artist

Katsushika Hokusai

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Katsushika Hokusai was a Japanese artist, ukiyo-e artist, and printmaker. Ukiyo-e, meaning “pictures of the floating world,” was a genre of art that flourished in Japan between the 17th and 19th centuries. Ukiyo-e focused on subjects popular amongst the growing urban merchant class, such as courtesans, kabuki actors, sumo wrestlers, and erotica. Hokusai was a prolific ukiyo-e artist, but he ultimately moved away from the genre’s traditional subjects to depict landscapes and images of everyday life.

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Editorial (4)

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Exit Through the Gift Shop

Exit Through the Gift Shop

With products selling anywhere from “10 pence all the way up to £3,500,” the shops at the British Museum boast an offering a…

“The Great Wave” Was Meant to Go Viral

“The Great Wave” Was Meant to Go Viral

In our series Why Is This Famous?, we aim to answer the unanswerable: How does a work actually enter the public consciousnes…

When “Japonisme” Swept Europe

When “Japonisme” Swept Europe

(Check out this article’s corresponding playlist, featuring Impressionist work juxtaposed with their ukiyo-e inspiration.)…

Playlists (19)

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20

Meural Sampler

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14

Wonderful Waterfalls

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Works (52)

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