One of the world’s most important contemporary Japanese print galleries lives in Cleveland. It stretches back seven decades.
What would it feel like to be inside of this artwork? Image credit: Utagawa Kuniaki II, 1835 - 1888 (Japanese), Ōzumō Keiko no zu [Professional Sumo Wrestlers Practicing], 1866, woodcut on paper, 13 3 ...
Shin-hanga is a 20th-century take on ukiyo-e, an older form of Japanese woodblock printing ... Jobs bought two prints of the work from a Ginza gallery. At the time, the fact that images could ...
This is the subject of “The Print Generation,” a retrospective at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery of the National Museum of Asian Art. Where Edo period (1603-1868) woodblocks were drawn ...