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  2. Hiroshi Yoshida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroshi_Yoshida

    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.

  3. Tōshi Yoshida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tōshi_Yoshida

    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. However, in the 1930s, Tōshi started making landscape paintings and prints similar to his father's works. Father and son ...

  4. The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fifty-three_Stations_of...

    The first of the prints in the series was published jointly by the publishing houses of Hōeidō and Senkakudō, with the former handling all subsequent releases on its own. [3] Woodcuts of this style commonly sold as new for between 12 and 16 copper coins apiece, approximately the same price as a pair of straw sandals or a bowl of soup. [ 6 ]

  5. Woodblock printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodblock_printing

    In India the main importance of the technique has always been as a method of printing textiles, which has been a large industry since at least the 10th century. [37] Nowadays wooden block printing is commonly used for creating beautiful textiles, such as block print saree, kurta, curtains, kurtis, dress, shirts, cotton sarees.

  6. Yoshida family artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshida_family_artists

    Parallel to this, Hiroshi and Fujio’s second son Hodaka Yoshida (1926–1995) became an artist entirely independent both of his father’s authority and his aesthetic. The first in the family to focus on abstract art, he began by exhibiting his oils, and then moved to woodblock prints.(Allen et al., 110-11) He was a pioneer in Japan in ...

  7. Sarah Brayer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Brayer

    Arriving in Kyoto Kyoto in 1980, Brayer studied etching with Yoshiko Fukuda and Japanese woodblock printing with Tōshi Yoshida (1911-1996) the son of influential woodblock artist Hiroshi Yoshida (1876-1950). Her interest in color gradation was piqued by the woodblock technique, and she subsequently applied similar gradations to her color ...

  8. Chizuko Yoshida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chizuko_Yoshida

    She was the wife of artist Hodaka Yoshida (1926–1995). Hodaka's mother, Fujio Yoshida (1887–1987), was a noted artist alongside of her husband Hiroshi Yoshida (1876–1950). Chizuko's daughter, Ayomi Yoshida (born 1958), is well known for her modernist woodblock prints and room-size woodblock-chip installations. Three generations of women ...

  9. Shin-hanga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shin-hanga

    Hikari umi (Glittering Sea), by Hiroshi Yoshida (1926) Shiba Zōjōji, by Kawase Hasui (1925) Two Cockatoos on Plum Blossom Tree, by Ohara Koson (c. 1925–1935) Shin-hanga ( 新版画 , lit. "new prints", "new woodcut (block) prints") was an art movement in early 20th-century Japan, during the Taishō and Shōwa periods , that revitalized the ...