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Ando Hiroshige

Ando Hiroshige

The Beauty of Japanese Art

Japanese art is amongst the most respected all over the world and it’s famous for many diverse art movements across distinct mediums, such as wooden block prints and calligraphy.

It is not just those with Japanese history in their blood that are attracted the country’s art but people all over the world who appreciate the Japanese unique and beautiful view of art and life. The top identified artists from Japan inside the western art public are currently Katsushika Hokusai, Morita, Ando Hiroshige and Kitagawa whose original paintings and wooden block prints make popular selections as reproductions framed prints or wall posters for those seeking to add just a little color and culture to their houses.

Japanese folk lore is filled with the fantastic samurai of history, the shoguns, the warlords or the pretenders – this vivid history, frequently elaborated and embroidered informs an enormous number of prints loosely known as musha-e or warrior prints. As such Japanese prints are rich with human sensation. Almost every Japanese print recounts a tale, usually bloody, of bound couples, envious spouses and suicidal warriors. Aside from the excellent battle photos you will find also genres on spiritual subjects; the nineteenth century Japanese being particularly fascinated with ghosts, demons and spirits.

Playfulness in meaning and language was a fascination in nineteenth century Japan, a scenario exaggerated by a lot of edicts on artists to censor the subject matter of their work. These were contemporary recreations of nicely known historical subjects known as mitate-e, (literally, likened) prints.

Possibly the largest genre of all is: yakusha-e or actor prints. These may be portrait busts of actors in role or individual scenes from kabuki performances. Despite the fact that these prints had been of contemporary actors, the dramas that they portray are usually historical or mythic, meaning that the print itself can be a representation of an historic or famous event.

One thing people notice is that prints by the exact same artist often vary widely in cost. There are a few reasons for this. Condition is paramount for value but also specific prints by artists are regarded as to be of exceptional artistic value, other people are rare due to the fact the editions were extremely tiny. Prints are prone to fading, attack by worms and insects, water damage, damp, fire and careless handling and excess trimming. Condition is quite crucial, don’t forget these are fragile things and it occasionally seems miraculous that they’ve survived at all. If you purchase from reputable dealers nevertheless, then marketplace value will on the entire be fairly reflected inside the cost.

Most of all buy prints simply because you like them; a great dealer will provide a lot of details on a piece: the date, subject matter, who is depicted and so on. Details like this enrich the experience of ownership enormously.

 

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(20x27) Utagawa Hiroshige Awa Province Naruto Rapids 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle


(20×27) Utagawa Hiroshige Awa Province Naruto Rapids 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle


$9.95


(20×27) Utagawa Hiroshige Awa Province Naruto Rapids 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle…

Utagawa Hiroshige: Gajo iccho, 50 Views of Edo Japan


Utagawa Hiroshige: Gajo iccho, 50 Views of Edo Japan


$4.95


Utagawa Hiroshige (Ando Hiroshige) was born in 1797. He was born as Ando Tokutaro, and later incorporated Ando in his known artist name. He was one of the last great Japanese Ukiyo-e artists. He showed great aptitude for painting very early on. Hiroshige painted a Shogun procession in 1806, a very impressive work considering his age. He first attempted to attend the school of Utagawa Toyokuni, but…

Hiroshige: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo


Hiroshige: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo


$85.00


Besides being the catalog of a marvelous exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Hiroshige: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo is the definitive study of the last series of landscapes produced by the Japanese woodblock-print artist Ando Hiroshige (1797-1858). These designs of Edo, or modern Tokyo, are among the most familiar images of Japanese art in the world: copies were printed by the thousands …

Ando Hiroshige


Ando Hiroshige




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