Damn It AllJaded SunshineJust a little bitSprouts in HandsDream TimeFightFamous Places of the East, Sumida River, The Ancient Story of UmewakaFuture Daily Morning RoutineDoraemon: Here We Go!Falling PassageInfinityWoe to WitA Journey to the Waterfalls in All the Provinces: Kiyotaki Kannon Waterfall on the TokaidoPoem by Fujiwara no Yoshitaka:  At a Hot SpringEight Views of Ryukyu: Bamboo Grove at BeisonGeishaUntitledThe Priest HenjoFrom Aten ReignThe Bureau for Paper Money at Tokyo Bridge
Damn It AllJaded SunshineJust a little bitSprouts in HandsDream TimeFightFamous Places of the East, Sumida River, The Ancient Story of UmewakaFuture Daily Morning RoutineDoraemon: Here We Go!Falling PassageInfinityWoe to WitA Journey to the Waterfalls in All the Provinces: Kiyotaki Kannon Waterfall on the TokaidoPoem by Fujiwara no Yoshitaka:  At a Hot SpringEight Views of Ryukyu: Bamboo Grove at BeisonGeishaUntitledThe Priest HenjoFrom Aten ReignThe Bureau for Paper Money at Tokyo Bridge

Literally meaning “Pictures of the Floating World,” ukiyo-e refers to a style of Japanese woodblock print and painting from the Edo period depicting famous theater actors, beautiful courtesans, city life, travel in romantic landscapes, and erotic scenes. The Floating World—as the pleasure districts of Edo (modern-day Tokyo) were called—exemplifies the sensory pleasures of urban life, but also offers a bittersweet reminder of the fleeting nature of worldly delights. It’s commonly said that in Edo Japan, anyone could own a masterpiece ukiyo-e print for about the price of a bowl of noodles. While this claim oversimplifies, it is true that by the 17th century, ukiyo-e printmakers innovated centuries-old woodblock text printing techniques to create colorful picture prints that were distributed widely for popular consumption. Some of the greatest Japanese artists of their time—Utagawa Hiroshige, Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Toyokuni III, and Keisai Eisen among them—became known primarily as woodblock print designers in the ukiyo-e style. In the 19th century, ukiyo-e printmakers also began to focus on landscape, creating series such as Hokusai’s famed Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji (1830–1835). Ukiyo-e also had a profound impact on European artists at that time—its flattened perspective and innovative compositions inspired artists such as Mary Cassatt, Vincent van Gogh, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, as well as the Japonisme movement in art and design.

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