Ukiyo-e

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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. Later, additional craftsmen variously assembled the prints into multiple panel assemblies, and into books. Only the names of the artists and publishers survive.

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

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

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

Woman after Bath, Hashiguchi Goyô, 1920

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

References