Japanese Art Prints (ukiyo-e art)

Ukiyo-e art meaning

Japanese art prints, or Ukiyo-e, which literally means “pictures of the floating world,” have become an increasingly popular art form in the Western world. These “pictures of the floating world” sprang from the Buddhist ideology that joy is transient and only detachment from desire will bring true enlightenment.

The concept was abbreviated to mean that if joy is fleeting, then one must enjoy it to its fullest. Thereafter, scenes of joy were depicted in Ukiyo-e. This particular movement came to fruition in the 17th century. It involved carving an image inversely onto woodblocks, covering the revealed surfaces with ink, and pressing the block onto paper, resulting in the creation of the print.

History Development

Ukiyo-e originated in the Edo region (Tokyo) during a time when Japanese political and military power was in the hands of the shoguns.

In 1853, an American commander named Perry came to Japan to negotiate with the Japanese government on behalf of the USA. At the time of Perry’s arrival, Ukiyo-e characteristics was a popular contemporary art form, and many prints were on sale on the streets of Edo. Western visitors carried Ukiyo-e prints back to their homeland, thus exposing Japan’s exotic art to the rest of the world.

Ukiyo-e portraits

The subject matter of Ukiyo-e was usually portraits of kabuki actors, theatre scenes, lovers, famed courtesans, and landscape scenes from Japan’s history and lore. The first prints were produced in black and white. Artists Okumura Masanobu and Suzuki Harunobu were among the first to produce color woodblock prints by using one block for each color. Color woodblock was a very complex process.

There had to be a key block made for the outlines and one block for each color. Many printing blocks have to be produced to correspond to each color in the print.

The number of impressions that can be produced from one block is quite limited. As the number of copies increases, the block becomes worn down and the print quality deteriorates. Producing Japanese art prints involved many people aside from the artist, including designers, individuals who planned the mold, others who cut the mold, and those who pressed the molds onto the paper.

Offshoots of Ukiyo-e

The production of these particular Japanese art prints faded out around 1912. However, two new schools of print-making emerged to take their place.

Collecting Ukiyo-e

When collecting this exotic form of art, one must be familiar with a few Japanese terms. Prints that are shozuri are early printings, and a print said to be fukkoku is a reproduction.

Until the second half of the 20th century, the Japanese print-making process did not involve artists signing and numbering each print.

After becoming exposed to the exotic culture of Japan, a craze for everything Japanese swept through Europe in the late 1860s.

Consequently, Japanese publishing houses began producing copies of the more famous prints. The copy business lasted for many prosperous years. Many of the copies were of excellent quality. Some prints have stamps or markings in their margins, identifying them as copies; however, others are more difficult to discern. The quality of the paper and the condition of the colors are usually the primary indicators in detecting a copy. For the average collector who is unable to read Japanese characters, the task of detecting a copy is often insurmountable.

Collecting Ukiyo-e Art

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