Verbal Description: Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Landscape, 1924

June 25, 2025

0:00

Verbal Description: Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Landscape, 1924

0:00

Narrator: Landscape is a modest-sized, horizontal oil painting on canvas. It is about 1.5 feet tall and 2.5 feet wide. The scene depicts a rugged landscape viewed from a low vantage point. It is painted in earth and copper tones with intermittent swaths of white and black.

A massive rock formation dominates the center of the composition. It is surrounded by a sparse cluster of weeds, including one with tall, sinuous leaves tinged with a murky yellow. On the right half of the canvas, just beyond the rock, are two buildings rendered as simplified, geometric shapes—rectangles and triangles of flat color. Diagonally positioned, they face one another from the top and bottom of a hill. A small barren tree, an evergreen, and a farm plot appear in the distance, partly hidden behind the building on the far right.

Above the craggy terrain is a dusty sky with long, ghoulish clouds that appear at once diaphanous and weighty. At the top of the canvas, a large strip of auburn, applied with varying opacity, extends horizontally across the painting from the left to the right edges. Below it, wispy clouds of grey, yellow, and black hover close to the land.

This dreamy, enigmatic scene captures Kuniyoshi’s impression of the remote fishing village and popular artist colony of Ogunquit, Maine, where he spent his summers in the 1920s. Similar to other works from this period, he exaggerates the scale of elements such as the oversize leaves in front of the rock in the foreground. A sense of somber eeriness pervades this strangely distorted and starkly rendered world.


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.