Paperback, colour and black and white illustrations, 144 pages, W225mm x H225mm
Japanese woodblock prints of the Edo period (16151868) were the products
of a highly commercialised and competitive publishing industry. Their
content was inspired by the vibrant popular culture that flourished in
Edo (Tokyo).
At any given time scores of publishers competed for the
services of the leading artists of the day. Publishers and artists
displayed tremendous ingenuity in finding ways to sustain demand for
prints and to to circumvent the restrictions placed upon them by
government censorship.
Japanese woodblock prints have long been
appreciated in the West for their graphic qualities but their content
has not always been fully understood. In recent years, publications by
scholars in Japan, Europe and the United States have made possible a
more subtle appreciation of the imagery encountered in them.
This book
draws upon this recent scholarship to explain how those who first
purchased these prints would have read them. Through stunning new
photography of both well-known and rarely published works in the
collection of the British Museum, including many recent acquisitions,
the author explores how and why such prints were made, providing a
fascinating introduction to a much-loved but littleunderstood art form.