Yoshida Hiroshi (1876-1950), a leading modern landscape painter, had a deep love for nature and believed that beauty lies in nature itself, and that his mission as an artist was to represent that beauty by standing between nature and those who cannot see it directly.

Most of Hiroshi's work consists of landscapes he has experienced himself, and his range of research extends not only to Japan but also to countries around the world.

In particular, in the latter half of his life he devoted himself to private woodblock prints, incorporating Western painting techniques using the touch of oil painting and the color expression of watercolors into the traditional techniques of ukiyo-e prints, creating a new and unexplored art.

This exhibition will feature approximately 7 of Hiroshi's representative woodblock prints, including the "Seto Inland Sea Collection" series, which captures the ever-changing sea, and the "American Series" and "Europe Series," which were created during his travels abroad for a total of more than seven years. In addition, the landscapes that Hiroshi painted have been photographed in their current state, and the appeal of his works, expressed with unique techniques, will be displayed in a comparative original video.