Yoshio Markino

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Yoshio Markino (1874-1956) was a Japanese artist and author who spent much of his life in London.

He was born at the town of Toyota in Japan, at birth being named Heijiro Makino.

He was curious about and attacted to Western culture. When he was 24 (1893) he took ship at Yokohama, on his way to San Francisco. He enrolled at the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art and stayed in the city for the next four years.

In 1897 he went to London via New York, and decided to stay at the British cpaital where he spent most of his subsequent life and career (1897-1942). He was well received among British writers and artists, and his illustrations of the city published in 1907 in "The Colour of London" got critical acclaim. This was followed by in 1908 by "The Colour of Paris" and "The Colour of Rome" and in 1912 by "The Charm of London".

Among his friends and aquaintances were the writers Arthur Ransome and M. P. Shiel. He is considered to have been the model for the male protagonist in Shiel's book The Yellow Wave (1905) - a Romeo and Juliet-type tragic romance on the background of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.

Between October 18, 1923 to March 9, 1927, he conducted an artistically fruitfull visit to the United States. His watercolour "The Plaza Hotel, New York City" dates from that visit (1924) (see external link).

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