Hokusai and Hiroshige
Hokusai and Hiroshige
Hokusai and Hiroshige
TEACHER’S WORKSHOP
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
The following material provides a historical and cultural overview of the Edo period, which was marked by a rise
in the merchant class, the decline in the prestige of the upper classes, and the growth of a vibrant urban culture
in Edo. This provides a context in which to understand how Japanese woodblock prints became a popular art
form for the common people, along with the development of a new genre of landscape prints. Teachers are
recommended to review this material before showing slides to their students.
I. Introduction........................................................................................................... 2
Portions of the following text were taken from “Hokusai and Hiroshige” exhibition catalog by Yoko Woodson and “Yokohama Prints”
teacher workshop packet by Molly Schardt.
INTRODUCTION
From roughly 1470 to 1615, Japan was plagued by continuous civil war and internal
strife as regional warlords fought for control of the country. This extended period of
constant warring devastated the countryside and brought about unprecedented pain
and suffering. In 1615, Japan was forcibly unified by a powerful warlord and shrewd
politician, Ieyasu Tokugawa. Ieyasu ruled with an iron hand, through a hierarchy
of advisors and vassals and the forced acquiescence of the emperor who lived in the
old capital of Kyoto. Ieyasu established Edo (present-day Tokyo) as his new capital,
transforming this previously sleepy, backwater town into the administrative center of
Japan. It is from this city that the Edo period (1615-1868) derives its name. By the
beginning of the eighteenth century, Edo had a population of one million, making it
the largest metropolis in the world. Edo was home to a literate population with the
money, time, and desire for new art, entertainment, and literature.
After 150 year of civil war, the shogunate was determined to enforce and maintain a
stable society and return the people to traditional values. Fearful of growing foreign
influence and colonialism, the country was sealed off from the outside world in 1639,
and remained so until 1853. Limited contact with Chinese and Dutch traders was
permitted in the remote southern harbor of Nagasaki. All Japanese were forbidden
to travel abroad; even those Japanese living outside the country at the time were cut
off from contact.
The shogunate further extended its iron-fisted control of the people through a rigid
class system with social and economic constraints. The highest class was composed
of the samurai, followed by farmers, craftsmen, and at the lowest level, merchants.
Nobility, Buddhist monks, Shinto priests, and social outcasts (beggars and
prostitutes) were exempt from these classifications. This system reflected the social
values placed on the different segments of society by the shogunate and was based
on the Japanese interpretation of Chinese Confucianism. The structure was purely
hereditary, and the rules of conduct, privileges, and duties of each class were strictly
enforced.
Samurai
Japan was ruled by the shogun (supreme military dictator), while the emperor
remained a figurehead leader in Kyoto. Sworn to obey the shogun were daimyo
(feudal lords deriving from the samurai), who in turn were supported by their
samurai (retainers) of varying ranks.
To prevent the daimyo from becoming powerful enough to threaten civil war, Ieyasu
enforced a system of alternate attendance (sankin kotei), which required the feudal
lords to maintain three extravagant residences in Edo, as well as similar homes in
their fiefs. Daimyo had to alternate every year between their provincial residence
and their Edo homes. Wives and children, however, remained in Edo at all times,
Ironically, despite their poor financial state, the samurai for the most part remained
the most privileged class as the landed aristocracy. During this period of peace,
samurai found themselves without the usual duties of war. Many made the
transition from military to civilian leadership by taking positions in the government
bureaucracy. As was expected, they regularly practiced artistic cultivation, such as
the tea ceremony, ikebana (flower arrangement), calligraphy, and poetry. Others
became scholars, artists, or musicians and were supported by their peers. However,
less fortunate samurai, particularly those of a lower level, ended up without socially
sanctioned employment. This was particularly true of the masterless samurai who
lost their patronage when their daimyo dropped from favor and had his estate
confiscated.
Farmers
Farmers were next in social rank, as the producers of rice that was the samurai’s
source of wealth. They were the only citizens who had to pay taxes, which they paid
for in rice. The samurai would raise taxes as much as they dared, achieving a kind of
delicate balance, until some natural disaster led to famine, causing the farmers to riot.
