The Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji by Hokusai - 1966
$100.00
By creating the landscape print, Hokusai breathed new life into the art. He became one of the greatest innovators of that field. Hokusai and Hiroshige are ranked among Japan's gifted and certainly most popular artists, and both made their marks with sets of prints depicting the Japanese landscape. Hokusai chose Mount Fuji as his theme, and Hiroshige chose the famous Tokaido. The volume reproducing this beautiful sets of woodblock prints comprise the highest achievement of the art of ukiyo-e.
Oblong brown cloth with black lettering. White and color-illustrated dust jacket. [114] pp. 46 color plates. 18 pages of text (essay) in English and Japanese (English adaptation by Charles S. Terry). Followed by 46 plates with descriptions in English and Japanese. VG/VG. Dust jacket is in great shape, and protected with a mylar sleeve. Not price clipped. No interior marks or foxing. Images are bright and stunning.
By creating the landscape print, Hokusai breathed new life into the art. He became one of the greatest innovators of that field. Hokusai and Hiroshige are ranked among Japan's gifted and certainly most popular artists, and both made their marks with sets of prints depicting the Japanese landscape. Hokusai chose Mount Fuji as his theme, and Hiroshige chose the famous Tokaido. The volume reproducing this beautiful sets of woodblock prints comprise the highest achievement of the art of ukiyo-e.
Oblong brown cloth with black lettering. White and color-illustrated dust jacket. [114] pp. 46 color plates. 18 pages of text (essay) in English and Japanese (English adaptation by Charles S. Terry). Followed by 46 plates with descriptions in English and Japanese. VG/VG. Dust jacket is in great shape, and protected with a mylar sleeve. Not price clipped. No interior marks or foxing. Images are bright and stunning.
By creating the landscape print, Hokusai breathed new life into the art. He became one of the greatest innovators of that field. Hokusai and Hiroshige are ranked among Japan's gifted and certainly most popular artists, and both made their marks with sets of prints depicting the Japanese landscape. Hokusai chose Mount Fuji as his theme, and Hiroshige chose the famous Tokaido. The volume reproducing this beautiful sets of woodblock prints comprise the highest achievement of the art of ukiyo-e.
Oblong brown cloth with black lettering. White and color-illustrated dust jacket. [114] pp. 46 color plates. 18 pages of text (essay) in English and Japanese (English adaptation by Charles S. Terry). Followed by 46 plates with descriptions in English and Japanese. VG/VG. Dust jacket is in great shape, and protected with a mylar sleeve. Not price clipped. No interior marks or foxing. Images are bright and stunning.