fbpx
Wikipedia

Hokusai

Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾 北斎, c. 31 October 1760 – 10 May 1849), known simply as Hokusai, was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the Edo period, active as a painter and printmaker.[1] He is best known for the woodblock print series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji, which includes the iconic print The Great Wave off Kanagawa. Hokusai was instrumental in developing ukiyo-e from a style of portraiture largely focused on courtesans and actors into a much broader style of art that focused on landscapes, plants, and animals. His works are thought to have had a significant influence on Vincent van Gogh and Claude Monet during the wave of Japonisme that spread across Europe in the late 19th century.

Hokusai
北斎
Self-portrait at the age of eighty-three
Born
Tokitarō
時太郎

supposedly (1760-10-31)31 October 1760
Died10 May 1849(1849-05-10) (aged 88)
Edo, Japan
Known forUkiyo-e painting, manga and woodblock printing
Notable workThe Great Wave off Kanagawa
Fine Wind, Clear Morning

Hokusai created the monumental Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji as a response to a domestic travel boom in Japan and as part of a personal interest in Mount Fuji.[2] It was this series, specifically, The Great Wave off Kanagawa and Fine Wind, Clear Morning, that secured his fame both in Japan and overseas.[3]

Hokusai was best known for his woodblock ukiyo-e prints, but he worked in a variety of mediums including painting and book illustration. Starting as a young child, he continued working and improving his style until his death, aged 88. In a long and successful career, Hokusai produced over 30,000 paintings, sketches, woodblock prints, and images for picture books in total. Innovative in his compositions and exceptional in his drawing technique, Hokusai is considered one of the greatest masters in the history of art.

Early life edit

 
Courtesan Asleep, a bijin-ga surimono print, c. late 18th to early 19th century
 
Fireworks in the Cool of Evening at Ryogoku Bridge in Edo, print, c. 1788–89

Hokusai's date of birth is unclear, but is often stated as the 23rd day of the 9th month of the 10th year of the Hōreki era (in the old calendar, or 31 October 1760) to an artisan family, in the Katsushika[ja] district of Edo, the capital of the ruling Tokugawa shogunate (currently Katsushika-ku, Tokyo).[4] His childhood name was Tokitarō.[5] It is believed his father was Nakajima Ise, a mirror-maker for the shōgun.[5] His father never made Hokusai an heir, so it is possible that his mother was a concubine.[4] Hokusai began painting around the age of six, perhaps learning from his father, whose work included the painting of designs around mirrors.[4]

Hokusai was known by at least thirty names during his lifetime. While the use of multiple names was a common practice of Japanese artists of the time, his number of pseudonyms exceeds that of any other major Japanese artist. His name changes are so frequent, and so often related to changes in his artistic production and style, that they are used for breaking his life up into periods.[4]

At the age of 12, his father sent him to work in a bookshop and lending library, a popular institution in Japanese cities, where reading books made from woodcut blocks was a popular entertainment of the middle and upper classes.[6] At 14, he worked as an apprentice to a woodcarver, until the age of 18, when he entered the studio of Katsukawa Shunshō. Shunshō was an artist of ukiyo-e, a style of woodblock prints and paintings that Hokusai would master, and head of the so-called Katsukawa school.[5] Ukiyo-e, as practised by artists like Shunshō, focused on images of the courtesans (bijin-ga) and kabuki actors (yakusha-e) who were popular in Japan's cities at the time.[7]

After a year, Hokusai's name changed for the first time, when he was dubbed Shunrō by his master. It was under this name that he published his first prints, a series of pictures of kabuki actors published in 1779. During the decade he worked in Shunshō's studio, Hokusai was married to his first wife, about whom very little is known except that she died in the early 1790s. He married again in 1797, although this second wife also died after a short time. He fathered two sons and three daughters with these two wives, and his youngest daughter Ei, also known as Ōi, eventually became an artist and his assistant.[7][8] Fireworks in the Cool of Evening at Ryogoku Bridge in Edo (c. 1788–89) dates from this period of Hokusai's life.[9]

Upon the death of Shunshō in 1793, Hokusai began exploring other styles of art, including European styles he was exposed to through French and Dutch copper engravings he was able to acquire.[7] He was soon expelled from the Katsukawa school by Shunkō, the chief disciple of Shunshō, possibly due to his studies at the rival Kanō school. This event was, in his own words, inspirational: "What really motivated the development of my artistic style was the embarrassment I suffered at Shunkō's hands."[10]

Hokusai also changed the subjects of his works, moving away from the images of courtesans and actors that were the traditional subjects of ukiyo-e. Instead, his work became focused on landscapes and images of the daily life of Japanese people from a variety of social levels. This change of subject was a breakthrough in ukiyo-e and in Hokusai's career.[7]

Middle period edit

 
Image of bathers from the Hokusai Manga
 
Contemporary print of Hokusai painting the Great Daruma in 1817
 
The Great Wave off Kanagawa, Hokusai's most famous print, the first in the series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, c. 1829–1832
 
Fine Wind, Clear Morning (or Red Fuji),
from Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji

The next period saw Hokusai's association with the Tawaraya School and the adoption of the name "Tawaraya Sōri". He produced many privately commissioned prints for special occasions (surimono), and illustrations for books of humorous poems (kyōka ehon) during this time. In 1798, Hokusai passed his name on to a pupil and set out as an independent artist, free from ties to a school for the first time, adopting the name Hokusai Tomisa.

By 1800, Hokusai was further developing his use of ukiyo-e for purposes other than portraiture. He had also adopted the name he would most widely be known by, Katsushika Hokusai, the former name referring to the part of Edo where he was born, the latter meaning 'north studio', in honour of the North Star, symbol of a deity important in his religion of Nichiren Buddhism.[11] That year, he published two collections of landscapes, Famous Sights of the Eastern Capital and Eight Views of Edo (modern Tokyo). He also began to attract students of his own, eventually teaching 50 pupils over the course of his life.[7]

He became increasingly famous over the next decade, both due to his artwork and his talent for self-promotion. During an Edo festival in 1804, he created an enormous portrait of the Buddhist prelate Daruma, said to be 200 square meters, using a broom and buckets full of ink.[12] Another story places him in the court of the shōgun Tokugawa Ienari, invited there to compete with another artist who practised more traditional brushstroke painting. Hokusai painted a blue curve on paper, then chased a chicken whose feet had been dipped in red paint across the image. He described the painting to the shōgun as a landscape showing the Tatsuta River with red maple leaves floating in it, winning the competition.[13]