When conditions became unbearable, some of the peasants gave up their birthright
as honorable farmers and joined the ranks of laborers, craftsmen, or merchants.
Periodically, the shogunate would try to force them back onto the land with mixed
success.
Although their lives could be hard, some enterprising farmers could purchase fields
from their destitute neighbors. Some became quite rich, educated themselves and
their children, and like wealthy merchants, at times commissioned art from well-
known schools. The shogunate periodically issued edicts to control consumption
among the farmers and other social classes, yet these attempts did not dissuade them
from striving for a better life.
Craftsmen
Along with merchants, craftsmen maintained the economy of the city and profited
handsomely. Together, the craftsmen and merchants supplied a demand that the
military had for luxurious goods of all kinds (silk, embroidery, porcelain, lacquer,
painting, sculpture, prints, etc.), deemed necessities in the lifestyles and ceremonies of
the upper classes. These two classes were referred to collectively as chonin (literally
“residents of the block” or townspeople).
Edo had a distinct consumer society born of the necessity to support the immense
numbers of military living there. Although the daimyos’ provinces supplied
directly to them, they were nevertheless dependent on local goods and services. The
professions required to build and sustain a new capital were traditionally held by
men, such as artisans, merchants, construction workers, carpenters, tailors, surveyors,
draftsmen, storekeepers, clerks, tatami makers, scholars, and legislators (Matsunosuke,
p. 37). As a result, the city’s population was primarily male. Men outnumbered
women two-to-one. The city’s residential areas were segregated into areas for each of
the four classes.
The Yoshiwara
The Yoshiwara, the licensed pleasure quarter of the city and center of social life,
added to the vibrant culture of Edo. Although there were other pleasure quarters
in every major city, such as Kyoto and Osaka, the Yoshiwara was most famous.
Swinton (1996) likened the pleasure districts more to fantasy theme parks of
romance and adventure, rather than the crude modern-day concept of red-light
districts. A self-contained community, the Yoshiwara was deliberately located away
from the main section of Edo, as a conscious effort by the shogunate to prevent it
from “polluting” the rest of the city. It housed approximately ten thousand people
(Smith, p. 30), and was packed with brothels, Kabuki theaters, teahouses, restaurants,
bathhouses, and puppet shows. People of all classes walked the streets, including
samurai, street performers, beggars, gamblers, sumo wrestlers, courtesans, merchants,
artisans, and travelers who had come from far away to visit this tourist destination.
Whereas the rest of Edo was segregated among the classes, within the Yoshiwara,
Japanese of all classes could socialize more or less as equals.
Ukiyo-e (literally “pictures of the floating world”) is the name given to paintings and
prints primarily depicting the transitory world of the Yoshiwara. It is a composite
term of uki (floating), yo (world), and e (pictures). Originally, ukiyo was a Buddhist
term to express the impermanence of human life. During the Edo period, however,
ukiyo came to refer to the sensual and hedonistic pleasures of people, who embraced
them all the more for their ever-changing nature. This concept was expressed in Asai
Ryoi, “Tales of the Floating World” as quoted in Baker (p. 186):
“Living only for the moment, turning our full attention to the
pleasures of the moon, sun, the cherry blossoms and the maple leaves,
singing songs, drinking wine, and diverting ourselves just in floating,
floating, caring not a whit for the pauperism staring us in the face,
refusing to be disheartened, like a gourd floating along with the river
current: this is what we call the floating world.”
Woodblock printing came to Japan during the eighth century and became the
primary method of printing from the eleventh to the nineteenth centuries. As in
China, the technology was first used to duplicate Buddhist texts and then later,
books of Chinese origin. It was not until the 1500s that books originally in Japanese
began to be printed. Black and white illustrations were a part of these early texts, to
which color was sometimes added by hand, but eventually colored prints developed
around 1765 as printing techniques improved. The first colored prints in Japan were
original works of art, which soon led to the publishing of the popular, single-sheet
ukiyo-e.
