Katsushika Hokusai
Japan, 1760-1849
Katsushika Hokusai (kah-tsoo-shee-kah hok-sigh) is considered the greatest
printmaker of the Japanese Ukiyo-e (oo-kee-yoh-ay)
style, or "pictures of the floating world." His woodblock prints influenced
a number of Impressionist artists in the West, including Degas, Gauguin,
and Toulouse-Lautrec.
From about 1825 to 1831, Hokusai published his brilliant series of Mount
Fuji prints. In spite of its title, Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji,
there are actually 46 scenes included in the series. These prints make
use of bold lines and extended perspective. In one print, The Great
Wave at Kanagawa, Mount Fuji appears serenely in the distance, while
an enormous wave occupies the foreground. Several long boats are overshadowed
by the wave, and their angles accentuate the wave's lines. The viewer's
eye is drawn into the painting's space by these lines and by the use of
flat space in the sky above. It is this use of line and space that the
Impressionists admired and incorporated into their own works.
Hokusai
was a prolific artist who produced more than 30,000 artworks in his lifetime.
These included illustrations for books, prints of actors, invitations,
greeting cards, and many landscapes, paintings, and prints. Despite this
vast output, Hokusai was a humble man.
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