Carp Banner, Toyohama, Kagawa Prefecture, 1948

by Hasui (1883 - 1957)

Current Status

Carp Banner, Toyohama, Kagawa Prefecture, 1948 by Hasui (1883 - 1957)

Original Hasui (1883 - 1957) Japanese Woodblock Print
Carp Banner, Toyohama, Kagawa Prefecture, 1948

Hasui was a great master of the twentieth-century shin-hanga (new prints) school. His talent for capturing a mood, illustrating a scene, and drawing the viewer into the image makes for some of the most appealing Japanese woodblocks ever created.

Early life

Born in Tokyo in 1883, Hasui was always interested in art. He studied ukiyo-e and Japanese-style painting at the studio of Kiyokata Kaburagi. He also studied Western-style painting for a couple years. He had taken over his family’s wholesale rope business, but it failed when he was in his twenties, and he turned to art as a career.

Woodblock printing

Hasui spent most of his adult life as a woodblock printmaker. Unlike earlier ukiyo-e artists whose landscapes typically featured famous sites, Hasui was one of the first artists to record the unknown rural places and urban corners that he found so captivating. He traveled often and recorded the scenic wonders of Japan with drawings and watercolor paintings, which became the basis for many of his prints.

In the face of rapid modernization during the twentieth century, Hasui's prints evoke a sense of nostalgia for old Japan and a respect for traditional culture. His romanticized views emphasize the beauty of the natural landscape; figures are absent or often small and insignificant in comparison. Hasui was known for his spectacular snow, rain and night scenes. These wonderful atmospheric landscapes are among his best work.

A prolific artist, Hasui created about six hundred woodblock print designs during his long career, the majority of them for publisher Watanabe Shozaburo. In 1953 the Japanese government bestowed its greatest artistic honor on him by commissioning a print, Snow at Zozoji Temple, and designating it as an Intangible Cultural Treasure.

Comments - Charming image of a quiet village street with a carp banner flying above a home during the Boy's Day Festival in May. Mounted to bamboo poles, these brightly colored "koinobori" symbolize strength and determination, with one banner hung for each son in the family. Houses line the road as it curves off into the distance, a narrow canal lined with stones running along the right edge. A few trees peek above the tiled rooftops as clouds drift across the blue sky. Beautifully colored and shaded.

Signed - Hasui with red artist's seal "Kawase"
Sealed - Publisher Watanabe, 7mm seal, later edition original, from original blocks

Artist - Hasui (1883 - 1957)

Image Size - 14 3/8" x 9 3/8" + margins as shown

Condition - Excellent condition overall with full margins, has never been mounted.

Carp Banner, Toyohama, Kagawa Prefecture, 1948 by Hasui (1883 - 1957)
Carp Banner, Toyohama, Kagawa Prefecture, 1948 by Hasui (1883 - 1957)