

Hokusai
4 snips Mar 30, 2017
Guests Angus Lockyer, a Japanese history expert, Rosina Buckland, a senior curator, and Ellis Tinios, an ukiyo-e specialist, explore Hokusai's incredible influence. They discuss the unique techniques Hokusai used in his woodblock prints and the impact of Western styles as he interacted with European art. Hear about his public painting performances and the significance of Mt. Fuji in his work. They also touch on his manga drawing manuals and how they helped democratize art in Japan, leaving a lasting legacy that shaped modern art worldwide.
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Hokusai's Urban Craft Origins
- Hokusai grew up in Edo's bustling merchant and artisan neighborhoods and trained early in crafts and block-carving.
- His working-class origins and apprenticeship shaped a practical, prolific approach to making art for popular audiences.
The Studio Row That Launched Him
- Hokusai quarrelled with his studio's chief apprentice and left after his rival tore down one of his signs.
- That rupture pushed him to strike out independently and develop his own distinctive style.
Controlled Openness Shaped Influences
- Japan's 'closed' Tokugawa era still allowed controlled cultural exchange via Nagasaki with Chinese and limited Dutch trade.
- Imported books and images fed artists like Hokusai with Chinese authority and selective Western techniques.