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Hashiguchi Goyo (1880-1921)
Hashiguchi Goyo (1880-1921)
Hashiguchi Goyo, born in
Kagoshima Pref., the son of a samurai and amateur painter, graduated
in 1905 as the top student in the Western Painting department of the
Tokyo School of Fine Arts. In 1911, he won first prize for an Ukiyo-e
poster design contest sponsored by the Mitsukoshi Department Store. Although
in poor health, he contributed articles on various Ukiyo-e studies to
print magazines. He caught the eye of Watanabe Shozaburo who urged him
to design prints for production by Watanabe. He designed a single print
(Bathing) which Watanabe published in 1915, but decided thereafter to
work on his own. A fine draftsman, many of his excellent figure studies
drawn from live models are extant. Prior to his death he self published
13 prints, for a total of 14. After his death, his nephew Yasuo published
seven new designs with blocks that he had inherited from his uncle.
Hashiguchi
Goyo is one of the most celebrated shin-hanga artists, known for his
stunning works
of beautiful women or bijin-ga. His prints and designs
were lavishly printed, often with the use of fine mica backgrounds. Goyo’s
standards were so high that only prints of superior quality were sold. Due
to Goyo’s exacting standards these prints were published in very small
editions, usually less than eighty. They were expensive to create and were
priced much higher than other shin hanga prints of the time. They are considered
to be the most important bijin-e prints of the period.
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