Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Includes
Tokyo Views, Araki Street in Yotsuya,
Asakusa Kannon Temple, and
Akashi Port, each signed to lower corner Koitsu together with red artist seal shin, framed in identical manner with mat under glass.
Frame dimensions 18 3/4 x 13 in., 18 3/4 x 13 in., 16 x 21 in.,
Koitsu Tsuchiya's prints immortalize Japan's scenic beauty. Through subtle effects of light and shadow, Koitsu endowed his work with an aura of bewitching beauty. Born in 1870 outside Hamamatsu, his given name was Koichi. At the age of 15, he moved to Tokyo to study woodblock printing under Matsuzaki, a carver for the ukiyo-e master Kiyochika Kobayashi. However, he soon left Matsuzaki and became a student of Kiyochika himself. For 19 years, Koitsu lived in Kiyochika’s home, studying the art of Japanese woodblock printing. His first prints were war scenes of the Sino-Japanese war (1894-95). He later worked as a lithographer. In 1931, a chance meeting with the publisher Watanabe changed the course of his career. From that time on, Koitsu Tsuchiya specialized in Japanese landscape prints in the Shin Hanga style.
Very good color, impression and condition; when examined outside of the frame, there is some mat burn, reverse side has toning, tape to the outside edges of the mat, loose within frame except where attached with framer's tape to two areas at top margin.