“Cool Traditions” Stay in Tune with Modern Life

Modern-day Artisans Carry On the “Ukiyo-e” Tradition

Culture

Brigitte Koyama-Richard [Profile]

The Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints has reproduced around 1,200 masterpieces by artists such as Hokusai and Utamaro. Brigitte Koyama-Richard, a researcher in Japanese fine arts from France, visited their Tokyo studio to report on how they are using techniques unchanged since the Edo period.

Working to Keep Ukiyo-e Relevant to the Modern World

The Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints opened its studio in Tokyo in 1928. Since then the institute has reproduced around 1,200 masterpieces by ukiyo-e artists such as Suzuki Harunobu (c.1725–70), Katsushika Hokusai, and Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858), and also reproduced the entire oeuvre of 142 prints by Tōshūsai Sharaku (unknown).

The Actor Ōtani Oniji III as Edobei by Tōshūsai Sharaku.


Nihonbashi, Clearing After Snow, No. 1 in One Hundred Famous Views of Edo by Utagawa Hiroshige.


Girl Blowing a Glass Toy from the series Ten Physiognomic Aspects of Women by Kitagawa Utamaro.

As well as faithfully reproducing works from the Edo period, the institute produces woodcut prints by twentieth century artists such as Yokoyama Taikan (1868–1958) and Hirayama Ikuo (1930–2009). It has also commissioned ukiyo-e drawings from modern artists such as Hiramatsu Reiji (b. 1941) and Yamaguchi Akira (b. 1969) to make original woodcut prints.

The 2013 multi-color woodcut print Haru (Spring) created from a design by the artist Hiramatsu Reiji
(© Hiramatsu Reiji / Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints).


The 2012 multi-color woodcut print New Sights of Tokyo: Tōkaidō Nihonbashi Revisited created from a design by the artist Yamaguchi Akira (© Yamaguchi Akira / Mizuma Art Gallery /Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints).

If the Adachi Institute of Woodcut Prints had not been created, the traditions of ukiyo-e stretching back to the Edo period might have disappeared. Although there are carvers and printers working as individuals elsewhere, the institute is the only place where artisans work alongside one another to make ukiyo-e and contemporary prints. Communication between the artisans is essential to preserving the advanced techniques employed and the quality of the artwork.

Artisans using actual woodblocks to make prints are actually in the minority in Japan, where various techniques tend to be used to make prints—such as lithography, silk screen printing, and digital printing. But ukiyo-e printed from woodblocks have a special quality; a warmth that stems from the traditional technique of pressing the water-based pigments into the washi paper to produce color.

The institute has set up a foundation to preserve the techniques of traditional woodcut printing and to support the professional development of artisans. Its aim is to pass down the wonders of woodcut prints to future generations. Nakayama, who is director of both organizations, expands on place of ukiyo-e in today’s society:

“Creating the sort of works that people today are interested in owning is crucial to the task of passing on ukiyo-e traditions to future generations. This requires the creation of new sales channels. We are trying to show people how ukiyo-e can enhance our contemporary lives, whether as a living-room decoration or as a gift for a friend overseas. Producing woodcut prints from works by contemporary artists is one important way of making ukiyo-e seem more contemporary in the twenty-first century.”

The "floating world" depicted in the Edo period woodcut prints was in fact the contemporary world of that time. Even though ukiyo-e is now seen as a traditional art form, it seems poised to retain its contemporary relevance by having its unsurpassed techniques passed down to future artisans capable of depicting the world around them.

(Originally written in French. Photos by Ōhashi Hiroshi and Illustrations by Izuka Tsuyoshi.)

Related Tags

art Tokyo kabuki ukiyo-e Japonisme Edo Shunga fine arts woodcut prints

Brigitte Koyama-RichardView article list

Professor, Department of Humanities, Musashi University. Born in Paris. PhD in comparative literature, University of Paris. Studied modern Japanese literature as a graduate student at Waseda University. Specializes in comparative literature and art (japonisme). Published works include Japon Rêvé: Edmond de Goncourt et Hayashi Tadamasa (A Dream of Japan: Edmond de Goncourt and Hayashi Tadamasa).

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