Art & Antiques

MOONSTRUCK

One of the greatest masters of the classic Japanese woodblock print was also the last. Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839–92) created his virtuosic, wildly imaginative works during the twilight of the ukiyo-e tradition, when the rapid Westernization threatened established art forms and transformed the Japanese art market. Photography and mechanical printing techniques imported from Europe made the time-consuming woodblock printmaking process uneconomical, while the Japanese public’s craving for Occidental imagery made many turn away from the old styles and subjects. Yoshitoshi, a stubborn and perfectionistic man, persevered and right up until his death turned out print series after print series that seemed to encapsulate the whole range of classic Japanese myth, legend, history, and symbolism. This last flowering of ukiyo-e was lush and heavily scented indeed.

Ukiyo-e originated in the 17th century, in Edo, the capital of the Tokugawa Shogunate (and predecessor of modern Tokyo). The term doesn’t actually mean woodblock printmaking (the medium itself is called nishiki-e); it means “pictures of the floating world.” The floating world, in Edo-period Japanese literature, was the realm of courtesans, actors, and other denizens of the urban night,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Art & Antiques

Art & Antiques2 min read
Action Comics No. 1, 1938, The Introduction of Superman
WHAT’S ABLE to leap over auction records in a single bound? A rare 1938 comic book that introduced Superman to the world. In April of this year, a copy of Action Comics No. 1 depicting Superman, arguably the most famous superhero of all time, sold fo
Art & Antiques2 min read
He Did It First…
ON JUNE 15th, BLACK ART AUCTION, an auction house in St. Louis, Missouri, dedicated exclusively to the sale of art by African Americans, will present an auction of more than 100 paintings by Adger Cowans. The works were painted as early as the 1960s
Art & Antiques7 min read
Paint As Experience
At age 10, in 1918, Norman Carton and his mother were in hiding during pogroms unleashed by the Russian revolution; six years later the same boy found himself safe and sound in Philadelphia, rescued from Eastern Europe by the intervention of his olde

Related Books & Audiobooks