Doraemon – Author –
Doraemon
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Japanese Culture
The Sumida River in Tokyo: Hokusai’s Neighborhood and Its Art History
Hokusai spent most of his life in the Sumida area of Edo. The river, its bridges, its festivals, and its floods appear throughout his work. A history of art's most storied waterway. -
Japanese Artists
Utamaro and the Beauty of Women: Japan’s Master of the Female Portrait
Kitagawa Utamaro was the greatest painter of bijin — beautiful women — in Japanese art history. His revolutionary close-up portraits transformed the genre and influenced Western art. -
Japanese Artists
Sharaku: The Mysterious Actor-Portrait Artist Who Appeared and Vanished
He appeared in 1794, produced 140 intensely psychological actor portraits in 10 months, and then completely disappeared. The greatest mystery in ukiyo-e history. -
Japanese Culture
Kimono Patterns in Ukiyo-e: Fashion as Art in Edo-Period Japan
The detailed fabric patterns in ukiyo-e prints are some of the most technically sophisticated elements in the art form. They also document Edo fashion in extraordinary detail. -
Japanese Culture
The Art of Bonsai: Japan’s Living Sculpture and Its Visual Traditions
Bonsai is one of Japan's most distinctive art forms — a living sculpture developed over centuries. Its aesthetic principles connect directly to the same visual culture as ukiyo-e. -
Japanese Culture
Edo Tokyo: The City That Built Hokusai
Hokusai was born, lived, and died in Edo. The city he knew was one of the world's largest — and its streets, bridges, rivers, and markets appear throughout his work. -
Buying Guide
How to Buy Japanese Woodblock Prints: A Collector’s Beginner Guide
Where to buy, what to look for, how to spot reproductions, and what prices to expect. A practical guide for first-time collectors of ukiyo-e. -
Ukiyo-e & Technique
Japonisme: How Japanese Art Changed European Painting Forever
Monet, Van Gogh, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec — all were transformed by Japanese woodblock prints. This is the story of how ukiyo-e sparked a revolution in Western art. -
Mount Fuji
Mount Fuji Pilgrimage: The Religious Journey That Shaped Japan’s Sacred Mountain
Hundreds of thousands of Edo citizens belonged to Fuji-ko pilgrimage societies. The religious journey shaped how Japan saw its sacred mountain — and how artists depicted it. -
Ukiyo-e & Technique
Japanese Paper (Washi): The Material That Made Ukiyo-e Possible
Ukiyo-e prints were made possible by washi — Japanese handmade paper with properties that no Western paper could match. The history of the material that carried all those masterworks.