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Seiho Twelve Fuji - Tea House under Flowers Modern Print Reproduction

Sale price£20.00 Regular price£25.00
Product: Fine Art Poster
Size: A4 (21x29.7 cm)
Frame: -
Available in stock
📦 Delivery 2–5 days

Experience the serene charm of Takeuchi Seiho’s “Twelve Scenes of Mt Fuji” series with this museum-quality modern print reproduction of “Tea House under Flowers.” The composition captures a rustic mountain-pass tea house framed by blooming cherry blossoms, where a shopkeeper offers warmth and refreshment to a lone traveler. Above them, Mt Fuji’s snow-capped peak rises through spring mist, embodying the harmony of human hospitality and natural splendor that defines the Shijō style.

This reproduction is created from high-resolution museum scans and printed using archival giclée techniques on premium matte art paper to ensure fade-resistant vibrancy and exceptional detail. Its timeless elegance makes it ideal for gallery walls, studies, or living spaces seeking a touch of Meiji-period Japanese artistry. Whether you’re an admirer of Mt Fuji iconography, Shijō-school refinement, or springtime landscapes, this “Tea House under Flowers” print brings classic tranquility and cultural heritage into any contemporary interior.

  • Ready-to-hang: Includes hanging kit, ready to hang directly on the wall.
  • Frame Material: Durable pine wood.
  • Frame Color: Black, white (smooth finish), natural, and dark brown wood (visible grain).
  • Frame Measurements: 20-25mm (0.79"-0.98") thick, 10-14mm (0.4"-0.6") wide.
  • Paper Weight: 170 gsm (65 lb), thickness: 0.19 mm (7.5 mils).
  • Paper Finishing: Semi-glossy, enhances colors with a subtle shine.
  • Protection: Shatterproof plexiglass protects the poster.
  • Sustainable Paper: FSC-certified materials or equivalent.


What our customers say

Real reviews from real customers

Received the beautiful hummingbird print in black frame. Great service, stunning print, I will post a picture when the room is finished. Thank you
Jayne - Yorkshire
Delighted with this print! The colours are extremely vibrant, the imagine crystal clear and beautifully displayed in an attractive frame. Delivery was prompt and securely packaged. Highly recommended and will be using again!
Matt - Rutland
So pleased with my print and the frame it’s housed in. Fantastic quality and really adds character to the room. Communication was great and it was delivered quicker than estimated. Overall I’m extremely pleased and will recommend to friends. I’m already eying up my next purchase!
Nikki - London
Beautiful print, great quality and love it with the white frame. Delivery was really fast. I've had loads of compliments from visitors as I've hung it in my hallway as the first thing you see when you enter the house. Couldn't be happier.
Alice - Norfolk
Seiho Takeuchi

Seiho Takeuchi

Seiho Takeuchi was born Takeuchi Tsunekichi on December 20, 1864, in Kyoto, a city long renowned for its imperial heritage and artistic traditions. He began formal training at age fourteen under Eirin Tsuchida and later refined his technique with Kōno Bairei, one of the leading masters of the Shijō school. Demonstrating an early commitment to nurturing emerging talent, he founded the Kyoto Young Artists’ Institute in 1888 at just twenty-four years old. In 1900 and 1901 he traveled in Europe, immersing himself in Western painting methods that would profoundly shape his later work.

Upon returning to Japan, Takeuchi blended the poetic brushwork and delicate aesthetic of the Shijō tradition with the naturalistic perspective and compositional depth he had studied abroad. He became celebrated for playful animal scenes such as monkeys riding horses and spirited dogs at play, and for landscapes rendered with a fresh, sketch-like spontaneity. His innovative fusion of East and West earned him a teaching post at the Kyoto City School of Fine Arts and Crafts, where he influenced a new generation of artists.

In addition to his artistic achievements, Takeuchi was a devoted mentor whose private art school trained future luminaries including Tokuoka Shinsen and Uemura Shōen. His contributions were formally recognized when he was inducted into the Imperial Art Academy in 1919 and awarded the Order for Cultural Merits in 1937. Today the Kachuan Seiho Museum, set within his former countryside retreat near Daikakuji Temple, preserves his work and legacy in a tranquil garden setting that continues to inspire visitors.
See more by Seiho Takeuchi →