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Arai Yoshimune – Suma Beach - antique Japanese Woodblock Print

$ 158.4

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Region of Origin: Japan
  • Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
  • Condition: This print is in near pristine condition with full margins, strong color with no discolorations, and solid bleed-through to the verso. This is a middle-edition copy of the piece, as evidenced by the margins yet still thin paper.
  • Featured Refinements: Japanese Woodblock Print
  • Primary Material: Paper
  • Age: 1900-1940
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    Arai Yoshimune was a Japanese artist associated with the shin-hanga (“New Prints”) art movement in Japan during the early 20th century. This movement was influenced by European Impressionism and its imagery focused on landscapes, women, and nature. In the 1920s, the publisher Hasegawa commissioned a small group of artists to create woodblock prints for a series entitled “
    Hasegawa’s Night Scenes
    “, of which there were a total of 21 prints by 6 artists.
    THE COMPOSITION
    The print is an image of Suma Beach at night, with a full moon glowing beyond the branches of a tall pine tree on the beach. Two laborers can be seen, possibly collecting seawater for processing into salt, one walking along the shore with a yoke over his shoulder while the other dips his buckets into the shallow water as waves lap at the sand.
    To see all of the different renderings that we have please go to our
    Suma Beach at Night
    tag.
    THE WOODBLOCK PRINT
    This print is in near pristine condition with full margins, strong color with no discolorations, and solid bleed-through to the verso. This is a middle-edition copy of the piece, as evidenced by the margins yet still thin paper.
    THE ARTIST
    Utagawa Yoshimune II
    (1863-1941) was the eleventh and youngest son of Utagawa Yoshimune I (1817-1880) and spent his childhood residence in the Kinroku-chō area of Tokyo. At a young age he studied with the famous ukiyo-e artist Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) and he assumed the name Toshiyuki at age thirteen. After his father’s death he was adopted by the Arai family. He succeeded his father in 1882 to become Yoshimune II and occasionally used his father’s art name Isshōsai, along with the adopted name Arai Yoshimune. Worked as illustrator and print designer. Also known as Arai Toshiyuki.