Hokusai (1760 - 1849 )

The Japanese artist Hokusai Katsushika was born in Honjo district of Edo as Tokitaro Kawamura. Adopted by the mirror maker Ise Nakajima, Hokusai was raised as an artisan, learning to engrave at an early age. As a teenager, he assumed the name Tetsuzo Nakajima and took his first steps towards the world of print. He worked as a delivery boy for a book rental shop for a time, then around age 14, tried his hand at carving woodblocks for prints at the apprentice to an engraver. Around 1779, he formally pursued his artistic education through the workshop of the preeminent ukiyo-e master of actor portraiture, Shunsho Katsukawa (1726-1792). Hokusai dedicated himself to the Katsukawa school until 1785, when he was dismissed due to a disagreement with Shunsho. From 1785 until early 1798, Hokusai under the name "Sori" as part of the Tawaraya workshop. Between 1785 and 1797 Hokusai established himself as a popular surimono (lavish, privately commissioned prints) designer, painter, and illustrator. As the turn of the century neared, Hokusai freed himself of all school associations and became an independent artist under the name "Hokusai" and "Tokitaro."The following decades were marked by personal struggles and profound professional success.

In 1814, the first volume of Hokusai Manga was published, where Hokusai captured the spectrum of daily life and Edo-period imagination with a spontaneous and sketch-like quality. Between 1817 and 1835, Hokusai Katsushika’s personal life was unsettled. While his artistic career flourished and his students proliferated, his second wife died. Continually changing residences within Edo, he spent time in Nagoya, Osaka, and Kyoto as well. In the 1830s, Hokusai entered his most prolific period as a print artist. He achieved great fame through his meisho-e (famous place pictures), such as the acclaimed series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji (c. 1831-1833), which includes the iconic Under the Wave Off Kanagawa. Hokusai incorporated daring composition and aspects of one-point perspective into his landscapes. He revolutionized the Japanese landscape print, capturing the familiar and the imagined alike with innovative techniques and contemporary resonance. Following a devastating fire in his home in 1839, Hokusai turned away from print design and focused on painting during the final decade of his life. Hokusai Katsushika died in 1849. It is said that on his deathbed, his words were a plea for just five more years to paint, "for then he could work as a truly great artist."

Though Hokusai Katsushika died in 1849, his woodblock prints and other works inspired generations of artists worldwide long after his death. While works such as the "Great Wave" brought Hokusai ubiquity, his persistent spirit of exploration, innovation, and sensitivity to his world that built his revelatory legacy.

Japanese Woodblock Prints (1800 - 1868)

By the 19th century, Japanese woodblock prints achieved extraordinary popularity. While the shogunate issued a battery of censorship reforms throughout the 1800s, artists ignored and evaded restrictions with images of indulgent beauties and vibrant kabuki actors. As constraints tightened in the 1840s, bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women) became earthier in prints by Eizan and Eisen, while kabuki actors persevered in the work of Kunisada (aka Toyokuni III). During this period, ukiyo-e artists also added landscapes, warriors, ghosts and scenes of everyday life to their oeuvre. Artists such as Hokusai and Hiroshige indulged a national wanderlust through Meisho-e or “famous place pictures,” while Kuniyoshi championed musha-e, a genre of warrior and legendary pictures.

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Artist

  • Aikawa, Minwa (ask Gosentei)
  • Ashiyuki
  • Chikayoshi
  • Eisen
  • Eizan
  • Gakutei
  • Gekko
  • Hidematsu
  • Hidenari
  • Hirokage
  • Hirosada
  • Hiroshige
  • Hiroshige & Toyokuni III
  • Hiroshige II
  • Hokkei
  • Hokuba
  • Hokuga
  • Hokusai
  • Hokushu
  • Hokutai
  • Katsushika, Isai
  • Kiyomoto II
  • Kunichika
  • Kunihisa II
  • Kunimori II
  • Kuninao
  • Kunisada
  • Kunisada II (aka Kunimasa III, Toyokuni IV)
  • Kuniyasu
  • Kuniyoshi
  • Kyosai
  • Mimura, Seizan
  • Sadafusa
  • Sadahide
  • Sadanobu
  • Shigeharu
  • Shigenobu
  • Shinsai
  • Shunman
  • Shunsen
  • Sori III
  • Sugakudo
  • Tamikuni
  • Teisai, Shuri
  • Toshikata
  • Toyohiro
  • Toyokiyo
  • Toyokuni I
  • Toyokuni II (Toyoshige)
  • Toyokuni III
  • Tsukimaro
  • Utamaro
  • Utamaro II
  • Yoshiiku
  • Yoshikata
  • Yoshikazu
  • Yoshikuni
  • Yoshitora
  • Yoshitoshi
  • Yoshitsuna
  • Yoshitsuya
  • Yoshiume
  • Unsigned / Unknown Artist