The single-sheet prints were mass produced for consumption by the commoner
and sold by street vendors and shopkeepers for pennies. As their lives became
more comfortable, and they could afford to enjoy more activities, ukiyo-e became
the most sought-after art form among the commoners. In attempts to control the
conspicuous consumption of the merchant class, the government periodically issued
edicts restricting the sizes, themes, and materials of ukiyo-e, and eventually censored
the prints after 1799, to ensure subject matters were not immoral or politically
subversive.
Landscapes
Landscapes, a minor genre since the early period of ukiyo-e, began to appear as an
independent subject in prints during the late 1820s for various reasons. In 1800,
aiming at reducing the influence of the merchant class, the government issued
measures to limit the production of Kabuki prints. They also restricted the use of
colors in prints, and banned the use of expensive mica to create a shiny background
in portraits of courtesans and actors. These restrictions, coupled with improved
printing techniques that allowed for superior gradations of color and subtle
expressions in sky, light, water, and snow, resulted in the rise of landscape prints.
With increased travel during the Edo period, landscape ukiyo-e also served as
personal mementos and intimate souvenirs of places people had already seen or
would someday visit. Hokusai and Hiroshige are primarily known as landscape
artists who brought this genre to its highpoint during the 1830s.
Meisho-e
Meisho (literally “place with a name”) referred to a place that had poetic, literary,
spiritual, or historic connotations, especially those relating to the seasons. In the
concept of meisho, it was the romantic spirit or mood of the place, rather than the
place itself that was most important in art. Meisho-e (“pictures of famous places”)
included not only well-known landscapes, but also scenic sights in cities, bridges,
rivers, waterfalls, Mount Fuji, etc. These prints were purchased by travelers as
souvenirs or to satisfy their curiosity of places not yet seen.
In addition, the introduction of a new blue pigment from Germany, called Prussian
blue, provided Japanese artists with a lustrous dye that gave the illusion of depth and
spaciousness in their landscapes. By combining Western and Japanese styles, ukiyo-e
artists created a hybrid style that realistically portrayed landscape features.
In order that ukiyo-e prints feature the latest favorites of a discerning public, prints
had to be published very quickly. Publication was a complex process involving the
collaboration of several people: publisher, artist, carver, and printer. Publishers were
the key figures in the printing process from start to finish: assessing the market,
hiring the designer, supervising production, and arranging for distribution. It was
the publisher’s seal that appeared on each print, with the artist’s signature. The only
other person who had a say in production was the government censor, who checked
all designs to make sure they were neither immoral nor politically subversive.
After a publisher had decided upon the subject matter for a print or series of
prints, he commissioned an artist to create the design. The artist would draw his
composition in black ink on a thin sheet of paper. Although the artist might include
notes and directions on his drawing, he was not involved in the printing process.
This could sometimes lead to the artist’s dissatisfaction with the finished product,
due to unexpected changes made by the printer or engraver. Hokusai apparently
complained during the production of his volume of sketches (Hokusai Manga) that
the engraver had added facial details and carved noses too much like those found in
the prints of his contemporary, Utagawa Toyokuni (Williams, p. 3).
The artist’s drawing was then sent to the printer’s workshop, where it was pasted face
down on a block of smooth cherrywood. Oil was sometimes applied to the paper to
make the outlines more visible. The paper was then pulled away (Japanese paper was
very strong and fibrous) to leave a thin layer behind with the design outlines showing
through.
About 200 prints (the usual edition of any particular design) could be made in
one day. Sometimes, blocks kept in storage would be reprinted, but as the wood
wore down, the line quality gradually deteriorated. However, as many as 8,000
prints could be made from a block before cutting a new one. The soft, water-
soluble colors, which were until the late nineteenth century derived from plant and
mineral sources, were applied in relatively large flat areas bordered by the fine line
drawing of the design. Even when artists borrowed shading techniques from the
West, the woodblock process still created an essentially flat image, one of the special
characteristics of Japanese prints.
As a teenager, Hokusai was a delivery boy for a booklending shop and also
apprenticed to a woodblock carver. At the age of eighteen, Hokusai began serious
training in print design under Katsukawa Shunsho (1726-1792), an eminent designer
in Kabuki actor and theater prints. Under the name Shunsho, Hokusai illustrated
storybooks and created prints depicting beautiful women. After his teacher’s death in
1793, Hokusai entered a period of wandering, searching restlessly for different styles
and themes in association with artists outside the Katsukawa School.
