A Best-Loved Master of the Woodblock Print
By Carol Sims
Originally published in hardcover for the Royal Academy
exhibition in 1997, this landmark text is now available in
paperback from Prestel. Utagawa (1797-1858) is one of the
best-loved masters of the woodblock print, known primarily for
his countless views of Edo and the Japanese countryside.
Travelers walking in the rain or snow, bridges, bays, views of Mt
Fuji, wild seas and birds tumbling through the air, are a few of
the subjects loved to capture.
The color reproductions of 's exquisite woodblock prints are top
quality and provide the reader/viewer with access to some of the
best examples of 's finest prints. Author Matthi Forrer stresses
the point that quality within and between various editions of the
same wood block print could vary tremendously since editions
frequently numbered more than 20,000. Earlier prints in the
edition are the more desirable. Forrer's descriptions identify
the location of the view depicted, and give details of coloring
and changes of later impressions. He also adds historic
references and background information.
Poetry was often incorporated in 's prints. We are able to see
the original Japanese characters in cartouches within the prints'
compositions, then read the transliterations and English
translations in the adjacent text. The combination of informed
text and beautiful imagery and Japanese poetry is alluring.
This is a very thorough text. It includes maps, a chronology,
glossary and bibliography. The author is curator of the Japanese
department at the National Museum of Ethnology in Leiden, The
Netherlands. He also wrote Hokusai: Prints and Drawings.
Other contributors are Suzuki Juzo and Henry D. Smith II. Suzuki
Juzo is author of the standard monograph on , and former senior
librarian at the National Diet Library in Tokyo. Henry D. Smith
II is professor of recent Japanese history at Columbia
University, New York City.
You don't have to be a Japanese print expert to appreciate this
book. As Juzo writes, "The work of Utagawa , more than that of
any other Japanese woodblock print artist, appeals profound-ly
and directly to the modern viewer, regardless of his or her
knowledge of ukiyoe."