Series

  • Famous Bridges in Various Provinces
  • 100 Ghost Stories
  • 100 Poems Explained by the Nurse
  • 100 Views of Mt. Fuji
  • 36 Views of Mt. Fuji (Hokusai)
  • 53 Stations of the Tokaido (Hokusai)
  • Eight Views of Omi (Hokusai)
  • Eight Views of Ryukyu
  • Hokusai Manga
  • Mountains upon Mountains
  • Waterfalls in Various Provinces

Subject

  • Actors & Theater
  • Animals & Fish
  • Architectural
  • Autumn
  • Beauties (bijin-ga)
  • Birds
  • Bridges
  • Calligraphy
  • Cats & Dogs
  • Children
  • Comic
  • Flowers & Gardens
  • Ghosts & Demons (yokai)
  • Insects
  • Landscapes
  • Legends & History
  • Manga & Bookplates
  • Moon & Night
  • Mt. Fuji
  • Music & Dance
  • Nature
  • Pastimes
  • Poets & Scholars
  • Portraits
  • Rain
  • Rituals & Beliefs
  • Shunga
  • Spring
  • Still Life
  • Sumo
  • Surimono
  • Tokaido
  • Warriors & Samurai
  • Waterfalls and Rapids
  • Waterscapes
  • Winter

Period

  • 1600 - 1800 (Early Edo)
  • 1800 - 1868 (Edo)

Medium

  • Ehon
  • Woodblock Print

Size

  • Extra Small (ie. Koban)
  • Small (ie. Chuban)
  • Medium (ie. Oban)
  • Large (ie. Triptych)

310 Products

Filtered By: Hokusai
Fuji under Clouds

Hokusai

Fuji under Clouds

JP-209275

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Fuji at Daybreak

Hokusai

Fuji at Daybreak

JP-209274

SOLD

Fuji Straddled

Hokusai

Fuji Straddled

JP-209273

SOLD

Fuji from Suidobashi

Hokusai

Fuji from Suidobashi

JP-209272

SOLD

Fuji through a Web

Hokusai

Fuji through a Web

JP-209271

SOLD

Fuji from Orankai

Hokusai

Fuji from Orankai

JP-209270

SOLD

Fuji in Asumi Village

Hokusai

Fuji in Asumi Village

JP-209269

SOLD

Fuji of Elegant Delight

Hokusai

Fuji of Elegant Delight

JP-209268

SOLD

The Farmhand of Fuji in Kai Province

Hokusai

The Farmhand of Fuji in Kai Province

JP-209267

$280.00
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Fuji over a Waterfall

Hokusai

Fuji over a Waterfall

JP-209266

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Fuji at a Village Boundary

Hokusai

Fuji at a Village Boundary

JP-209265

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Fuji Behind a Net

Hokusai

Fuji Behind a Net

JP-209264

SOLD

Fuji under a Bridge

Hokusai

Fuji under a Bridge

JP-209263

SOLD

Fuji in a Downpour

Hokusai

Fuji in a Downpour

JP-209262

SOLD

Fuji with a Scaffold

Hokusai

Fuji with a Scaffold

JP-209261

$520.00
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Fukurokuju

Hokusai

Fukurokuju

JP-209260

SOLD

Fuji from the Bucket-ferry on the Oi River

Hokusai

Fuji from the Bucket-ferry on the Oi River

JP-209259

$520.00
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Fuji through a Partition

Hokusai

Fuji through a Partition

JP-209258

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Fuji from the Musashi Plain

Hokusai

Fuji from the Musashi Plain

JP-209257

$580.00
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Fuji in a Grass Hoop

Hokusai

Fuji in a Grass Hoop

JP-209256

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Surprise-view Fuji

Hokusai

Surprise-view Fuji

JP-209255

$280.00
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Fuji with Broken Form in Deep Mountain Mist

Hokusai

Fuji with Broken Form in Deep Mountain Mist

JP-209254

SOLD

Fuji from Senzoku

Hokusai

Fuji from Senzoku

JP-209253

SOLD

Fuji from Rakanji Temple

Hokusai

Fuji from Rakanji Temple

JP-209252

SOLD