning for autumn: The young quail cries, dreaming of fall.
Download ImageDo you have a similar woodblock print to sell?
Get in touch with us for a preliminary estimate and for information in selling your woodblock print.
GET IN TOUCH