Between 1804 and 1815 saw Hokusai collaborate with the popular novelist Takizawa Bakin on a series of illustrated books. Especially popular was the fantasy novel Chinsetsu Yumiharizuki (Strange Tales of the Crescent Moon, 1807–1811) with Minamoto no Tametomo as the main character, and Hokusai gained fame with his creative and powerful illustrations, but the collaboration ended after thirteen works. There are various theories as to why they dissolved their cooperation, such as discordant personalities and conflicting opinions on how to draw illustrations.[14][15] Hokusai also created several albums of erotic art (shunga). His most famous image in this genre is The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife, which depicts a young woman entwined sexually with a pair of octopuses, from Kinoe no Komatsu, a three-volume book of shunga from 1814.[16]

Hokusai paid close attention to the production of his work. In letters during his involvement with Toshisen Ehon, a Japanese edition of an anthology of Chinese poetry, Hokusai wrote to the publisher that the blockcutter Egawa Tomekichi, with whom Hokusai had previously worked and whom he respected, had strayed from Hokusai's style in the cutting of certain heads. He also wrote directly to another blockcutter involved in the project, Sugita Kinsuke, stating that he disliked the Utagawa school style in which Kinsuke had cut the figure's eyes and noses and that amendments were needed for the final prints to be true to his style. In his letter, Hokusai included examples of both his style of illustrating eyes and noses and the Utagawa school style.[17]

In 1811, at the age of 51, Hokusai changed his name to Taito and entered the period in which he created the Hokusai Manga and various etehon, or art manuals.[5] These manuals beginning in 1812 with Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing, were intended as a convenient way to make money and attract more students. The first volume of Manga (meaning random drawings) was published in 1814 and was an immediate success.[18] By 1820, he had produced twelve volumes (with three more published posthumously) which include thousands of drawings of objects, plants, animals, religious figures, and everyday people, often with humorous overtones.[19]

On 5 October 1817, he painted the Great Daruma outside the Hongan-ji Nagoya Betsuin in Nagoya. This portrait in ink on paper measured 18 × 10.8 metres, and the event drew huge crowds. The feat was recounted in a popular song and he received the name "Darusen" or "Daruma Master"[20][21] Although the original was destroyed in 1945, Hokusai's promotional handbills from that time survived and are preserved at the Nagoya City Museum.

In 1820, Hokusai changed his name yet again, this time to "Iitsu," a change which marked the start of a period in which he secured fame as an artist throughout Japan. His most celebrated work, Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, including the famous The Great Wave off Kanagawa and Red Fuji was produced in the early 1830s. The results of Hokusai's perspectival studies in Manga can be seen here in The Great Wave where he uses what would have been seen as a western perspective to represent depth and volume.[22] It proved so popular that ten more prints were later added to the series. Among the other popular series of prints he made during this time are A Tour of the Waterfalls of the Provinces, Oceans of Wisdom and Unusual Views of Celebrated Bridges in the Provinces.[23] He also began producing a number of detailed individual images of flowers and birds (kachō-e), including the extraordinarily detailed Poppies and Flock of Chickens.[24]

Later life edit

 
Portrait of Hokusai by disciple Keisai Eisen

The next period, beginning in 1834, saw Hokusai working under the name "Gakyō Rōjin" (画狂老人; "The Old Man Mad About Art").[25] It was at this time that he produced One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji, another significant series,[26] generally considered "the masterpiece among his landscape picture books".[10]

In the colophon to this work, Hokusai writes:

From the age of six, I had a passion for copying the form of things and since the age of fifty I have published many drawings, yet of all I drew by my seventieth year there is nothing worth taking into account. At seventy-three years I partly understood the structure of animals, birds, insects and fishes, and the life of grasses and plants. And so, at eighty-six I shall progress further; at ninety I shall even further penetrate their secret meaning, and by one hundred I shall perhaps truly have reached the level of the marvellous and divine. When I am one hundred and ten, each dot, each line will possess a life of its own.[27]

A True Mirror of Chinese and Japanese Poetry (Shika shashin kyo), produced in about 1833 to 1834, was printed in extra-long vertical formats resembling the form of Chinese hand scrolls. Prints in this series include poems by Chinese and Japanese poets combined with scenes in those countries, and scenes from Noh plays (a form of dance theater predating kabuki). Ten designs in this series survive.[28]

Hokusai's final print series, produced around 1835 to 1836, was called One Hundred Poems Explained by a Nurse (Hyakunin isshu tuba ga etoki). The series was never published in full, perhaps due to financial hardships faced by Hokusai's publishers during Japan's economic downturn in the mid-1830's.[29] These prints featured scenes with the poems inscribed in a square. Each print also contains the series title listed in its own vertical rectangle.[30]

In 1839, a fire destroyed Hokusai's studio and much of his work. By this time, his career was beginning to fade as younger artists such as Andō Hiroshige became increasingly popular. At the age of 83, Hokusai traveled to Obuse in Shinano Province (now Nagano Prefecture) at the invitation of a wealthy farmer, Takai Kozan where he stayed for several years.[31] During his time in Obuse, he created several masterpieces, including the Masculine Wave and the Feminine Wave.[31] Between 1842 and 1843, in what he described as "daily exorcisms" (nisshin joma), Hokusai painted Chinese lions (shishi) every morning in ink on paper as a talisman against misfortune.[32][33] Hokusai continued working almost until the end, painting The Dragon of Smoke Escaping from Mt Fuji[34] and Tiger in the Snow in early 1849.[35]

Constantly seeking to produce better work, he apparently exclaimed on his deathbed, "If only Heaven will give me just another ten years ... Just another five more years, then I could become a real painter." He died on 10 May 1849[36] and was buried at the Seikyō-ji in Tokyo (Taito Ward).[5] A haiku he composed shortly before his death reads: "Though as a ghost, I shall lightly tread, the summer fields."[35]

Selected works edit

Influences on art and culture edit

 
Cover of Debussy's La Mer, 1905

Hokusai had achievements in various fields as an artist. He made designs for book illustrations and woodblock prints, sketches, and painting for over 70 years.[37] Hokusai was an early experimenter with western linear perspective among Japanese artists.[38] Hokusai himself was influenced by Sesshū Tōyō and other styles of Chinese painting.[39] His influences stretched across the globe to his western contemporaries in nineteenth-century Europe with Japonism, which started with a craze for collecting Japanese art, particularly ukiyo-e. Some of the first samples were to be seen in Paris, when in about 1856, the French printmaker, designer and colleague of many Impressionsist artists such as Édouard Manet,[40] Félix Bracquemond first came across a copy of a Hokusai sketchbook at the workshop of August Dalatre, his printer.[41]

With the sketchbook as his influence Bracquemond designed the "Rousseau Service," an elegant set of dinnerware, on behalf of Francois-Eugene Rousseau, the owner of a glass and ceramics shop. Exhibited at the Universal Exposition in Paris in 1867, the Rousseau Service was a success both critically and commercially and was reissued in several editions over the years. The Rousseau Service featured images of birds and fish copied from the Japanese book illustrations and placed asymmetrically against a white background for a look that would have been very modern at that time.[42]

Hokusai also influenced the Impressionism movement, with themes echoing his work appearing in the work of Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, as well as Art Nouveau, or Jugendstil in Germany. His woodcuts were collected by many European artists, including Degas, Gauguin, Klimt, Franz Marc, August Macke, Édouard Manet, and van Gogh.[43] Degas said of him, "Hokusai is not just one artist among others in the Floating World. He is an island, a continent, a whole world in himself."[44] Hermann Obrist's whiplash motif, or Peitschenhieb, which came to exemplify the new movement, is visibly influenced by Hokusai's work.

