English  Français  Nederlands 

Onchi KÅshirÅ [artist and author] æ©åoe° å­å››éƒŽ - Kanjå æ„Ÿæƒ- Sentiment. 大正7

 1530698402,
1918. Onchi KÅshirÅ [artist and author] æ©åoe° å­å››éƒŽ. KanjÅ æ„Ÿæƒ- Sentiment. 大正7 [1918] . Tokyo. KanjyÅ Shisha æ„Ÿæƒ-詩社 Issue 20; June of 3rd year. 20å·ã€€3å¹´6æoeˆå· 23.5 x 15.5cm magazine with self-wrappers in [original?] glassine. 30 pages with introduction and poetry by Onchi with 12 black and white woodblock prints. Poetry, essays and art descriptions by Onchi and others in Japanese text. KanjÅ æ„Ÿæƒ- Sentiment was a monthly magazine of poetry and art that published approx. 32 issues, beginning in Taisho 5 [1916]. Onchi (1891-1955) and his work need no introduction - he is considered the most important Japanese printmaker of the mid-Century and one of the most innovative and creative of all time. As a leader of the Sosaku Hanga Creative Print movement, he guided the development of many of the dominant figures of post-war art until his premature death in the 1950's. Notable are the woodcuts on page 8 and 9ã€Jyotaini Kanshite 女体ã«é–¢ã—㦠and Jyotaini Tsuite 女体ã«ã¤ã„ã¦, respectively, that experiment with the abstraction of the female form, the beginnings of a theme which Onchi explored throughout his career. This particular issue is also important as he explores the relationship between his lyrical images and the art of woodblock as well as lyricism and modernism in the early 20th Century in two essays. Ref Elizabeth Swinton, The Graphic Art of Onchi Koshiro, p.99. Only copy of this issue located through research is held in Maebashi Bungakukan (Maebashi City Museum of Literature) å‰æ©‹æ–‡å­¦é¤¨. An extremely ephemeral production.Toned wrappers and light foxing not affecting artwork. .
USD 850.00 [Appr.: EURO 794 | CHF 757.5] Buchzahl 90465

wird angeboten von:


Boston Book Company
705 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, MA 02130, USA Tel.: +1 617 522 21 00 | Fax: +1 617 522 9359
Email: office@rarebook.com
Member of ILAB 




  Dieses Buch bestellen?

Bitte um Informationen

Zurück zu Ihre Suchergeschichte