An eccentric artist, Hokusai changed his artistic name at least twenty times. In 1797,
the artist began using the name Hokusai, the best known to us. Frequently, he
combined it with others, creating a variety of names, such as Sori arateme Hokusai
(“Hokusai changed from Sori”), Hokusai Sori, or Gakyojin Hokusai (“A Man Mad
about Art, Hokusai”).
Around 1804, Hokusai studied Western styles based on Dutch copperplate prints.
In his new work influenced by the Dutch prints, Hokusai gave an illusion of
space and landscape elements using light and dark shadows and signed his name
horizontally in imitation of Western artists.
The year 1831 marked the beginning of Hokusai’s most productive period while he
was in his seventies. He published his monumental landscape series, Thirty-six View
of Mount Fuji. Although the title indicates thirty-six, forty-six prints were made.
Because of their popularity, the publisher added ten prints to the series. The series
probably took a few years to complete.
Between 1833-34, three other major series were published: A Tour of Japanese
Waterfalls, Imagery of the Poets, and Rare Views of Famous Bridges in All Provinces.
Another important publication was One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji. From 1836
to 1845, Hokusai diligently worked on book illustrations and various commissioned
works.
Hokusai was a good teacher, producing 111 students of the Katsushika School. He
was a disciplined worker who rose early in the morning, painting and drawing until
evening. Despite his prolific work and relative fame, Hokusai constantly battled
poverty. Unlike masters of the prestigious painting schools, ukiyo-e artists were
poorly paid. Hokusai’s frequent name changes may have resulted from the need to
sell his old names to his students, a common practice among artists. His multiple
changes in residence could also have been due to poverty. Hokusai died on May 10,
Toyohiro’s interest in landscape prints, a minor genre at the time, influenced his
young apprentice. For some years, Hiroshige worked on book illustrations, designs
of beauties, and inexpensive types of beauty prints. In 1822, at age twenty-seven,
Hiroshige retired from his position as a fire warden and became a full-time artist. It
is difficult to explain why Hiroshige, with his samurai status (albeit one of low rank),
wanted to become an ukiyo-e artist. The financial state of the lower-ranking samurai
had become increasingly difficult, and when young Hiroshige started training with
Toyohiro, he might have wished to earn extra income for his household.
Hiroshige’s first landscapes were ten prints of Famous Places in the Eastern Capital,
published in 1825. Here, he boldly adopted Western conventions to create a new
hybrid style. His work at this time already revealed his particular interest in changes
in nature due to weather, time, and the seasons.
In 1832, Hiroshige reportedly traveled the Tokaido Road to Kyoto on official
business; he was accompanying an entourage of the shogun’s officials with their
annual gift of horses to the emperor in Kyoto. The Japanese traditionally celebrated
the first day of the eighth lunar month by exchanging gifts. The trip must have
been an eye-opening experience for Hiroshige, a city person who had heard so much
about the Tokaido Road. Returning to Edo, Hiroshige immediately launched on
his monumental project of publishing the Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido Road.
It was scarcely a year since Hokusai had published his famous Thirty-six Views of
Mount Fuji, of which Hiroshige was undoubtedly aware.
In 1835, Hiroshige was involved in publishing the Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso
Road, comprising seventy prints. The project began as a collaboration with another
After 150 years of constant civil war, the government tried to maintain a stable
society by enforcing a strict class system. During the Edo period (1615-1868),
Japanese were born into certain classes, in which they remained their entire lives.
Samurai
The samurai made up the majority of the military that ruled the country. Although
there was an emperor, the country was ruled by a military dictator called the shogun.
The shogun was served by daimyo (feudal lords who were higher-ranking samurai),
who in turn were served by other samurai.
Higher ranking samurai (daimyo) owned land, which was their source of income.
They rented their fields to farmers who paid for rent in rice. Rice was the major
form of wealth in Japan at this time.
