The Whale, the Samurai, and the Detail I Couldn’t Remove

Some images feel like a dare: a small human figure placed beside something so large it refuses to become “background.” A whale that fills the world. A samurai who insists on acting anyway.

This painting—Huge Whale and Musashi Miyamoto—began as a return to an ukiyo-e obsession: Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1798–1861), one of the late masters of the floating world, famous for bold compositions and legendary heroes.

Huge whale and Musashi Miyamoto

A small figure, a vast body

Kuniyoshi’s famous scene of Miyamoto Musashi confronting a giant whale turns scale into drama: the whale’s body dominates the space, and the human becomes a bright, almost comic punctuation mark inside the storm.

Musashi belongs to that rare category of historical person who feels half-real, half-myth—an early Edo soldier-artist, remembered not only for martial life but for discipline and craft. But the image is the point here, not hero worship. The whale isn’t just an opponent.

It’s the world.

宮本武蔵の鯨退治by Fan Stanbrough

A personal detail: I tried to remove him… and couldn’t

This painting started with a funny disagreement in my own house.

While I was working, my sister—who simply loves whales—said:
“Can you make one without Musashi? Just the whale.”

I understood completely. The whale is so lovable, so magnificent, that the human can feel like an interruption.

But I couldn’t take him out.

Because Musashi is the spark—the tiny, stubborn dot of life that makes the whole composition breathe. In a scene this large, that small figure isn’t “extra.” It’s the hinge the story turns on: the little unreasonable courage that insists on entering the vastness. I left him there, dressed in traditional clothes, because I love that contradiction—serious courage inside a playful picture.

About the painting

  • Original watercolor

  • 18” × 24”

  • Unframed

  • Buy It

Under the Wave, Under the Mind – The Great Wave

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