In ukiyo-e prints, artists such as Hokusai, Hiroshige, and Kuniyoshi carved and inked the sea with bold, decisive lines and the now-famous deep Prussian blue. Crests curl like claws, foam twists into almost living forms, and the vast wave itself becomes a creature of its own.
Against this immense force, tiny boats push forward, dwarfed by the calm, distant Mount Fuji.
This contrast, between human fragility and nature’s colossal scale, the sea into a stage where courage, fate, and humility meet.
Japanese Mythology: The Essential Story
Waves in Japanese Art
In works like The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai, the sea becomes a near-living force that overwhelms human effort while hinting at renewal within chaos; in Hiroshige’s The Sea off Satta, waves shape the emotional atmosphere, turning shifting water and weather into quiet expressions of mood and impermanence; and in Kuniyoshi’s dramatic scenes such as Takiyasha the Witch and the Skeleton Spectre, where he often frames heroes within surging waters, waves serve as a stage for courage and conflict, adding a bold, theatrical energy to the narrative.
- Ryūjin, the dragon king, rules the ocean from his palace of coral and pearl. His tide-controlling jewels can summon calm waters or roaring surges with a single command.
- Susanoo, the storm-bringer, embodies sudden, chaotic force, yet also the return to order once the tempest settles.
- Namazu, the giant catfish sleeping beneath the earth, is said to thrash and twist during earthquakes, sending tsunamis surging to the shore. Satirical prints often depicted Namazu after real disasters, turning fear into visual metaphor.
Through these figures, wave imagery becomes a symbolic language of power, humility, and moral balance. The sea is both nurturer and destroyer, and its ceaseless rhythm mirrors the passages of human life.
A frequent question arises: Is the Great Wave a tsunami? Most scholars think not. Its steep, curling shape resembles a rogue wave forming near boats rather than the long, low profile of a tsunami rising in deeper waters. Hokusai wasn’t recording a real event; he was shaping drama, energy, and meaning. The dominance of blue in the print also has a practical origin: Prussian blue, introduced during the Edo period, allowed artists to capture depth, mood, and atmospheric distance that earlier pigments could not.
Here are 5 notable Japanese artworks where waves play a key symbolic or compositional role:






