Ukiyo-e

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Revision as of 00:45, 27 December 2009 by imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: {{TOC|right}} '''Ukiyo-e''' is a form of Japanese visual art, both with its own intrinsic beauty, but also reflecting social systems of the Tokugawa or Edo Periods (1615-1868). It also ext...)
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Ukiyo-e is a form of Japanese visual art, both with its own intrinsic beauty, but also reflecting social systems of the Tokugawa or Edo Periods (1615-1868). It also extended artistic technique, including the printing of art books to make it more accessible to the wealthy, but socially inferior, merchant class. [1]

Courtesan painting a screen, Torii Kiyonobu I, ca. 1711

Literally, ukiyo-e means pictures of the Floating World, which included both geisha and respected courtesans, two quite distinct classes. It was a world of socially acceptable hedonism.

Technique

The fundamental technique of the genre was the woodblock. Producing a book of woodblock prints involved the complementary skills of a publisher, an artist who created the image, a carver who made the block, and a printer who applied the pigments and pressed the block to to paper.

Kabuki dancers, hand colored with metallic dust, mid-1700s

This technique evolved from approximately 1600 on. The first prints were monochromatic woodcuts, with the design laid out in bold black lines. Artists began hand-coloring by brush, and worked with textured surfaces.






Multicolor printing came into use the mid-eighteenth century. Erotic works and images of actors and beautiful women were common subjects in early Ukiyo-e. Also popular were themes from Japanese myth, legend, literature, and history.

Color woodblock print, Kitao Shigemasa, pre-1820









Expansion of subjects

Subjects, but using the same techniques, began to expand beyond the Floating World, with some of the best-know artists:

Hokusai, "In the Hollow of a Wave off the Coast at Kanagawa", 1827

In the twentieth century, a new Japanese movement revived ukiyo-e, merging modern methods. The example shows a nude, more a classically Western subject.

Woman after Bath, Hashiguchi Goyô, 1920

References