The French composer Claude Debussy's tone poem La Mer, which debuted in 1905, is believed to have been inspired by Hokusai's print The Great Wave. The composer had an impression of it hanging in his living room and specifically requested that it be used on the cover of the published score, which was widely distributed, and the music itself incorporated Japanese-inflected harmonies.[45]

Even after his death, exhibitions of his artworks continue to grow. In 2005, Tokyo National Museum held a Hokusai exhibition which had the largest number of visitors of any exhibit there that year.[46] Several paintings from the Tokyo exhibition were also exhibited in the United Kingdom. The British Museum held the first exhibition of Hokusai's later year artworks including 'The Great Wave' in 2017.[47]

Hokusai inspired the Hugo Award–winning short story by science fiction author Roger Zelazny, "24 Views of Mt. Fuji, by Hokusai", in which the protagonist tours the area surrounding Mount Fuji, stopping at locations painted by Hokusai. A 2011 book on mindfulness closes with the poem "Hokusai Says" by Roger Keyes, preceded with the explanation that "[s]ometimes poetry captures the soul of an idea better than anything else."[48]

In the 1985 Encyclopædia Britannica, Richard Lane characterizes Hokusai as "since the later 19th century [having] impressed Western artists, critics and art lovers alike, more, possibly, than any other single Asian artist".[49]

'Store Selling Picture Books and Ukiyo-e' by Hokusai shows how ukiyo-e during the time was actually sold; it shows how these prints were sold at local shops, and ordinary people could buy ukiyo-e. Unusually in this image, Hokusai used a hand-colored approach instead of using several separated woodblocks.[50]

His youngest daughter Ei has her own manga and film called Miss Hokusai.[51]

A biographical film about the painter was released in Japan on May 28, 2021.[52] It was premiered at the 33rd Tokyo International Film Festival.[53]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric. (2005). "Hokusai" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 345.
  2. ^ Smith[page needed]
  3. ^ Kleiner, Fred S. and Christin J. Mamiya, (2009). Gardner's Art Through the Ages: Non-Western Perspectives, p. 115.
  4. ^ a b c d Weston, p. 116
  5. ^ a b c d e Nagata[page needed]
  6. ^ Weston, pp. 116–117
  7. ^ a b c d e Weston, p. 117
  8. ^ "葛飾, 応為 カツシカ, オウイ" (in Japanese). CiNii. Retrieved 22 May 2017.
  9. ^ Calza (2003), p. 426
  10. ^ a b Nagata, Seiji. Hokusai: Genius of the Japanese Ukiyo-e. Kodansha, Tokyo, 1999.[page needed]
  11. ^ The name "Hokusai" (北斎 "North Studio") is an abbreviation of "Hokushinsai" (北辰際 "North Star Studio"). In Nichiren Buddhism the North Star is revered as a deity known as Myōken.
  12. ^ Calza (2003), p. 128
  13. ^ Weston, pp. 117–118
  14. ^ 日美ブログ 第86回 深川・両国・九段へ 北斎と馬琴の面影を探す旅. NHK. February 17, 2019
  15. ^ 曲亭馬琴と葛飾北斎 Hokusai Museum.
  16. ^ Calza (2003), p. 455
  17. ^ Tinios, Ellis (June 2015). "Hokusai and his Blockcutters". Print Quarterly. XXXII (2): 186–191.
  18. ^ Hillier, Jack R. (1980). The Art of Hokusai in Book Illustration. London: Sotheby Parke Bernet; Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. p. 107
  19. ^ Weston, p. 118
  20. ^ A shortened form of Daruma Sensei.
  21. ^ Calza (2003), p. 192
  22. ^ Screech, Timon (2012). "Hokusai's Lines of Sight". Mechademia. 7: 107. doi:10.1353/mec.2012.0009. JSTOR 41601844. S2CID 119865798.
  23. ^ Weston, pp. 118–119
  24. ^ Weston, p. 119
  25. ^ Hokusai Heaven retrieved 27 March 2009 3 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ "Fugaku hyakkei (One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji)". Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. December 21, 2018. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  27. ^ Calza, Gian Carlo. "Hokusau: A Universe" in Hokusai, p. 7. Phaidon
  28. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. (2019). Hokusai's landscapes: the complete series (First ed.). Boston: MFA publications Museum of fine arts. pp. 151–165. ISBN 978-0-87846-866-9.
  29. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. (2019). Hokusai's landscapes: the complete series (First ed.). Boston: MFA publications Museum of fine arts. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-87846-866-9.
  30. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. (2019). Hokusai's landscapes: the complete series (First ed.). Boston: MFA publications Museum of fine arts. pp. 167–203. ISBN 978-0-87846-866-9.
  31. ^ a b "Welcome to the World of Hokusai, an "Old Man Mad About Painting"!". Hokusai Kan. Hokusai Museum. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  32. ^ Machotka, Ewa (2009). Visual Genesis of Japanese National Identity: Hokusai's Hyakunin Isshu. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-90-5201-482-1.
  33. ^ "Fine Japanese Art, lot 252". Bonhams. 2008. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  34. ^ . KatsushikaHokusai.com. Archived from the original on 31 December 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  35. ^ a b Tsuji Nobou in Calza (2003), p. 72
  36. ^ (18th day of the 4th month of the 2nd year of the Kaei era by the old calendar)
  37. ^ Finley, Carol (1 January 1998). Art of Japan: Wood-block Color Prints. Lerner Publications. ISBN 978-0-8225-2077-1.
  38. ^ Kadar, Endre E.; Effken, Judith A. (5 November 2008). "Paintings as Architectural Space: "Guided Tours" by Cézanne and Hokusai". Ecological Psychology. 20 (4): 299–327. doi:10.1080/10407410802421874. S2CID 143785505.
  39. ^ Daniel Atkison and Leslie Stewart. "Life and Art of Katsushika Hokusai" in From the Floating World: Part II: Japanese Relief Prints, catalogue of an exhibition produced by California State University, Chico. Retrieved 9 July 2007; 8 November 2002 at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ Wilson-Bareau, Juliet, ed. (2004). Manet by himself: Correspondence and conversation (2nd ed.). London: Time Warner Books UK. p. 24. ISBN 0-316-72809-8.
  41. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. (2023). Hokusai: Inspiration and Influence (1st ed.). Boston, MA: MFA Boston. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-87846-890-4.
  42. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. Id. at 120.
  43. ^ Rhodes, David (November 2011). "Hokusai Retrospective". The Brooklyn Rail.
  44. ^ "How, after death, Hokusai changed art history". Phaidon. 10 May 2017. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  45. ^ Thompson, Sarah E. (2023). Hokusai: Inspiration and Influence (1st ed.). Boston, MA: MFA Publications. p. 116. ISBN 9780878468904.
  46. ^ Brown, Kendall H. (13 August 2007). "Hokusai and His Age: Ukiyo-e Painting, Printmaking and Book Illustration in Late Edo Japan (review)". The Journal of Japanese Studies. 33 (2): 521–525. doi:10.1353/jjs.2007.0048. ISSN 1549-4721. S2CID 143267375.
  47. ^ Carelli, Francesco (2018). "Hokusai: beyond the Great Wave". London Journal of Primary Care. 10 (4): 128–129. doi:10.1080/17571472.2018.1486504. PMC 6074688. PMID 30083250.
  48. ^ Mark Williams and Danny Penman (2011). Mindfulness: An Eight-Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World, pp. 249, 250–251. The poem is also at Hokusai Says – Gratefulness.org.
  49. ^ Lane, Richard (1985). "Hokusai", Encyclopædia Britannica, v. 5, p. 973.
  50. ^ Finley, Carol (January 1998). Art of Japan: Wood-block Color Prints. Lerner Publications. ISBN 978-0-8225-2077-1.
  51. ^ Hoeij, Boyd van (30 October 2015). "'Miss Hokusai' ('Sarusuberi: Misu Hokusai'): Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  52. ^ "HOKUSAI IN CINEMAS MAY 28". hokusai2020.com. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  53. ^ Blair, Patrick; Brzeski, Gavin J. (2 November 2020). "Tokyo Film Festival Opens With Light COVID-19 Restrictions, Support from Christopher Nolan". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 7 June 2021.

