Shin hanga

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The shin hanga (literally new prints) art movement in early 20th century Japan, during the Taishō and Shōwa periods, revitalized traditional ukiyo-e art which had its roots in the Edo and Meiji periods (17th–19th century). It maintained the traditional ukiyo-e collaborative system [hanmoto system] where the artist, carver, printer, and publisher engaged in division of labor, as opposed to the sōsaku hanga (creative prints) movement that advocated the principles of “self-drawn” [jiga], self-carved” [jikoku] and “self-printed” [jizuri], according to which the artist, with the desire of expressing the self, is the sole creator of art.

The term shin hanga was coined in 1915 by Watanabe Shozaburo (1885-1962), the most important publisher of shin hanga, with the aim of differentiating shin-hanga from the commercial mass art that ukiyo-e had been, though somewhat ironically it was driven largely by exports to the United States. The movement flourished from around 1915 to 1942, though it resumed briefly from 1946 through the 1950s. Inspired by European Impressionism, the artists incorporated Western elements such as the effects of light and the expression of individual moods, but focused on strictly traditional themes of landscapes [fukeiga], famous places [meisho], beautiful women [bijinga], kabuki actors [yakusha-e], and birds and flowers [kachoga].

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[edit] Shin hanga Creative Peak: Early 1920s

Shin hanga prints were directed to a Western audience largely through Western patronage and art dealers such as Robert O. Muller (1911-2003). Directed primarily to foreign markets, shin-hanga prints appealed to Western taste for nostalgic and romanticized views of Japan. Shin hanga prints flourished and enjoyed immense popularity overseas. In the 1920s, there were articles on shin hanga in the International Studio, the Studio, the Art News and the Art Digest. In 1921, Shinsaku-hanga Tenrankai (New Creative Print exhibition) was held in Tokyo. 150 works by 10 artists were exhibited. In 1930 and 1936, two major shin hanga exhibitions were held in Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio. They were the largest showcase of shin hanga prints at the time.

Ironically, there was not much domestic market for shin hanga prints in Japan. Ukiyo-e prints were considered by the Japanese as mass commercial products, as opposed to the European view of ukiyo-e as art during the climax of Japonisme. After decades of modernization during the Meiji era, architecture, art and clothing in Japan were westernized. Japanese art students were trained in the Western tradition. Western oil paintings [yoga] were considered as high art and received official recognition from the Bunten (The Ministry of Education Fine Arts Exhibition). Shin hanga prints, on the contrary, were considered as a variation of the outdated ukiyo-e. They were dismissed by the Bunten and were subordinated under oil paintings and sculptures.

[edit] Subject Matter and Technique

The nostalgic and romanticized views of Japan that shin hanga artists offered reveal the ways artists perceive their own environment in the midst of transformation. Most shin hanga landscape prints (which constitute seventy percent of shin hanga prints) feature places that are obscure and tranquil. Artists such as Kawase Hasui (1883-1957) produce dreamlike qualities in their prints, yearning for rural roots and the warm wooden architecture that was disappearing in urban Tokyo.

[edit] Shin hanga vs. Ukiyo-e

Shin hanga is often defined as “neo-ukiyo-e” under the shadow of the ukiyo-e tradition. While shin hanga prints retain much of the ukiyo-e tradition in terms of subject matter, they reveal vastly different techniques and sensibilities. Inspired by Western realism, shin hanga artists produce hybrids that combine modern design with traditional subjects. The use of naturalistic light, colored lines, soft colors, 3-dimensionality, deep space are artistic innovations that break with the ukiyo-e tradition.

[edit] Shin hanga vs. Sosaku hanga

The shin hanga movement is often defined in opposition to the sōsaku hanga movement (creative print movement) that began in the 1910s. While sōsaku hanga artists advocated the principles of “self-drawn” [jiga], self-carved” [jikoku] and “self-printed” [jizuri], according to which the artist engages in artistic expression by involving himself in all stages of the printmaking process, shin hanga artists continued to collaborate with carvers, printers and publishers in print production. At the core of the shin hanga and sōsaku hanga dichotomy is the debate of what constitutes a creative print or pure art. Shin hanga artists and publishers believed that their works were as creative as those produced by sōsaku hanga artists. In 1921, Watanabe Shozaburo even used the term “shinsaku-hanga” to emphasize the creative aspects of shin hanga.

In a larger context, the dichotomy between shin hanga and sōsaku hanga was one but many of the tensions in the Japanese art scene during decades of modernization and internationalization when Japan was in search of modernity. Parallel to the shin-hanga-sosaku-hanga antagonism was the polarization between Japanese paintings [[nihonga]] and Western paintings [yoga], along with the flowering of many artistic currents such as futurism, avant-garde, proletarian art, mingei (folk art) movement, all of which were actively seeking a voice in the art scene in the period from 1910 to 1935 before the rise of militarism in Japan.

[edit] Decline of Shin hanga

Shin hanga declined as the military government tightened its control over the arts and culture during wartime. In 1939, the Army Art Association was established under the patronage of the Army Information Section to promote war art. By 1943, an official commission for war painting was set up and artists’ materials were rationed. Overseas market for Japanese prints declined drastically at the same time. Shin hanga never regained its momentum in postwar Japan. Instead, sōsaku hanga emerged as the genuine heir of the ukiyo-e woodblock tradition and enjoyed immense popularity and prestige in the international art scene.

[edit] Notable artists

[edit] Reference and Further Reading

  • Blair, Dorothy. Modern Japanese prints: printed from a photographic reproduction of two exhibition catalogues of modern Japanese prints published by the Toledo Museum of Art in 1930-1936. Ohio: Toledo Museum of Art, 1997.
  • Brown, K. and Goodall-Cristante, H. Shin-Hanga: New Prints in Modern Japan. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1996. ISBN 0-295-97517-2
  • Hamanoka, Shinji. Female Image: 20th Century Prints of Japanese Beauties. Hotei Publishing 2000. ISBN 90-74822-20-7
  • Jenkins, D. Images of a Changing World: Japanese Prints of the Twentieth Century. Portland: Portland Art Museum, 1983. ISBN 0-295-96137-6
  • Menzies, Jackie. Modern boy, Modern Girl: Modernity in Japanese Art 1910-1935. Sydney, Australia: Art Gallery NSW, c1998. ISBN 0-7313-8900-X
  • Merritt, Helen and Yamada, Nanako. Guide to Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: 1900-1975. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1992. ISBN 0-8248-1732-X
  • Merritt, Helen. Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: The Early Years. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press 1990. ISBN 0-8248-1200-X
  • Mirviss, Joan B. Printed to Perfection: Twentieth-century Japanese Prints from the Robert O. Muller Collection. Washington D.C.: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution and Hotei Publishing 2004. ISBN 90-74822-73-8
  • Newland, Amy Reigle. The Hotei Encyclopedia of Japanese Woodblock Prints. Amsterdam: Hotei Publishing, 2005. ISBN 90-74822-65-7
  • Smith, Lawrence. Modern Japanese Prints 1912-1989. New York, London, Paris: Cross River Press, 1994.
  • Swinton, Elizabeth de Sabato. Terrific Tokyo: A panorama in Prints from the 1860s to the 1930s. Worcester: Worcester Art Museum, 1998. ISBN 0-936042-00-1

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