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Harnisch and Company

72 Japanese Woodblock Print Amsterdam inthe Morning Fumio Kitaoka 1918-2007 (SeF

72 Japanese Woodblock Print Amsterdam inthe Morning Fumio Kitaoka 1918-2007 (SeF

Regular price $979.00 USD
Regular price $0.00 USD Sale price $979.00 USD
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Aloha,

Up for sale from a recent estate in Honolulu Hawaii this 1972 Japanese limited edition 22/100 color woodblock print on heavy paper that is titled "Amsterdam in the morning" depicting Amsterdam's famous gables in morning light by trees and was created by the well known artist Fumio Kitaoka (1918-2007). The condition is described above - for more information please check the photos. The shipping rate is for tube shipping.

Measurements:

Image 15 ⅝ inches x 21 ⅜ inches

Sheet 18 ⅞ inches x 25 inches

More about the artist:

Born in Tokyo in 1918, Kitaoka studied oil painting with Fujishima Takeji at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts from 1936 to 1941. In his third and fourth years, he was instructed in woodblock printing by Un'ichi Hiratsuka. Following his graduation he worked as an art teacher in Tokyo, until 1945, when he was sent to occupied Manchuria to work with the Japanese government's Northeast Asia Culture Development Society. While in Manchuria, he became interested in contemporary social-realist Chinese monochrome prints, and was inspired to create his 1947 print series Sōkokue no tabi ("Repatriation"), chronicling his difficult journey home to Japan.[1]


After his return, he began to attend evening classes with the influential Sōsaku-hanga artist Kōshirō Onchi, and joined his group, the First Thursday Society (一木会, Ichimokukai). The Sōsaku-hanga movement advocated artistic creation as originating from the self, and promoted expressing emotions through woodblock print art. At this time, Kitaoka virtually gave up oil painting to focus on woodblock printing, contributing prints to the First Thursday Society's publication in 1947 and 1948, and his 1949 print series The Face of Tokyo, five portfolios of prints documenting post-war Japan.[1]


In 1955, he moved to Paris to study wood engraving at the École des Beaux Arts, and then to the United States in 1964-5 to teach at the Minneapolis School of Art, and the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He served as Director of the Japanese Artists Association, and was named an honorary member of the Japan Print Association.[2] Kitaoka died on April 23, 2007, of pneumonia.[3]
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