The lives of the samurai were always controlled. Strict rules governed what vehicles
they used, the color and style of their clothing, even the furnishings of their homes.
In order to prevent civil war and rebellion, the shogun required daimyo to maintain
extravagant homes in their provinces and in Edo, and to travel constantly in lavish
processions between them every year. This travel impoverished the samurai, and
made sure they could be closely watched by the shogun when they lived in Edo
during the year.
Along with their service to the shogun and duties of war, samurai were expected to be
well-versed in the arts. Samurai regularly practiced the tea ceremony, ikebana (flower
arrangement), calligraphy, writing poetry. Knowledge and practice of the arts was
considered necessary for members of this refined aristocratic class.
Farmers were next in social rank behind the samurai. They were the producers of
rice, which was the basis of the Japanese economy. They were the only citizens who
had to pay taxes, since their income was the only type among the common people
considered “honorable” enough to tax.
With heavy taxes, farmers’ lives were very difficult. At times, they would riot and
protest, and the government would try to force them back onto their land. Some
destitute peasants gave up their birthright as honorable farmers to become laborers,
craftsmen, or merchants. Yet, some ambitious farmers were able to purchase fields
from their poorer neighbors. Some became quite rich, educated themselves and their
children, and became patrons of the arts. At times, the government issued laws to
control the power of the farmers and other social classes, yet these attempts did not
stop them from striving for a better life.
How did Edo Japan’s attitude towards taxation differ from that of the United States
government today?
Craftsmen made up the third class in society, and included such people as carpenters,
tailors, tatami mat makers, construction workers, woodblock artists, etc. Because
they produced actual goods that were of value to people, they were not the lowest
of the social classes. Yet, both merchants and craftsmen supplied a demand of
the samurai for luxurious goods of all kinds (silk, embroidery, porcelain, lacquer,
painting, sculpture, prints, etc.), necessities in the lifestyles and ceremonies of the
upper classes. Together, they were called chonin (literally “residents of the block” or
townspeople).
Because they did not produce anything of value for society, the merchants were at
the bottom of the social ladder. They nevertheless accumulated great wealth that
surpassed that of the military, and at times merchants lent money to samurai. Some
merchants gained the power and influence to become art patrons and could afford
luxuries and entertainment. For those who could afford it, merchants spent much of
their money on Kabuki theater, restaurants, clothing, and sumo tournaments. Strict
laws, however, prevented them from openly displaying their wealth. For instance,
the government periodically issued edicts restricting their literature and art, and even
specified clothing that could not be worn by them.
Towards the end of the Edo period, a blurring of class lines gradually developed.
People switched roles, for instance samurai borrowed money from the lower classes,
merchants could sometimes buy themselves the status as a samurai, and farmers
gave up their status to become merchants. By the 1850s, there was widespread
dissatisfaction at all levels of society. Farmers were overworked, the samurai were
poor, the imperial family was alienated, and the merchant class were repressed. At
the end of the Edo period, the Japanese wanted an end to feudalism, which led to the
restoration of the Meiji emperor in 1868.
All photographs are taken in a late nineteenth century or early twentieth century studio setting.
Library Collection, Asian Art Museum.
Title of Print:
“Yoshida on the Tokaido Road”
Title of Series:
“Thirty-six
Views of Mount
Fuji” Prints
were often part
of a series, which
people would
collect over time.
Occasionally, a
series would be
continued with
further editions of
prints, depending
on its popularity.
Artist’s
Signature:
Hokusai
Publisher’s Seal:
The publisher was the most important person in the printing process. He decided on which designs to produce,
hired the people for production, and marketed the prints. The artist would often incorporate the publisher’s
name in very clever ways in his design, as you see here.
Artist’s
Signature:
Hiroshige
Censor’s Seal:
After 1799,
government
censors had to
approve each print
before production,
to ensure designs
Publisher’s
were not immoral
Surname
or subversive. A
censor’s seal was
usually round or
oval.
Publisher’s Seal:
The publisher was the most important person in the printing process. He decided on which designs to produce,
hired the people for production, and marketed the prints. The artist would often incorporate the publisher’s
name in very clever ways in his design, as you see here.