The Magnificent Erotic World Displayed in Hokusai Prints
The ukiyo-e genius Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) is by far the most widely known of all Japanese artists. There are several factors that contributed to his stardom. One of them was the publication in 1896 of Edmond de Concourt’s intense monography Hokousai (published the same year as Michel Revon’s Etude sur Hoksai‘).
Van Gogh
Another major aspect was off course his ‘pictorial testament’ propagated by means of his ground-breaking ‘One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji‘ (1834-1849). These landscape designs had a enormous impact on the principles of the impressionists, especially Vincent van Gogh. The third factor was Hokusai’s famous Manga, a book series consisting of 13 volumes (plus two posthumous ones) published between 1814 and 1878. The sketches portrayed in this set demonstrate his unlimited creativity and detailed virtuosity.
Hokusai First Prints
Hokusai’s professional life as an artist started in 1778, at the age of eighteen. His first teacher was Shunsho, who gave him the pseudonym Shunro. He specialized in pictures of stage scenes and illustrations of popular novels. Hokusai first shunga prints are very similar to the work of his master, and are unlike the majority of erotic works, signed. At the end of the 18th century he produced a series of small format limited edition calendar prints (egoyomi) aimed at art aficionado’s of the day.
Melancholy
After his master’s death in 1795, Hokusai left and adopted the prestigious Tawaraya studio. At that time the studio was somewhat in decline but he soon developed his own aesthetic ideal. He introduced the elongated human figure and assumed a pictorial language that was both otherworldly and infused with a mood of languorous melancholy.
Fleshier
Between 1810 and 1814 his production of erotic albums intensified and reached a high level of quality. The album ‘Pining for Love (kinoe no komatsu)‘ , published in 1814, reflects Hokusai’s new kind of human figure. This figure had a fuller, more opulent and fleshier form, expressing an energetic, forceful sensuality. It includes one of his most well-known shunga images ‘Dream of the Fisherman’s Wife (aka. Diving Girl Ravished by Octopuses)‘.
The Adonis Plant
Supplementary to, Hokusai also created albums of oban-sized prints such as ‘Models of Loving Couples (Ehon tsuhi no hinagata)‘. The colors in this album are vivid, yet refined and the compositions are often powerful with less obtrusive text than in his smaller books. His most important work of this period was ‘Fukujuso (The Adonis Plant)‘. It was published between 1815 and 1817 in various editions and in this series Hokusai concentrated to a greater extent on imposing figures and huge compositions, filling each sheet all the way to its frame, and sometimes even beyond it. There’s also a recarved edition (with deleted text and with a mica background) of this series called ‘Plovers Above the Waves (Namichidori)‘. A lesser known oban series is ‘Brocades of the East (Azuma nishiki)‘ from 1812.
Last Erotic Book
‘The Jewelled Wig (Tamakazura)‘,published c.1820, is the last shunga album of this period. Hokusai completed a stylistic transition in which the crumpled hemline of the undergarments (his trademark) had almost completely disappeared. In 1821 the master created one last erotic book, ‘The Gods of Intercourse (Manpuku Wagojin)‘ These books tell the tales of Osane and Otsubi and their various walks of life. After this series Hokusai abandoned shunga, a genre to which he had devoted so much energy.
All the above Hokusai prints are available in our gallery!
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