What would it feel like to be inside of this artwork? Image credit: Utagawa Kuniaki II, 1835 - 1888 (Japanese), Ōzumō Keiko no zu [Professional Sumo Wrestlers Practicing], 1866, woodcut on paper, 13 3 ...
The Met in New York has teamed up with Band-Aid to offer bandages printed with the museum's most iconic works.
Tech icon Steve Jobs was fascinated by Japanese culture, and was particularly passionate about shin-hanga woodblock prints. Interviews with former colleagues and friends reveal that his lifelong ...
A walking tour of the Kiso Valley offers glimpses of the golden age of Japan’s great printmakers ... line up one of Eisen’s or Hiroshige’s prints with the real thing. In Hiroshige’s ...
It’s a very attractive print but I don’t know anything about Japanese art.” Thomczek confirmed that it was indeed Japanese, identifying it as a Samurai scene and an example of a woodblock print.
A chat with the architect behind the New York institution’s transformation and an art historian’s view on it, plus a chat ...
There are two figures. One is feminine, the other is masculine. The masculine figure seems to be farther away because he is much smaller and higher in the image. The feminine figure takes up about a ...