General and cited references edit

  • Calza, Gian Carlo (2003). Hokusai. Phaidon. ISBN 978-0-7148-4457-2.
  • Lane, Richard (1978). Images from the Floating World: The Japanese Print. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-211447-1; OCLC 5246796.
  • Nagata, Seiji (1995). Hokusai: Genius of the Japanese Ukiyo-e. Tokyo: Kodansha International. ISBN 978-4-770-01928-8
  • Ray, Deborah Kogan (2001). Hokusai: The Man Who Painted a Mountain. New York: Frances Foster Books. ISBN 978-0-374-33263-1.
  • Smith, Henry D. II (1988). Hokusai: One Hundred Views of Mt. Fuji. New York: George Braziller, Inc., Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8076-1195-1.
  • Weston, Mark (1999). Giants of Japan: The Lives of Japan's Most Influential Men and Women. New York: Kodansha International. ISBN 978-1-56836-286-1.

Further reading edit

General biography edit

  • Bowie, Theodore (1964). The Drawings of Hokusai. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.
  • Forrer, Matthi (1988). Hokusai Rizzoli, New York. ISBN 978-0-8478-0989-9.
  • Forrer, Matthi; van Gulik, Willem R., and Kaempfer, Heinz M. (1982). Hokusai and His School: Paintings, Drawings and Illustrated Books. Frans Halsmuseum, Haarlem. ISBN 978-90-70216-02-3
  • Hillier, Jack (1955). Hokusai: Paintings, Drawings and Woodcuts. Phaidon, London.
  • Hillier, Jack (1980). Art of Hokusai in Book Illustration. Sotheby Publications, London. ISBN 978-0-520-04137-0.
  • Lane, Richard (1989). Hokusai: Life and Work. E.P. Dutton. ISBN 978-0-525-24455-4.
  • van Rappard-Boon, Charlotte (1982). Hokusai and his School: Japanese Prints c. 1800–1840 (Catalogue of the Collection of Japanese Prints, Rijksmuseum, Part III). Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam.

Specific works of art edit

For readers who want more information on specific works of art by Hokusai, these particular works are recommended.

  • Hillier, Jack, and Dickens, F.W. (1960). Fugaku Hiyaku-kei (One Hundred Views of Fuji by Hokusai). Frederick, New York.
  • Kondo, Ichitaro (1966). Trans. Terry, Charles S. The Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji by Hokusai. East-West Center, Honolulu.
  • Michener, James A. (1958). The Hokusai Sketch-Books: Selections from the 'Manga'. Charles E. Tuttle, Rutland.
  • Morse, Peter (1989). Hokusai: One Hundred Poets. George Braziller, New York. ISBN 978-0-8076-1213-2.
  • Narazaki, Muneshige (1968). Trans. Bester, John. Masterworks of Ukiyo-E: Hokusai – The Thirty-Six Views of Mt. Fuji. Kodansha, Tokyo.
  • Balcou, Amelie (2019). "Hokusai: Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji". Prestel. ISBN 978-3791386072.
  • Marks, Andreas (2021). "Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji". Taschen, New York. ISBN 978-3836575720.
  • Price, Jonathan Reeve (2020). "Viewing Hokusai Viewing Mount Fuji". Communication Circle, Albuquerque, New Mexico. ISBN 978-0-9719954-7-5.
  • Thompson, Sarah (2019). "Hokusai's Landscapes: The Complete Series". MFA Publications, Boston. ISBN 978-0878468669.
  • Zelazny, Roger (2000). "24 Views of Mount Fuji". In "Cthulu 2000: Stories" (1999). Arkham House, Sauk City, WI. ISBN 978-0345422033

Art monographs edit

Monographs dedicated to Hokusai art works:

  • Goncourt, Edmond de (2014). Essential Hokusai. Bournemouth, Parkstone International. ISBN 978-1-78310-128-3.
  • Goncourt, Edmond de (2014). Hokusai Mega Square. Bournemouth, Parkstone International. ISBN 978-1-78310-566-3.

