WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Impressions of Ukiyo-ye, the school of the Japanese colour-print artists cover

Impressions of Ukiyo-ye, the school of the Japanese colour-print artists

Chapter 10: Hints to Collectors of Ukiyo-ye Gems.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

An accessible survey traces the emergence and aesthetic principles of the Japanese colour-print tradition known as the Floating World, situating it amid preceding Chinese, Buddhist, and courtly schools and outlining technical and stylistic developments in colour printing. It profiles major practitioners and branches — including Torii printers and masters such as Utamaro, Hokusai, and Hiroshige — compares their methods and motifs, and discusses themes from genre scenes to landscape. Practical guidance for collectors, analytical comparisons of the artists, a bibliography, and facsimile signatures and illustrations round out a handbook for students and enthusiasts.

Hints to Collectors of Ukiyo-ye Gems.

O truly appreciate Japanese prints, a knowledge of the language of the block must first be acquired, then the pursuit has an indescribable charm, inexplicable excepting to the initiated, but to those who have fallen under the spell, the love of Ukiyo-ye gems becomes a veritable passion. The collector of old prints must be guided in his selection by the quality of the paper, which should be soft and vibrant, the fibrous tentacles upon its surface often forming shadows where it has been exposed to the dust. The register must be perfect, each colour being confined absolutely to its prescribed space. Perfection in the register is an infallible guide, and prints with a perfect register will increase in value. The colours must be soft and melting, in many cases one tone shading into another, not harshly determined by the lines of the block, as in even the most beautiful reproductions. The florid colouring of the later impressions by the Hiroshige are notable examples of the deterioration caused by the use of cheap pigments and the haste of the printer who had to supply the increasing demand for cheap pictures.

There are often exquisite examples of colouring to be found among the later impressions from the old blocks, but the lovely colours and nuances of colours conjured by the artists, designers and printers in loving collaboration, before commercialism had invaded Japan, can never be seen again, even as the disciples of William Morris seem unable to reproduce the beautiful shades which the genius of the master workman evolved from the dyeing-vat.