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Leonard Baskin
"Man of Peace, " Woodcut Print on Rice Paper, 1972

1972

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  • "Custos Morum (Guardian of Morals)" Woodcut Print on Rice Paper, circa 1950
    By Leonard Baskin
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    This woodcut print was created by American artist Leonard Baskin. Baskin is well known for his somewhat grotesque, intricate, surreal drawings and natural subject matter. This print ...
    Category

    1950s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Rice Paper, Woodcut

  • "Dierdre, " Woodcut Print on Rice Paper by Leonard Baskin
    By Leonard Baskin
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    This woodcut print was created by American artist Leonard Baskin. Baskin is well known for his somewhat grotesque, intricate, surreal drawings and natural subject matter. This print ...
    Category

    1950s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Woodcut, Rice Paper

  • "Fiorentino, " Woodcut Print on Rice Paper, circa 1950 by Leonard Baskin
    By Leonard Baskin
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    This woodcut print was created by American artist Leonard Baskin. Baskin is well known for his somewhat grotesque, intricate, surreal drawings and natural subject matter. This print ...
    Category

    1950s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Rice Paper, Woodcut

  • "Self Portrait, " Woodcut Print on Rice Paper by Leonard Baskin, circa 1950
    By Leonard Baskin
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    This woodcut print was created by American artist Leonard Baskin. Baskin is well known for his somewhat grotesque, intricate, surreal drawings and natural subject matter. This print ...
    Category

    1950s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Rice Paper, Woodcut

  • "The Football Player, " Woodcut Print on Rice Paper by Leonard Baskin
    By Leonard Baskin
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    This woodcut print was created by American artist Leonard Baskin. Baskin is well known for his somewhat grotesque, intricate, surreal drawings and natural subject matter. This print ...
    Category

    1950s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Woodcut, Rice Paper

  • VIII from Les Marionnettes
    By Hans Bellmer
    Located in Long Island City, NY
    Artist: Hans Bellmer, German (1902 - 1975) Title: VIII from Les Marionnettes Year: 1969 Medium: Hand-colored Drypoint Etching on Rice Paper, signed in pencil Image Size: 12 x 11 inch...
    Category

    1960s Surrealist Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Gouache, Rice Paper, Drypoint

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    Toyohara Kunichika "Sumo Wrestling Tournament" Woodcut Print on Paper 13.5 x 28.5" Framed size 35 x 20" The print pictures an exciting scene featuring t...
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  • "Gertrude" - Eleven Color Woodcut on Laid Rice Paper 2/45
    Located in Soquel, CA
    "Gertrude" - Eleven Color Woodcut on Laid Rice Paper 2/45 Portrait of a woman by artist, Dan Miller (American, b. 1928) made by layers of color in woodcuts in Miller's signature sty...
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  • "Enshoku Sanju-roku Kasen" (Thirty-six Enchanting Flowers) Woodblock on paper
    By Toyohara Kunichika
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    "Enshoku Sanju-roku Kasen" (Thirty-six Enchanting Flowers) Woodblock on paper Elegant woodblock print by Toyohara Kunuchika (Japanese, 1835-1900). Three women are in talking with each other inside, while a man waits outside holding a bag of some kind. The colors in this piece are rich and saturated, primarily blues, greens, and purple. Mat size: 16"H x 20"W Paper size: 14.75"H x 9.88"W Born in 1835, Toyohara Kunichika grew up in the Kyobashi district of Edo in the midst of merchants and artisans. In 1848, at age 13, he was accepted as an apprentice into the studio of Utagawa Kunisada I...
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  • Women in a Garden
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    Tohoyara Chikanobu "Women in a Garden" Woodcut print on Paper Tryptich totalling 13 x 29" Framed size 20 x 35" The triptych of woodcut prints features a classic scene of a garden in...
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  • "Various Himochi" Wagashi Festival Japanese Woodblock Print by Utagawa Toyokuni
    Located in Soquel, CA
    "Various Himochi" Wagashi Festival Japanese Woodblock Print by Utagawa Toyokuni Rare oversized early 19th century 5-tiered woodblock by Utagawa Ichiyosai Toyokuni, (Japan, 1769-1825), a Japanese lord and wife oversee a sekku festival of food, music, and dolls or toys. '"oshi" is the first day of “Mi (Snake)” in the third month of the lunar calendar. This day, known in modern Japan as the Girls' Festival, originated in China as a form of purification ceremony in which water and drinking peach blossom wine were used to drive away evil. Many kinds of hishi-mochi appear in this picture of hina ningyo (dolls associated with Hinamatsuri, or the Girl’s Day) from Omochae. The custom of eating special dishes at events throughout the year and at milestones in people's lives has existed since ancient times. This paragraph specifically focuses on the annual event called sekku, and life events that involve eating sweets. Joshi is the first day of “Mi (Snake)” in the third month of the lunar calendar. This day, known in modern Japan as the Girls' Festival, originated in China as a form of purification ceremony in which water and drinking peach blossom wine were used to drive away evil. According to the Keiso saijiki, in ancient China, on the third day of the third lunar month, people ate “ryuzetsuhan,” which is the juice of gogyo (Jersey cudweed) mixed with rice flour and nectar. In Japan, there is a record in the Heian period history book Nihon Montoku tenno jitsuroku [839-5] that it was an annual event to make kusamochi using gogyo on the third day of the third month of the lunar calendar, which may have been influenced by Chinese customs. The tradition of eating kusamochi on the third day of the third month of the lunar calendar continued after that. By the Edo period, however, hishimochi had come to be used as a sweet to serve on the third day of the third month. A picture of a hishimochi is included in the Morisada manko , which we mentioned in Part 1. According to it, hishimochi in the Edo period were often three layers of green-white-green instead of the now common red-white-green. However, it is possible to see from our collection that not all hishimochi were made in this way. Omochae published in 1857, is a good example. Omochae is a type of ukiyoe print...
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  • "First Horse Day, 1896" - Chiyoda Palace - Japanese Woodblock by Chikanobu Yoshu
    By Toyohara Chikanobu
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    "First Horse Day, 1896" - Chiyoda Palace - Japanese Woodblock by Chikanobu Yoshu Colorful and expressive court scne by Toyohara Chikanobu,"Yoshu" (Japanese, 1838-1912). This is the r...
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