External links edit

  • The Hokusai-kan Museum (Obuse, Japan)
  • Hokusai website
  • Works by Hokusai at Faded Page (Canada)

Prints edit

  • Hokusai complete works
  • Ukiyo-e Prints by Katsushika Hokusai
  • Hokusai prints at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
  • Hokusai's works at Tokyo Digital Museum 3 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hokusai's works at the University of Michigan Museum of Art

Biographies edit

  • Biography of Katsushika Hokusai, British Museum

hokusai, this, article, about, japanese, artist, eponymous, crater, mercury, crater, this, japanese, name, surname, katsushika, katsushika, 葛飾, 北斎, october, 1760, 1849, known, simply, japanese, ukiyo, artist, period, active, painter, printmaker, best, known, w. This article is about the Japanese artist For the eponymous crater on Mercury see Hokusai crater In this Japanese name the surname is Katsushika Katsushika Hokusai 葛飾 北斎 c 31 October 1760 10 May 1849 known simply as Hokusai was a Japanese ukiyo e artist of the Edo period active as a painter and printmaker 1 He is best known for the woodblock print series Thirty Six Views of Mount Fuji which includes the iconic print The Great Wave off Kanagawa Hokusai was instrumental in developing ukiyo e from a style of portraiture largely focused on courtesans and actors into a much broader style of art that focused on landscapes plants and animals His works are thought to have had a significant influence on Vincent van Gogh and Claude Monet during the wave of Japonisme that spread across Europe in the late 19th century Hokusai北斎Self portrait at the age of eighty threeBornTokitarō時太郎supposedly 1760 10 31 31 October 1760Edo JapanDied10 May 1849 1849 05 10 aged 88 Edo JapanKnown forUkiyo e painting manga and woodblock printingNotable workThe Great Wave off Kanagawa Fine Wind Clear MorningHokusai created the monumental Thirty Six Views of Mount Fuji as a response to a domestic travel boom in Japan and as part of a personal interest in Mount Fuji 2 It was this series specifically The Great Wave off Kanagawa and Fine Wind Clear Morning that secured his fame both in Japan and overseas 3 Hokusai was best known for his woodblock ukiyo e prints but he worked in a variety of mediums including painting and book illustration Starting as a young child he continued working and improving his style until his death aged 88 In a long and successful career Hokusai produced over 30 000 paintings sketches woodblock prints and images for picture books in total Innovative in his compositions and exceptional in his drawing technique Hokusai is considered one of the greatest masters in the history of art Contents 1 Early life 2 Middle period 3 Later life 4 Selected works 5 Influences on art and culture 6 Citations 7 General and cited references 8 Further reading 8 1 General biography 8 2 Specific works of art 8 3 Art monographs 9 External links 9 1 Prints 9 2 BiographiesEarly life edit nbsp Courtesan Asleep a bijin ga surimono print c late 18th to early 19th century nbsp Fireworks in the Cool of Evening at Ryogoku Bridge in Edo print c 1788 89Hokusai s date of birth is unclear but is often stated as the 23rd day of the 9th month of the 10th year of the Hōreki era in the old calendar or 31 October 1760 to an artisan family in the Katsushika ja district of Edo the capital of the ruling Tokugawa shogunate currently Katsushika ku Tokyo 4 His childhood name was Tokitarō 5 It is believed his father was Nakajima Ise a mirror maker for the shōgun 5 His father never made Hokusai an heir so it is possible that his mother was a concubine 4 Hokusai began painting around the age of six perhaps learning from his father whose work included the painting of designs around mirrors 4 Hokusai was known by at least thirty names during his lifetime While the use of multiple names was a common practice of Japanese artists of the time his number of pseudonyms exceeds that of any other major Japanese artist His name changes are so frequent and so often related to changes in his artistic production and style that they are used for breaking his life up into periods 4 At the age of 12 his father sent him to work in a bookshop and lending library a popular institution in Japanese cities where reading books made from woodcut blocks was a popular entertainment of the middle and upper classes 6 At 14 he worked as an apprentice to a woodcarver until the age of 18 when he entered the studio of Katsukawa Shunshō Shunshō was an artist of ukiyo e a style of woodblock prints and paintings that Hokusai would master and head of the so called Katsukawa school 5 Ukiyo e as practised by artists like Shunshō focused on images of the courtesans bijin ga and kabuki actors yakusha e who were popular in Japan s cities at the time 7 After a year Hokusai s name changed for the first time when he was dubbed Shunrō by his master It was under this name that he published his first prints a series of pictures of kabuki actors published in 1779 During the decade he worked in Shunshō s studio Hokusai was married to his first wife about whom very little is known except that she died in the early 1790s He married again in 1797 although this second wife also died after a short time He fathered two sons and three daughters with these two wives and his youngest daughter Ei also known as Ōi eventually became an artist and his assistant 7 8 Fireworks in the Cool of Evening at Ryogoku Bridge in Edo c 1788 89 dates from this period of Hokusai s life 9 Upon the death of Shunshō in 1793 Hokusai began exploring other styles of art including European styles he was exposed to through French and Dutch copper engravings he was able to acquire 7 He was soon expelled from the Katsukawa school by Shunkō the chief disciple of Shunshō possibly due to his studies at the rival Kanō school This event was in his own words inspirational What really motivated the development of my artistic style was the embarrassment I suffered at Shunkō s hands 10 Hokusai also changed the subjects of his works moving away from the images of courtesans and actors that were the traditional subjects of ukiyo e Instead his work became focused on landscapes and images of the daily life of Japanese people from a variety of social levels This change of subject was a breakthrough in ukiyo e and in Hokusai s career 7 Middle period edit nbsp Image of bathers from the Hokusai Manga nbsp Contemporary print of Hokusai painting the Great Daruma in 1817 nbsp The Great Wave off Kanagawa Hokusai s most famous print the first in the series Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji c 1829 1832 nbsp Fine Wind Clear Morning or Red Fuji from Thirty six Views of Mount FujiThe next period saw Hokusai s association with the Tawaraya School and the adoption of the name Tawaraya Sōri He produced many privately commissioned prints for special occasions surimono and illustrations for books of humorous poems kyōka ehon during this time In 1798 Hokusai passed his name on to a pupil and set out as an independent artist free from ties to a school for the first time adopting the name Hokusai Tomisa By 1800 Hokusai was further developing his use of ukiyo