1953
Kiyoshi Hasegawa initially intended to pursue a diplomatic career but because of poor health opted to become an artist. He started out producing woodblock prints that incorporated the grain of the wood. He made covers for a cultural circle magazine, "Seihai"(later changed to Kamen). In 1916, he helped organize the first print group in Japan, the Japan Prints Club. In 1918, he moved to France where he spent the rest of his life. Hasegawa revived the technique of mezzotint("maniére noire"), which had declined since the invention of photography, expanding the possibilities of this medium with the addition of his own techniques and establishing a solid reputation for his prints in France. His mezzotints focused on landscapes, the entire surface rendered with a cross-hatching technique unique to Hasegawa. In the difficult conditions of postwar France, he chose a familiar tree as his main motif, using it to express the meaning and mystery of everything that exists in this world and the universe to which it is connected. During the same period, the subject matter of his prints shifted from landscape to plants and animals. According to the artist,“In many cases, the small bird is a 'spirit' or myself,the fish is 'matiére', the grass, flowers, and seeds express the mystery of nature, and roses symbolize eternal beauty or truth. The act of playing dice alone is human life, the image of chess shows the struggles of life, and the conical form and universal equations refer to the universal truth of the world.” The arrangement and relationship of still-life objects depicted in Hasegawa's prints all have meanings that arise from his mind and feelings. Hasegawa was also one of the first Japanese artists to do innovative work in the medium of engraving.
1891-1980
Genre | Prints |
---|---|
Material/technique | Engraving (gampi paper) |
Dimensions | 31.3×23.2cm |
Acquisition date | 1987 |
Accession number | 1975-00-7495-000 |
Edition | Ed. 5/50(画面外左下) |
1940
1966
1931
1932
1964
1969
1959
1930
1925
1961
MURAI Masanari
1953
EI-KYU
1953
HAMADA Chimei
1953
OKADA Kenzo
1953
YAMAGUCHI Katsuhiro/OHTSUJI Kiyoji
1953/2002
KITADAI Shozo/OHTSUJI Kiyoji
1953/2003
ONOSATO Toshinobu
1953
HASEGAWA Saburo/OHTSUJI Kiyoji
1953/1980s
HASEGAWA Saburo/OHTSUJI Kiyoji
1953/1980s
KODERA Kenkichi
1953