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Published byAmos Stafford Modified over 9 years ago
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Art – Ms. Crump
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Types of Printmaking Relief – ink on a raised surface Woodcut Linoleum cut Intaglio –ink is below the surface Etching Stencil – ink is pushed through a film template or pattern Screen printing or serigraphy Planographic – plate surface is chemically treated
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Woodcut Printing Earliest printing technique Only method traditionally used in East Asia Originated from China Oldest example are fragments of silk from Han Dynasty (before year 220 CE) Woodcut images on paper introduced in Europe in 1400s, slightly later in Japan
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Ukiyo-e Well-known Japanese woodblock printing genre produced from 17 th -20 th centuries Ukiyo-e translated means “images of a floating world” Motifs (subjects) include landscape and tales from history Kikugawa Eizan – “Sakura”
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Ando Hiroshige Lived from 1797-1858 From Edo (Tokyo), Japan Specialized in landscapes "Hundred Famous Places of Edo“ "Famous Views of the Eastern City“ "Fifty-Three Stages of the Tokaido", which depict scenes along the old imperial highway from Edo (Tokyo) to Kyoto.
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Hiroshige Number 11 from “Fifty-Three Sages of the Tokaido”
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Hiroshige Number 16 “Evening Snow at Kanbara”
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Hiroshige Number 29 is the Tenryu River, west of Mitsuke
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Hiroshige From “One-hundred Views of Famous Places of Edo” Jumbo plain at Suzaki, Fukagawa and the Bridge at Awate
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Hiroshige “Wild Duck and Reeds in Snow", “A White Heron and Iris", “A Long-tailed Blue Bird on a Blooming Plum Branch" and “Sparrow, Moon, and Peach Blossoms",
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Katsushika Hokusai Lived from October or November 1760 – May 10, 1849 From Edo (Tokyo), Japan Specialized in landscapes Famous for his series “Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji”
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Hokusai “The Great Wave of Kanagawa”
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Hokusai “Red Fuji”
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Hokusai Tago Bay near Ejiri on the Tokaido
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Hokusai Mount Fuji Reflected on Water at Misaka in Kai Province
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Hokusai Inume Pass in Kai Province
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Hokusai A Shower Below the Summit
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Kitagawa Utamaro Lived from 1753 - October 31, 1806 May have been born in Edo (Tokyo), Kyoto, or Osaka Well known for his prints of women, known as bijinga
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Utamaro “A Beauty” “Dojouji”
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Utamaro “Woman Wiping Sweat” “Flowers of Edo: Young Woman's Narrative Chanting to the Samisen."
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Utamaro
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