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A great wave rises in the ocean. Three small wooden boats float below it. There are people in these boats, but we cannot see many of them. The ocean waves are so high these block the sailors from being seen. The sailors we can see hold on for their lives. Far past the sailors, a mountain rises. There is snow at its top. The mountain is the same color as the waves. It even looks as if it is one of them, but it is solid, unmoving.
This is a description of a famous painting. It is called the Great Wave off Kanagawa by Katsushika Hokusai. Great Wave is an excellent example of a Japanese art style called ukiyoa. This name translates to pictures of the floating world. These pictures are a style of printed art. Today's Spotlight is on the floating world of Japanese printmaking.
Ukiyoa is a unique style of art from Japan. Japanese artists created its images through a method called woodblock printing. To create a woodblock print, an artist would first paint an image. Another person would cut the image into a piece of wood. Then they would cover the image in paint. They would place paper on top of the wood, then they would press down. This would copy the image from the wood to the paper. It was a low cost way to create many versions of a single image.
Japan was not the only country to use woodblock printing. Many other cultures also used this kind of printing, but the conditions that created ukiyoa were special. What historians today called ukiyoa began during Japan's Edo Period. This was a period of time between sixteen oh three and eighteen sixty eight. During this period, strong military leaders called shoguns ruled Japan.
These rulers stopped foreigners from entering the country. People from other countries could not trade with Japan and Japanese these people could not leave their country. The Edo period was a time with few wars, and many people made their way to the Japanese capital. The name of the capital was Edo.
In its time, Edo became the most populated city in the world. By seventeen hundred, one million people lived in Edo. Traders or merchants who lived there became wealthy. Some became so wealthy that they did not need to work. They spent their time in the Edo entertainment district. These were areas filled with theaters, places to eat, and places to buy sex. People from Edo called these areas ukiyo. It
meant the floating world. Asiriyoi was a Japanese writer who lived during the Edo period, He wrote about these places in his book Tales from the Floating World.
Living only for the present, enjoying the moon, the snow, the flowering trees and the leaves, singing songs, drinking alcohol, enjoying yourself, just floating and concerned by thoughts of poverty, care free, like a vegetable carried along with the river current. That is what we call ukiyo.
These wealthy traders wanted art to make their homes beautiful, but they did not want traditional Japanese art. They wanted art that looked like their lives. They wanted art that reminded them of the Ukiyo. Artists began to meet this demand. At first, these artists painted views of the Ukiyo, but they soon found printing much easier. They could make hundreds of copies of the same picture, and they could sell these prints at a price most traders could pay.
Hishikawa Moronobu was one of the first artists of Ukiyoa. Moronobu's style was special and the subjects of his prints were different. Before artists often painted the lives of nobles and warriors, but Moronobu's work showed real life in the entertainment districts. He painted beautiful women playing instruments. His woodcuts showed actors from kabuki theater performances. These prints showed sumo wrestlers, sex workers, and tea house mistresses. But Moronobu did not
make his princes realistic. The prince did not look like a photograph. These showed a special style.
Most other Ukyoe artists followed Moronobu's example. They printed views from life and from history, but they also improved on his method. One of the most important improvements was the use of line. Line is one of the basic elements of art. It is the part that gives a piece of art its shape. The line in Maronubu's art often curved or flowed. Later artists expanded this element. They filled their prints with graceful curving lines.
Soon Ukiyowa began to change. More people became interested in this form of art, and new masters of the art form appeared. Katsushika hoku Sai was one of these masters. Hoku Sai's work was similar to Moronobu's in some ways, but printers of his period used more colors. These prints were also more detailed. Hokusai himself studied art from Europe and the Americas. He used many of their methods in his work. He played with light and darkness. These methods made his art seem more real.
Hokusai also showed different subjects and earlier printers. His Great Wave is an excellent example. Before Houkusai u ki yoe, artists mostly created work about the ukio, but Hokusai's work showed the beauty of nature. He painted work showing mountains, animals, and the sea. Hokusai's work was so popular that other painters followed his example.
Ukiyowa changed art both in and out of Japan. It influenced many artists in the Western world. Artists such as Vincent van Go and Claude Monet took inspiration from what they saw French artist en Ri de delous La Trek's posters show this Japanese style. These artists contributed to Art Nouveau, an artistic movement it started in France. Its painters took Ukiyoa's bent lines, but they used these lines in a new way.
By eighteen ninety, uki Yoi's popularity had decreased in Japan. The country permitted trade with other countries in eighteen sixty eight. This brought new technology and new ideas. These ideas grew popular. Many believed that uki yoi was old fashioned. People still produced uki yoi, but it was no longer a part of the larger culture.
But Ukiyoa's influence is still strong, its style changed. Western art prints like the Great Wave off Kanagawa still inspire artists, and in some places people still learn the traditional way. Nakayama Maiguri is the director of the Adachi Institute for woodblock Prints. This organization still uses ukioa methods, it also creates new woodblock art. Nakayama spoke to nipon dot com about the future of ukiyoa.
We are trying to show people how ukiyoe can make our lives better. We produce woodcut prints from works by present artists. This is one important way of making Ukiyoe seem more contemporary in the twenty first century.
What is your favorite style of art? How would you describe it? You can leave a comment at www dot Spotlight English dot com. You can also find us on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and x You can also get our programs delivered directly to your Android or Apple device through our free official Spotlight English app.
The writer of this program was Dan Christman. The producer was Mitchyosaki. The voices you heard were from the United Kingdom and the United States. All quotes were adapted for this program and voiced by Spotlight. This program is called Images of the Floating World.
We hope you can join us again for the next Spotlight program. Goodbye,
