Book Description
Katsushika Hokusai (1769-1849) was one of the greatest of the Japanese printmakers, painters and book illustrators. This richly illustrated monograph provides an overview of the master's life and works. Comprising introductory essays, seven chapters embracing Hokusai's entire career and some 700 illustrations, it presents and analyses a large selection of Hokusai's finest works in all media, covering his whole career and giving a scholarly and up-to-date interpretation of the artist and his significance. Gian Carlo Calza is Professor of East Asian Art History at the University of Ca' Foscari, Venice, and Director of the International Hokusai Research Centre in Milan. A distinguished authority on Hokusai and Japanese art, he has published many books, exhibition catalogues and articles on Hokusai, and is currently preparing a catalogue raisonnÈ of Hokusai's paintings. In addition to Calza's eight introductory essays and his catalogue of the artist's works, the book includes discussions of various aspects of Hokusai's art by inter-nationally respected authorities in the field, namely Roger S. Keyes, Visiting Professor in the History of Art at Brown University; Matthi Forrer, Curator at the National Museum of Ethnology, Leiden; John M. Rosen-field, Professor Emeritus of East Asian Art at Harvard University; Richard Lane, independent scholar; Asano Shugo, Curator of the Municipal Museum of Art, Chiba; Tsuji Nobuo, Rector of Tama University of Fine Arts, Tokyo; and Kobayashi Tadashi, Director of the Muni-cipal Museum of Art, Chiba, and Professor of East Asian Art History at the University Gakushuin of Tokyo.
Hokusai FROM THE PUBLISHER
Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) was one of the greatest of the Japanese printmakers. painters and book illustrators. This richly illustrated monograph provides a comprehensive overview of the master's life and works, and also analyses his potent influence on Western artists. The core of the book is a series of six chapters, each providing a succinct account of a phase in Hokusai's life followed by a sequence of the finest and most representative works of that period. In addition, seven essays by distinguished Western and Japanese scholars present new research on a range of crucial areas of interest in Hokusai's studies. Finally, a full commentary on each illustration provides detailed technical information and also a revealing analysis of style, colour, composition and motif. With some 700 illustrations, this magnificent scholarly survey is the first publication in English to make such a rich selection of Hokusai's prints, paintings and drawings available to a wide public, revealing his mastery of line and colour to full advantage, and demonstrating the extraordinary range and quality of his achievement. This will become an indispensable book for all scholars and lovers of Japanese art.
SYNOPSIS
This big and beautiful book
presents a comprehensive survey of the work of one of Japanᄑs greatest and most
influential artists, together with a collection of essays that focus on a key
aspects of the masterᄑs career.
The
book opens with an introductory essay by Gian Carlo Calza presenting an overview
of the changing world Hokusai was born into and lived through. This is followed
by a series of essays by distinguished Western and Japanese scholars that
present new research on a range of crucial areas of interest in Hokusai studies.
These provide a context for the core of the book, which forms a retrospective of
Hokusaiᄑs entire career, divided into six chapters. Each chapter gives a
succinct account of a phase in Hokusaiᄑs life, followed by a series of the
finest and most representative works of that period. A seventh chapter explores
Hokusaiᄑs influence on the West. Great care has been taken throughout to choose
for reproduction the best-preserved original prints that reveal Hokusaiᄑs
mastery of line and colour to full advantage. This magnificent pictorial survey
of Hokusaiᄑs prints, paintings and drawings is the first publication in English
to make such a rich selection widely available, and to demonstrate the
extraordinary range and quality of Hokusaiᄑs achievement. The final component of
the book is a detailed scholarly commentary on each illustration that provides
not only the necessary technical information but also a revealing analysis
of style, colour, composition and
motif.
FROM THE CRITICS
The New York Times
… Gian Carlo Calza, director of the International Hokusai Research Center in Milan, has divided up the territory among a remarkable team of experts. Hokusai was as interested in the movement of water as Leonardo. Nobuo Tsuji, the rector of the Tama University of Fine Arts in Tokyo, tells us that there is as much fantasy as observation in Hokusai's surreal late views of waterfalls (some look like a courtesan's combed hair, others like buckwheat noodles), and Richard Lane, an art scholar in Kyoto, walks us through Hokusai's perhaps equally fanciful erotica. Even people who think they know Hokusai's work well will find surprises in this thoughtfully arranged book, which concludes with some striking examples of French art inspired by Hokusai.
Christopher Benfey
Publishers Weekly
In this exhaustive volume, editor Calza smartly resists any attempt to neatly categorize Japanese artist Hokusai (1769-1849)-innovative printmaker, illustrator and painter-and instead catalogs his prodigious output with sumptuous reproductions that provide indisputable evidence of an expansive and innovative talent. Additional studies and sketches reveal Hokusai to be a master craftsman, whether he was composing monumental seascapes or small-scale, complex fabric patterns. Throughout his 70-year career, Hokusai mastered multiple genres and constantly reinvented-and renamed-himself; several scholarly essays explore the astonishing results, from the renowned, magnificent views of Mount Fuji to intricate erotic miniatures to lesser known virtuoso instruction manuals for dance steps. Other chapters examine the artist's response to Western practices, spatial handling in particular, and the subsequent perspectival shifts in his own technique. But influence works two ways-so attests an analysis of Hokusai as one of the main catalysts of the 19th-century Japonisme movement. Calza's comprehensive and lavish monograph will prove an invaluable resource for Hokusai scholars and students of Japanese art in general. 500 full-color and 200 b/w illustrations. (Aug.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.