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Farmhouse

Artist (Japanese, 1876–1950)
Date1946
MediumWoodblock print
Dimensions10 9/16 × 15 3/4 inches (26.8 × 40 cm)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineGift of Professor Ellen C. Oppler, in memory of Charlotte Oppler
Terms
  • Prints
  • Japanese
Object number99.123.004
Label CopyYoshida Hiroshi embraced Western approaches to drawing and painting and first mastered watercolors before turning to oil painting. Influenced by French impressionist style introduced to Japan by Japanese artists who had studied in France, Yoshida spent the better part of the years 1900-1907 in the U.S. and Europe, and gained financial success from the sale of his paintings. Yoshida did not discover an interest in woodblock printing until 1920. In 1925 he established his own printmaking studio and for the rest of his life devoted himself to this form of art. He became associated with the shin-hanga, or "new print" movement to revive traditional Japanese woodblock printmaking in Japan. In his prints, he combined the sophisticated techniques of ukiyo-e printmaking with Western-style images.
Collections
Toshogu Shrine
Yoshida Hiroshi
1937
"Yoshi Kawa", Showa 10th year (1936)
Yoshida Hiroshi
Showa 10th year (1936)
Bamboo Wood
Yoshida Hiroshi
1939
Kameido Bridge
Yoshida Hiroshi
1927
A Restaurant at Night
Yoshida Hiroshi
1933
Kura in Tomonoura
Yoshida Hiroshi
1930
Abstraction
Yoshida Chizuko
Midnight Violet
Maruyama Hiroshi
1992
Plaza, New York
Hiroshi Sugimoto
1977