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Shin Hanga

The New Prints of Japan. 1900—1950


  • Thames & Hudson +
  • Expo: Spring 2022 - Fall 2022, Köln, Leiden, Brussels
  • by Chris Uhlenbeck, Jim Dwinger, Philo Ouweleen
Since the 90s museums and private collectors have shown a growing interest in shin hanga ('new prints'): balanced designs printed on luxurious paper, with the finest pigments and in smaller editions. They are the fruit of the traditional yet highly successful collaboration between artist, publisher, block-cutter and printer. The modern landscapes, meanwhile, are impressionistic rather than figurative, using a range of colour nuances to achieve highly atmospheric results.

ISBN 9789493039599 | EN | HB
€46,50
reprint under consideration
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More Information
Publisher Thames & Hudson +
ISBN 9789493039599
Author(s) Chris Uhlenbeck, Jim Dwinger, Philo Ouweleen
Publication date May 2022
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 290 x 235 mm
Illustrations 200 col. & bw ill.
Pages 224
Language(s) English ed.
Exhibition Köln, Leiden, Brussels
Description

Twentieth-century Japanese printmaking has come in for relatively little attention. Classic Hokusai and Hiroshige landscapes and Utamaro’s beautiful images of women remain the dominant form.
All the same, since the 1990s museums and private collectors have shown a growing interest in shin hanga (‘new prints’): balanced designs printed on luxurious paper, with the finest pigments and in smaller editions. They are the fruit of the traditional yet highly successful collaboration between artist, publisher, block-cutter and printer.
It is not so much in their subject matter as their visual language that shin hanga prints set themselves apart from their traditional precursors. Where the classically depicted women were stylized and idealized, their more recent counterparts are based on real models, individually recognizable and full of emotion. The modern landscapes, meanwhile, are impressionistic rather than figurative, using a range of colour nuances to achieve highly atmospheric results.
This book offers a unique selection with which to explore twentieth-century Japanese printmaking. The prints it reproduces are mostly drawn from two large private collections, and, by way of great exception, items from the family collection of the publisher Watanabe, the man who started it all.

Auteur Chris Uhlenbeck curator van grote tentoonstellingen op het gebied van Japanse kunst. Hij wordt bijgestaan door Jim Dwinger, kenner van Japanse kunstgeschiedenis, gespecialiseerd in houtsneden en Philo Ouweleen, beeldend kunstenaar met een masterdiploma in Japanse Studies.
Deze publicatie vergezelt een reizende tentoonstelling die in het voorjaar Keulen, in de zomer Leiden en in het najaar Brussel aandoet.