Japanese
Prints
Outstanding among the
contemporary arts for vitality and originality are the
works of the creative printmakers, which have brought
worldwide recognition. The twentieth-century Japanese
print evolved from the Western idea of a single artist's
conceiving, executing, and producing one individual
work. In contrast, the classic ukiyo-e
(floating world art) print approach was of a team
production by an artist designer, craftsman carver,
colorist, printer, and publisher, who promoted sales of
multiple copies. The modern print movement so stressed
the creative process that even in the 1980s, editions of
prints were seldom very large and were apt to differ in
color or even design elements from one printing to the
next.
In the late twentieth
century, a broad spectrum of artistic styles from
traditional to experimental was practiced in a
multiplicity of media and techniques. Munakata Shiko, a
major force in gaining recognition for creative
printmaking, drew deeply on Japanese artistic sources,
from folk art to Zen poetry-paintings, combining kanji
with free-floating Chagall-like figures. He influenced
many other celebrated print artists who drew on folk art
and used natural earth and mineral colors to depict
traditional village scenes and lively local festivals.
Artists such as Sekino Jun'ichiro and Saito Kiyoshi were
inspired to update famous views, as of the Tokaido,
while others played with traditional themes derived from
sumo, the theater, or geisha. At the opposite pole are
the works of the abstractionists, the exponents of all
the "isms" of the day, and the experimental
essays of some consummate designers. Most avant-garde
artists worked in mixed media, often using engraving
techniques with silk-screened colors or monochromatic
metal prints with soldered wires. They experimented
freely with photomontage, photo-prints made with an
electric scanner, and lithographs. Photography as an art
form came into its own in the 1980s, and major
international exhibitions displayed the stunning
products of artist photographers such as Namikawa Banri,
Kurigama Kazumi, and Hashi. In the 1980s, a trend among
many young printmakers was toward the use of black and
white for somber, often superrealistic, themes, captured
with exquisite technical and artistic precision.
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We
offer the Internet's largest selection of Asian Arts,
Crafts, and Collectibles with over 5,000 different
items in stock in our Maryland warehouse. Our products
are handcrafted and imported from Japan, China, Korea,
Bali, India, Vietnam, Russia, Ceylon, Nepal, and
Thailand. So sit back, relax, and enjoy your visit.
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