The Arts of Japan

HokusaiOne Hundred Poets

Morse, PeterCassell · 1989

Details

Title
Hokusai
Subtitle
One Hundred Poets
Author
Morse, Peter
Publisher
Cassell
Publication Date
1989
Languages
English,
Japanese
Media
Print
Page Count
222
ISBN 13
9780807612132
Subjects
Woodblock Printing
Ukiyo-e
Edo
Katsushika, Hokusai

Blurb

This lavishly illustrated, oversized (17" x 10") book brings together the last major print series of the celebrated Japanese artist Hokusai (1760-1849) and the Japanese poetry that inspired these beautiful prints. Whether showing semi-nude women abalone divers struggling with their catch while a male crew of shriveled old salts leers from a nearby boat, or the carefree rapture of a leisurely group of men and women observing cherry blossoms at their peak, Hokusai captures, with drama and delicacy, sublime and ridiculous states. The artist's simplicity, though deceptive, is also remarkable: he illustrates a poem about a lovers' seaside tryst with a magnificently imposing yet unadorned sailing vessel, its small window offering a coy glimpse of the fortunate couple inside. Each of the 111 color prints (as well as 41 black-and-white sketches of projected prints apparently never completed) is accompanied by the poem, in Japanese and English, a biographical note on the poet and by Peter Morse's comments on literary and artistic intention and execution.