Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#onchikoshiro
Advertisement · 728 × 90
Post image

Onchi Koshiro, 1927.

#printmaking #woodblockprint #1920s #cats #OnchiKoshiro

20 7 0 0
Preview
G-Culture Noticias, un recorrido por las novedades de la escena artística y cultural del mundo. Episodio 89 - Martes enero 13, 2026. | G-Culture Noticias Inicia la Celebración del Yennayer 2976, Año Nuevo Amazigh, Arranca la Mostra de Dança Internacional en Sao Paulo, Concluye Winter Jazzfest y Exposición de William Eggleston se Alista en NY.

G-Culture #Noticias #podcast , un recorrido por las novedades de la escena artística y cultural del mundo.

Episodio 89 - Martes enero 13, 2026. 👇 shows.acast.com/g-culture/ep...

#Yennayer #MostradeDançaInternacional #OnchiKoshiro #SketchbookClub #WinterJazzFest #WilliamEggleston

0 0 0 0
Post image

🏵️ Join @japaneseartsoc this Tuesday, at 5pm EST for a live Zoom webinar on the groundbreaking prints of Onchi Kōshirō (1891–1955), leader of the Creative Prints (sōsaku hanga) movement. Be sure to sign up today!

➡️ www.japaneseartsoc.org/calendar/

#japaneseartsoc #OnchiKoshiro #japaneseart

0 0 0 0
Kōshirō Onchi, born in Tokyo, was a Japanese print-maker. He was the father of the sōsaku-hanga movement in twentieth century Japan, and a photographer. His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.
Onchi Kōshirō is emblematic of the midcentury sōsaku hanga, or creative print, movement in Japan as one of its major artists and its main advocate.
Artists of this self-defined group proudly conceived, carved, and printed their own works. They did not feel that the traditional ukiyo-e method, in which the tasks of designing, carving, and printing were separated among specialists, allowed for true creative expression. Onchi, who often cited Kandinsky and Munch as his major influences, was decidedly Western-oriented in terms of style. He explained that printmaking is the best way to create abstract art, since it is the most removed from the artist’s hand or brush and requires precision and forethought in construction and composition. In addition to wood, Onchi used wax paper, cardboard, string, and other found materials as his printing blocks.
It was common for Onchi to produce very few prints—often only a single edition of each of the abstract works that were the major output of his last 10 years. Very few of his works remain in private hands, and in terms of museums, the Art Institute of Chicago is one of only a few with significant holdings, thanks to gifts from key donors. Oliver Statler, an army employee in Japan during the Occupation, was a great friend of Onchi’s and proponent of the sōsaku hanga movement. He gave a large portion of his personal collection to the Art Institute and was also the intermediary in sales of his works to local collectors. In turn, these collectors gave their Japanese modern prints to the museum, including many of the works on display in this exhibition.

Kōshirō Onchi, born in Tokyo, was a Japanese print-maker. He was the father of the sōsaku-hanga movement in twentieth century Japan, and a photographer. His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics. Onchi Kōshirō is emblematic of the midcentury sōsaku hanga, or creative print, movement in Japan as one of its major artists and its main advocate. Artists of this self-defined group proudly conceived, carved, and printed their own works. They did not feel that the traditional ukiyo-e method, in which the tasks of designing, carving, and printing were separated among specialists, allowed for true creative expression. Onchi, who often cited Kandinsky and Munch as his major influences, was decidedly Western-oriented in terms of style. He explained that printmaking is the best way to create abstract art, since it is the most removed from the artist’s hand or brush and requires precision and forethought in construction and composition. In addition to wood, Onchi used wax paper, cardboard, string, and other found materials as his printing blocks. It was common for Onchi to produce very few prints—often only a single edition of each of the abstract works that were the major output of his last 10 years. Very few of his works remain in private hands, and in terms of museums, the Art Institute of Chicago is one of only a few with significant holdings, thanks to gifts from key donors. Oliver Statler, an army employee in Japan during the Occupation, was a great friend of Onchi’s and proponent of the sōsaku hanga movement. He gave a large portion of his personal collection to the Art Institute and was also the intermediary in sales of his works to local collectors. In turn, these collectors gave their Japanese modern prints to the museum, including many of the works on display in this exhibition.

Fish, from Milestones of the Season (Shibunshū “Kisetsu-hyō”)
color woodblock print
1935
Onchi Kōshirō
Japanese, 1891-1955

#onchikoshiro #sosakuhanga #Japan #printmaking #woodblock #art #japaneseart #midcenturymodern #japanesemodernism #20thcenturyart

17 2 1 0