Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾 北斎) (1760–1849)
Two woodblock illustrations
from "Hokusai's Sketches" (北斎漫画) (aka “Hokusai Manga”; “Ten
Thousand Sketches by Hokusai: Ehon”), 1815, vol. 2, (left) page 59 and (right) pages
56, published in Nagoyaby by Eirakuya Tōshirō (永楽屋東四郎) (fl.1813–1842) (see http://pulverer.si.edu/node/663/title/2).
Regarding the curious
image of the goat, Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery offers the following insights:
“… a goat-like creature
with three eyes looking out of its side, the suggestion of four more eyes on
the front of its face and two pairs of horns, one at the top of its head and
the other coming out of its back. It is posed in a very animalistic position,
as if it was grazing but without a background to place it in context. The style
speaks to Hokusai's fascination with the grotesque, and his impressive
imagination. His use of fine lines depicts the detail of the fur along the back,
hoofs and tail. Hokusai was able to take a familiar animal, the goat, and turn
it into something supernatural and fantasized” (https://web-kiosk.scrippscollege.edu/objects-1/info/20397).
Ruth Chandler
Williamson Gallery also offers the following background information about the
volume in which these prints feature:
“Volume II from Hokusai's
set of Manga, intended as primers for aspiring artists. In this series of 15
volumes, designed from around 1813 through his final years, Hokusai produced a
veritable pictorial encyclopedia of Far Eastern life and legend. The series was
originally intended as a set of copybooks for art students but soon made the
artist's name known throughout Japan and, eventually, throughout the world.
Volume II includes 50 illustrations with black, blue and orange inks. Depicts
people, landscapes, birds, animals, bugs, and plants” (op. cit.).
Two woodblock prints printed
in three colours (black, grey and pale flesh/orange) on a single sheet of washi paper
with centre fold and margins as published (but without the binding edges).
Size: (sheet) 23.9 x 28.9 cm;
(image borderline) 17.5 x 25.1 cm.
Condition: excellent, but
slightly grey impressions showing no sign of wear to the printing plate in
near pristine condition with no tears, holes, abrasions, stains, foxing or
signs of handling.
I am selling this sheet of woodblock
prints featuring a curiously wonderful many-eyed goat and seventeen small
critters (viz. a wasp on its nest, butterflies, a worm, leeches, lizards,
spiders, a ladybird and bugs that I assume are millipedes) by one of the most
famous of the Japanese printmakers, for the total cost of [deleted[ at the time of this listing) including Express Mail (EMS) postage and handling
to anywhere in the world, but not (of course) any import duties/taxes imposed
by some countries.
If you are interested in
purchasing this superb leaf of original woodblock prints by the almost legendary
Hokusai, please contact me (oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com)
and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make the payment easy.
This print has been sold
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