e for purposes other than portraiture He had also adopted the name he would most widely be known by Katsushika Hokusai the former name referring to the part of Edo where he was born the latter meaning north studio in honour of the North Star symbol of a deity important in his religion of Nichiren Buddhism 11 That year he published two collections of landscapes Famous Sights of the Eastern Capital and Eight Views of Edo modern Tokyo He also began to attract students of his own eventually teaching 50 pupils over the course of his life 7 He became increasingly famous over the next decade both due to his artwork and his talent for self promotion During an Edo festival in 1804 he created an enormous portrait of the Buddhist prelate Daruma said to be 200 square meters using a broom and buckets full of ink 12 Another story places him in the court of the shōgun Tokugawa Ienari invited there to compete with another artist who practised more traditional brushstroke painting Hokusai painted a blue curve on paper then chased a chicken whose feet had been dipped in red paint across the image He described the painting to the shōgun as a landscape showing the Tatsuta River with red maple leaves floating in it winning the competition 13 Between 1804 and 1815 saw Hokusai collaborate with the popular novelist Takizawa Bakin on a series of illustrated books Especially popular was the fantasy novel Chinsetsu Yumiharizuki Strange Tales of the Crescent Moon 1807 1811 with Minamoto no Tametomo as the main character and Hokusai gained fame with his creative and powerful illustrations but the collaboration ended after thirteen works There are various theories as to why they dissolved their cooperation such as discordant personalities and conflicting opinions on how to draw illustrations 14 15 Hokusai also created several albums of erotic art shunga His most famous image in this genre is The Dream of the Fisherman s Wife which depicts a young woman entwined sexually with a pair of octopuses from Kinoe no Komatsu a three volume book of shunga from 1814 16 Hokusai paid close attention to the production of his work In letters during his involvement with Toshisen Ehon a Japanese edition of an anthology of Chinese poetry Hokusai wrote to the publisher that the blockcutter Egawa Tomekichi with whom Hokusai had previously worked and whom he respected had strayed from Hokusai s style in the cutting of certain heads He also wrote directly to another blockcutter involved in the project Sugita Kinsuke stating that he disliked the Utagawa school style in which Kinsuke had cut the figure s eyes and noses and that amendments were needed for the final prints to be true to his style In his letter Hokusai included examples of both his style of illustrating eyes and noses and the Utagawa school style 17 In 1811 at the age of 51 Hokusai changed his name to Taito and entered the period in which he created the Hokusai Manga and various etehon or art manuals 5 These manuals beginning in 1812 with Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing were intended as a convenient way to make money and attract more students The first volume of Manga meaning random drawings was published in 1814 and was an immediate success 18 By 1820 he had produced twelve volumes with three more published posthumously which include thousands of drawings of objects plants animals religious figures and everyday people often with humorous overtones 19 On 5 October 1817 he painted the Great Daruma outside the Hongan ji Nagoya Betsuin in Nagoya This portrait in ink on paper measured 18 10 8 metres and the event drew huge crowds The feat was recounted in a popular song and he received the name Darusen or Daruma Master 20 21 Although the original was destroyed in 1945 Hokusai s promotional handbills from that time survived and are preserved at the Nagoya City Museum In 1820 Hokusai changed his name yet again this time to Iitsu a change which marked the start of a period in which he secured fame as an artist throughout Japan His most celebrated work Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji including the famous The Great Wave off Kanagawa and Red Fuji was produced in the early 1830s The results of Hokusai s perspectival studies in Manga can be seen here in The Great Wave where he uses what would have been seen as a western perspective to represent depth and volume 22 It proved so popular that ten more prints were later added to the series Among the other popular series of prints he made during this time are A Tour of the Waterfalls of the Provinces Oceans of Wisdom and Unusual Views of Celebrated Bridges in the Provinces 23 He also began producing a number of detailed individual images of flowers and birds kachō e including the extraordinarily detailed Poppies and Flock of Chickens 24 Later life edit nbsp Portrait of Hokusai by disciple Keisai EisenThe next period beginning in 1834 saw Hokusai working under the name Gakyō Rōjin 画狂老人 The Old Man Mad About Art 25 It was at this time that he produced One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji another significant series 26 generally considered the masterpiece among his landscape picture books 10 In the colophon to this work Hokusai writes From the age of six I had a passion for copying the form of things and since the age of fifty I have published many drawings yet of all I drew by my seventieth year there is nothing worth taking into account At seventy three years I partly understood the structure of animals birds insects and fishes and the life of grasses and plants And so at eighty six I shall progress further at ninety I shall even further penetrate their secret meaning and by one hundred I shall perhaps truly have reached the level of the marvellous and divine When I am one hundred and ten each dot each line will possess a life of its own 27 A True Mirror of Chinese and Japanese Poetry Shika shashin kyo produced in about 1833 to 1834 was printed in extra long vertical formats resembling the form of Chinese hand scrolls Prints in this series include poems by Chinese and Japanese poets combined with scenes in those countries and scenes from Noh plays a form of dance theater predating kabuki Ten designs in this series survive 28 Hokusai s final print series produced around 1835 to 1836 was called One Hundred Poems Explained by a Nurse Hyakunin isshu tuba ga etoki The series was never published in full perhaps due to financial hardships faced by Hokusai s publishers during Japan s economic downturn in the mid 1830 s 29 These prints featured scenes with the poems inscribed in a square Each print also contains the series title listed in its own vertical rectangle 30 In 1839 a fire destroyed Hokusai s studio and much of his work By this time his career was beginning to fade as younger artists such as Andō Hiroshige became increasingly popular At the age of 83 Hokusai traveled to Obuse in Shinano Province now Nagano Prefecture at the invitation of a wealthy farmer Takai Kozan where he stayed for several years 31 During his time in Obuse he created several masterpieces including the Masculine Wave and the Feminine Wave 31 Between 1842 and 1843 in what he