One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (in ) is a series of 119 ukiyo-e prints begun and largely completed by the Japanese artist Hiroshige (1797âÂÂ1858), of Edo, the historical name for Tokyo. The prints were first published in serialized form in 1856âÂÂ59, with Hiroshige II completing the series after Hiroshige's death. It was tremendously popular and much reprinted.
Hiroshige produced designs in the style of the Utagawa school, a 19th-century popular style in woodblock prints, much favoured during his lifetime. Increasingly large series of prints were produced. This trend can be seen in HiroshigeâÂÂs work, such as The Fifty-three Stations of the Tà Âkaidà  and The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kisokaidà Â.
Many publishing houses arose and grew, publishing both books and individual prints. A publisher's ownership of the physical woodblocks used to print a given text or image constituted the closest equivalent to a concept of "copyright" that existed at this time.
Woodblock prints such as these were produced in large numbers in 18th- and 19th-century Japan, created by artists, block cutters and printers working independently to the instructions of specialist publishers. Prints such as these were called ukiyo-e, which means 'pictures of the floating world'. This world was one of transient delights and changing fashions centred on the licensed pleasure districts and popular theatres found in the major cities of Japan.
In the years 1829âÂÂ36, a seven volume illustrated guidebook Pictures of famous places of Edo (, Edo meishà  zue) was published. It was begun by Saità  Yukio (1737âÂÂ1799) in 1790 and illustrated very accurately by Hasegawa Settan (1778âÂÂ1848). The pictures and text describe the important temples and shrines, but also the famous stores, restaurants, tea-houses etc. of Edo as well as the Sumida river and its channels and surrounding landscape.
Hiroshige, in several cases, makes use of this guide for his series of colour prints (see below and within the list). His series covered the place too which the guide didnâÂÂt describe, and he drew casual views of Edo. His series is a work that inspired a number of Western artists, including Vincent van Gogh, to experiment with imitations of Japanese methods. Elements of Hiroshige's work can be found in Western cinema and comics produced during the 20th-century, particularly The Adventures of Tintin, and they "profoundly influenced" the development of modernism.
The series uses a vertical format which Hiroshige pioneered in his preceding series, Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces, and was a departure from the horizontal format used in his previous major print series.