calendar e-news tickets
       
         
 

Yoshitoshi's Strange Tales: Woodblock Prints from Edo to Meiji
May 26–
September 2, 2007
Hambrecht Gallery

 

Features a hundred prints by Taiso Yoshitoshi (1839–1892) dating from the turbulent last decades of Edo Japan to the westernizing Meiji era. The exhibition is built around two series that deal with the supernatural, one from the beginning of Yoshitoshi’s career, the other from the end—stylistically so different that they could be by different artists. Sometimes considered ancestors of modern manga (Japanese comics), woodblock prints were known as ukiyo-e, pictures of the “floating world” of entertainment, especially of actors and courtesans. Yoshitoshi preferred other subjects, including events from folklore and history, often bloody. Colors are intense, gestures histrionic. In his later designs Yoshitoshi moved beyond the swirl of momentous events to portray human emotions with great psychological subtlety, which is his most important contribution to ukiyo-e. Through his work, a picture emerges of traditional Japanese society moving at a breakneck speed into the modern world.






Exhibition Images

Yoshitoshi/Tezuka Podcast (audio only), 8.38 MB file | Listen | Help

 

 
   

Organized by the Asian Art Museum. This exhibition is made possible by support from The Henri and Tomoye Takahashi Charitable Foundation.

Audio clips © Asian Art Museum and Acoustiguide Corporation, 2007

 
         
 
calendar e-news tickets