described as daily exorcisms nisshin joma Hokusai painted Chinese lions shishi every morning in ink on paper as a talisman against misfortune 32 33 Hokusai continued working almost until the end painting The Dragon of Smoke Escaping from Mt Fuji 34 and Tiger in the Snow in early 1849 35 Constantly seeking to produce better work he apparently exclaimed on his deathbed If only Heaven will give me just another ten years Just another five more years then I could become a real painter He died on 10 May 1849 36 and was buried at the Seikyō ji in Tokyo Taito Ward 5 A haiku he composed shortly before his death reads Though as a ghost I shall lightly tread the summer fields 35 Selected works edit nbsp Thunderstorm Beneath the Summit from Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji nbsp Kirifuri waterfall at Kurokami Mountain in Shimotsuke from A Tour of Japanese Waterfalls nbsp The Dream of the Fisherman s Wife 1814 included in Kinoe no Komatsu a three volume book of shunga erotica nbsp Cuckoo and Azaleas 1834from the Small Flower series nbsp Egrets from Quick Lessons in Simplified Drawing nbsp Carp Leaping up a Cascade nbsp The Ghost of Oiwa from One Hundred Ghost Stories nbsp Still Life surimono print nbsp Kajikazawa in Kai Province from Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji nbsp Tenma Bridge in Setsu Province from Rare Views of Famous Japanese Bridges nbsp Chōshi in Shimosha from Oceans of Wisdom nbsp The Big Wave from One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji nbsp Amida Falls from A Tour of Japanese Waterfalls nbsp Dragon on the Higashimachi Festival Float Obuse 1844 nbsp Feminine Wave painted while living in Obuse 1845 nbsp The Dragon of Smoke Escaping From Mount Fuji painting 1849 nbsp Tiger in the Snow hanging scroll ink and colour on silk 1849Influences on art and culture edit nbsp Cover of Debussy s La Mer 1905Hokusai had achievements in various fields as an artist He made designs for book illustrations and woodblock prints sketches and painting for over 70 years 37 Hokusai was an early experimenter with western linear perspective among Japanese artists 38 Hokusai himself was influenced by Sesshu Tōyō and other styles of Chinese painting 39 His influences stretched across the globe to his western contemporaries in nineteenth century Europe with Japonism which started with a craze for collecting Japanese art particularly ukiyo e Some of the first samples were to be seen in Paris when in about 1856 the French printmaker designer and colleague of many Impressionsist artists such as Edouard Manet 40 Felix Bracquemond first came across a copy of a Hokusai sketchbook at the workshop of August Dalatre his printer 41 With the sketchbook as his influence Bracquemond designed the Rousseau Service an elegant set of dinnerware on behalf of Francois Eugene Rousseau the owner of a glass and ceramics shop Exhibited at the Universal Exposition in Paris in 1867 the Rousseau Service was a success both critically and commercially and was reissued in several editions over the years The Rousseau Service featured images of birds and fish copied from the Japanese book illustrations and placed asymmetrically against a white background for a look that would have been very modern at that time 42 Hokusai also influenced the Impressionism movement with themes echoing his work appearing in the work of Claude Monet and Pierre Auguste Renoir as well as Art Nouveau or Jugendstil in Germany His woodcuts were collected by many European artists including Degas Gauguin Klimt Franz Marc August Macke Edouard Manet and van Gogh 43 Degas said of him Hokusai is not just one artist among others in the Floating World He is an island a continent a whole world in himself 44 Hermann Obrist s whiplash motif or Peitschenhieb which came to exemplify the new movement is visibly influenced by Hokusai s work The French composer Claude Debussy s tone poem La Mer which debuted in 1905 is believed to have been inspired by Hokusai s print The Great Wave The composer had an impression of it hanging in his living room and specifically requested that it be used on the cover of the published score which was widely distributed and the music itself incorporated Japanese inflected harmonies 45 Even after his death exhibitions of his artworks continue to grow In 2005 Tokyo National Museum held a Hokusai exhibition which had the largest number of visitors of any exhibit there that year 46 Several paintings from the Tokyo exhibition were also exhibited in the United Kingdom The British Museum held the first exhibition of Hokusai s later year artworks including The Great Wave in 2017 47 Hokusai inspired the Hugo Award winning short story by science fiction author Roger Zelazny 24 Views of Mt Fuji by Hokusai in which the protagonist tours the area surrounding Mount Fuji stopping at locations painted by Hokusai A 2011 book on mindfulness closes with the poem Hokusai Says by Roger Keyes preceded with the explanation that s ometimes poetry captures the soul of an idea better than anything else 48 In the 1985 Encyclopaedia Britannica Richard Lane characterizes Hokusai as since the later 19th century having impressed Western artists critics and art lovers alike more possibly than any other single Asian artist 49 Store Selling Picture Books and Ukiyo e by Hokusai shows how ukiyo e during the time was actually sold it shows how these prints were sold at local shops and ordinary people could buy ukiyo e Unusually in this image Hokusai used a hand colored approach instead of using several separated woodblocks 50 His youngest daughter Ei has her own manga and film called Miss Hokusai 51 A biographical film about the painter was released in Japan on May 28 2021 52 It was premiered at the 33rd Tokyo International Film Festival 53 Citations edit Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Hokusai in Japan Encyclopedia p 345 Smith page needed Kleiner Fred S and Christin J Mamiya 2009 Gardner s Art Through the Ages Non Western Perspectives p 115 a b c d Weston p 116 a b c d e Nagata page needed Weston pp 116 117 a b c d e Weston p 117 葛飾 応為 カツシカ オウイ in Japanese CiNii Retrieved 22 May 2017 Calza 2003 p 426 a b Nagata Seiji Hokusai Genius of the Japanese Ukiyo e Kodansha Tokyo 1999 page needed The name Hokusai 北斎 North Studio is an abbreviation of Hokushinsai 北辰際 North Star Studio In Nichiren Buddhism the North Star is revered as a deity known as Myōken Calza 2003 p 128 Weston pp 117 118 日美ブログ 第86回 深川 両国 九段へ 北斎と馬琴の面影を探す旅 NHK February 17 2019 曲亭馬琴と葛飾北斎 Hokusai Museum Calza 2003 p 455 Tinios Ellis June 2015 Hokusai and his Blockcutters Print Quarterly XXXII 2 186 191 Hillier Jack R 1980 The Art of Hokusai in Book Illustration London Sotheby Parke Bernet Berkeley Calif University of California Press p 107 Weston p 118 A shortened form of Daruma Sensei Calza 2003 p 192 Screech Timon 2012 Hokusai s Lines of Sight Mechademia 7 107 doi 10 1353 mec 2012 0009 JSTOR 41601844 S2CID 119865798 Weston pp 118 119 Weston p 119 Hokusai Heaven retrieved 27 March 2009 Archived 3 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Fugaku hyakkei One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji Museum