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Hiroshi Yoshida (吉田 博, Yoshida Hiroshi, September 19, 1876 – April 5, 1950) was a 20th-century Japanese painter and woodblock printmaker. Along with Hasui Kawase , he is regarded as one of the greatest artists of the shin-hanga style, and is noted especially for his landscape prints.
Restoration by trialsanderrors: Hiroshi Yoshida: Hikaru umi (the sparkling sea), 1926 Licensing This is a faithful photographic reproduction of a two-dimensional, public domain work of art.
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File:The Grand Canyon, from "The United States Series", Hiroshi Yoshida.jpg. ... Uploaded a work by Hiroshi Yoshida from Tokyo Fuji Art Museum https://www.fujibi.or ...
Point of Infinity is a 69-foot-tall stainless steel sculpture by Japanese artist Hiroshi Sugimoto, installed on a Yerba Buena Island hilltop in San Francisco, California. [1] [2] The artwork also acts as a sundial. [3]
The Yoshida Studio was established in 1925. Hiroshi helped Fujio develop into one of the leading modern women artists of the time. (Yoshida Fujio, Foreword) Their first son, Tōshi Yoshida (1911–1995), was destined to inherit the Yoshida Studio in Tokyo. He slowly moved beyond the quiet romantic style of his father into a brightly illuminated ...
Pages in category "Artists from San Francisco" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 360 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Yoshida's artistic career was a long struggle between fidelity to his father's legacy and freedom from it. Hiroshi Yoshida, a shin-hanga landscape artist, dictated Tōshi's early artistic development. In 1926, Tōshi chose animals as his primary subjects to distinguish himself from his father, who was a landscape printmaker.