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Technical Innovations
At first ukiyo-e weren't prints
but paintings made with sumi(black ink); later on, color
was added, and as the number of colors increased and the paintings became
more complicated, Making woodblock prints was a three-stage process: (1) painting a design with ink, (2) carving the design onto wooden blocks, and (3) applying colored ink to the blocks and pressing sheets of paper on them to print the design. There were specialists for each of these stages, and the entire process took a lot of work, but once the blocks were completed, it became much easier than before to make reproductions of the same design.
Ukiyo-e Genres As ukiyo-e developed
into popular art, subjects having to do with entertainment came to be
taken up. Yakusha-e were portraits of kabuki actors in
popular roles; they were sort of like the posters and photographs of
movie stars that you can get today. Bijin-ga illustrated
beautiful women of Edo (present-day Tokyo). Influence on Western Art At around the end of the nineteenth
century, European painters came across ukiyo-e prints
that were being used as wrapping paper. They were struck very strongly
by the expressive curves, bold use of colors, and liberal designs of
ukiyo-e.
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Photos (from top): Mikaeri Bijin (A Beauty Looking over Her Shoulder) by Hishikawa Moronobu; Ichikawa Monnosuke (The Actor Ichikawa Monnosuke) by Torii Kiyonobu; Tokaido Gojusantsugi: Yokkaichi (Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido: Yokkaichi) by Utagawa Hiroshige; Sawamura Sojuro (The Actor Sawamura Sojuro) by Utagawa Toyokuni; Furyu Rokkasen: Sojo Henjo (Six Famous Poets: The Priest Henjo) by Suzuki Harunobu. (Courtesy of the Tokyo National Museum) |