of Fine Arts Boston December 21 2018 Retrieved January 22 2019 Calza Gian Carlo Hokusau A Universe in Hokusai p 7 Phaidon Thompson Sarah E 2019 Hokusai s landscapes the complete series First ed Boston MFA publications Museum of fine arts pp 151 165 ISBN 978 0 87846 866 9 Thompson Sarah E 2019 Hokusai s landscapes the complete series First ed Boston MFA publications Museum of fine arts p 167 ISBN 978 0 87846 866 9 Thompson Sarah E 2019 Hokusai s landscapes the complete series First ed Boston MFA publications Museum of fine arts pp 167 203 ISBN 978 0 87846 866 9 a b Welcome to the World of Hokusai an Old Man Mad About Painting Hokusai Kan Hokusai Museum 7 March 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2019 Machotka Ewa 2009 Visual Genesis of Japanese National Identity Hokusai s Hyakunin Isshu Peter Lang ISBN 978 90 5201 482 1 Fine Japanese Art lot 252 Bonhams 2008 Retrieved 5 November 2020 The Dragon of Smoke Escaping From Mount Fuji 1849 by Hokusai KatsushikaHokusai com Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 2 November 2020 a b Tsuji Nobou in Calza 2003 p 72 18th day of the 4th month of the 2nd year of the Kaei era by the old calendar Finley Carol 1 January 1998 Art of Japan Wood block Color Prints Lerner Publications ISBN 978 0 8225 2077 1 Kadar Endre E Effken Judith A 5 November 2008 Paintings as Architectural Space Guided Tours by Cezanne and Hokusai Ecological Psychology 20 4 299 327 doi 10 1080 10407410802421874 S2CID 143785505 Daniel Atkison and Leslie Stewart Life and Art of Katsushika Hokusai in From the Floating World Part II Japanese Relief Prints catalogue of an exhibition produced by California State University Chico Retrieved 9 July 2007 Archived 8 November 2002 at the Wayback Machine Wilson Bareau Juliet ed 2004 Manet by himself Correspondence and conversation 2nd ed London Time Warner Books UK p 24 ISBN 0 316 72809 8 Thompson Sarah E 2023 Hokusai Inspiration and Influence 1st ed Boston MA MFA Boston p 112 ISBN 978 0 87846 890 4 Thompson Sarah E Id at 120 Rhodes David November 2011 Hokusai Retrospective The Brooklyn Rail How after death Hokusai changed art history Phaidon 10 May 2017 Retrieved 6 November 2020 Thompson Sarah E 2023 Hokusai Inspiration and Influence 1st ed Boston MA MFA Publications p 116 ISBN 9780878468904 Brown Kendall H 13 August 2007 Hokusai and His Age Ukiyo e Painting Printmaking and Book Illustration in Late Edo Japan review The Journal of Japanese Studies 33 2 521 525 doi 10 1353 jjs 2007 0048 ISSN 1549 4721 S2CID 143267375 Carelli Francesco 2018 Hokusai beyond the Great Wave London Journal of Primary Care 10 4 128 129 doi 10 1080 17571472 2018 1486504 PMC 6074688 PMID 30083250 Mark Williams and Danny Penman 2011 Mindfulness An Eight Week Plan for Finding Peace in a Frantic World pp 249 250 251 The poem is also at Hokusai Says Gratefulness org Lane Richard 1985 Hokusai Encyclopaedia Britannica v 5 p 973 Finley Carol January 1998 Art of Japan Wood block Color Prints Lerner Publications ISBN 978 0 8225 2077 1 Hoeij Boyd van 30 October 2015 Miss Hokusai Sarusuberi Misu Hokusai Film Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 7 June 2021 HOKUSAI IN CINEMAS MAY 28 hokusai2020 com Retrieved 7 June 2021 Blair Patrick Brzeski Gavin J 2 November 2020 Tokyo Film Festival Opens With Light COVID 19 Restrictions Support from Christopher Nolan The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 7 June 2021 General and cited references editCalza Gian Carlo 2003 Hokusai Phaidon ISBN 978 0 7148 4457 2 Lane Richard 1978 Images from the Floating World The Japanese Print Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 211447 1 OCLC 5246796 Nagata Seiji 1995 Hokusai Genius of the Japanese Ukiyo e Tokyo Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 770 01928 8 Ray Deborah Kogan 2001 Hokusai The Man Who Painted a Mountain New York Frances Foster Books ISBN 978 0 374 33263 1 Smith Henry D II 1988 Hokusai One Hundred Views of Mt Fuji New York George Braziller Inc Publishers ISBN 978 0 8076 1195 1 Weston Mark 1999 Giants of Japan The Lives of Japan s Most Influential Men and Women New York Kodansha International ISBN 978 1 56836 286 1 Further reading editGeneral biography edit Bowie Theodore 1964 The Drawings of Hokusai Indiana University Press Bloomington Forrer Matthi 1988 Hokusai Rizzoli New York ISBN 978 0 8478 0989 9 Forrer Matthi van Gulik Willem R and Kaempfer Heinz M 1982 Hokusai and His School Paintings Drawings and Illustrated Books Frans Halsmuseum Haarlem ISBN 978 90 70216 02 3 Hillier Jack 1955 Hokusai Paintings Drawings and Woodcuts Phaidon London Hillier Jack 1980 Art of Hokusai in Book Illustration Sotheby Publications London ISBN 978 0 520 04137 0 Lane Richard 1989 Hokusai Life and Work E P Dutton ISBN 978 0 525 24455 4 van Rappard Boon Charlotte 1982 Hokusai and his School Japanese Prints c 1800 1840 Catalogue of the Collection of Japanese Prints Rijksmuseum Part III Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Specific works of art edit For readers who want more information on specific works of art by Hokusai these particular works are recommended Hillier Jack and Dickens F W 1960 Fugaku Hiyaku kei One Hundred Views of Fuji by Hokusai Frederick New York Kondo Ichitaro 1966 Trans Terry Charles S The Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji by Hokusai East West Center Honolulu Michener James A 1958 The Hokusai Sketch Books Selections from the Manga Charles E Tuttle Rutland Morse Peter 1989 Hokusai One Hundred Poets George Braziller New York ISBN 978 0 8076 1213 2 Narazaki Muneshige 1968 Trans Bester John Masterworks of Ukiyo E Hokusai The Thirty Six Views of Mt Fuji Kodansha Tokyo Balcou Amelie 2019 Hokusai Thirty Six Views of Mount Fuji Prestel ISBN 978 3791386072 Marks Andreas 2021 Thirty six Views of Mount Fuji Taschen New York ISBN 978 3836575720 Price Jonathan Reeve 2020 Viewing Hokusai Viewing Mount Fuji Communication Circle Albuquerque New Mexico ISBN 978 0 9719954 7 5 Thompson Sarah 2019 Hokusai s Landscapes The Complete Series MFA Publications Boston ISBN 978 0878468669 Zelazny Roger 2000 24 Views of Mount Fuji In Cthulu 2000 Stories 1999 Arkham House Sauk City WI ISBN 978 0345422033Art monographs edit Monographs dedicated to Hokusai art works Goncourt Edmond de 2014 Essential Hokusai Bournemouth Parkstone International ISBN 978 1 78310 128 3 Goncourt Edmond de 2014 Hokusai Mega Square Bournemouth Parkstone International ISBN 978 1 78310 566 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Katsushika Hokusai nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Hokusai The Hokusai kan Museum Obuse Japan Hokusai website Works by Hokusai at Faded Page Canada Prints edit Hokusai complete works Ukiyo e Prints by Katsushika Hokusai Hokusai prints at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston Hokusai s works at Tokyo Digital Museum Archived 3 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Hokusai s works at the University of Michigan Museum of ArtBiographies edit Biography of Katsushika Hokusai British Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hokusai amp oldid 1199191018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.