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#JPR5099

Shotei (aka Hiroaki) (1871 - 1945)

Sawatari in Joshu District

Medium: Woodblock Print
Date: pre 1930
Size (H x W): 15.25 x 6.75 (inches)
Seals: Shotei
Condition: Very good color and impression, margins lightly toned.
$2,100.00

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Description

There are two variants of this print, one with a straight path another with a crooked path. No one knows definitively which is earlier, however, it is assumed that since the crooked path variant is more rare, it is also earlier.

About the artist

Born in Tokyo as Katsutaro Takahashi, Shotei (aka Hiroaki/ Komei) was in his mid-teens when he began to work in the design department of the Imperial Household Agency. He studied Nihonga, or Japanese-style painting, under his uncle Fuko Matsumoto, but also worked as an illustrator for periodicals and textbooks. Beginning in the early Taisho period, Shotei regularly collaborated with the prominent Shin Hanga publisher Shozaburo Watanabe. Shotei used a variety of signatures. Many of his large landscape prints and bijin-ga are signed 'Hiroaki,' while ‘Shotei’ appears on other works. Shotei was a productive shin-hanga artist, completing around five hundred designs by the time he was fifty. Unfortunately, many of Shotei's prints were destroyed by the fire that raged in the aftermath of the Great Kanto earthquake in 1923. Despite this tragedy, he continued to work as a printmaker until his death in 1945.