Katsushika Hokusai, Shunga from the album "Ehon tsuhi no hinagata 絵本つひの雛形
Woodblock print. Shunga, erotic scene from the album 'Ehon tsuhi no hinagata' 絵本つひの雛形 or 'Ehon tsui no hinagata' (Picture-book Models of Couples). Image 25 x 36 cm. Frame 42 x 52 cm.
Not examined out of frame. Faded. Stains. Creasings.
Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) is considered one of the greatest artists in Japanese history, and one of the important masters of the Japanese woodblock print. He was the son of the mirror maker Nakajima Issai and was born in 1760 into a family of craftsmen where he reportedly started drawing as early as six years old. Trained as a woodcarver, Hokusai was an apprentice to the artist and printmaker Katsugawa Shunsho, but was forced to quit seven years later as he had his own ideas about art. Hokusai questioned the strict Japanese principles for images and tested new techniques and perspectives and was not recognized until his 40s. He created the series 'Fugaku sanju-rokkei' (Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji), between 1830-1832, over seventy years old. The series actually consists of 46 views, including the world famous 'Under the waves off Kanagawa'. Hokusai's pictures came to Europe, along with the works of other Japanese woodcut artists, in the latter part of the 19th century and came to influence many of the Western world's most important artists.
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