Smithsonian’s Arthur Sackler Gallery exhibiting “Japan Modern: Prints in the Age of Photography” thru Jan. 24

Sanjo Bridge; Tokuriki Tomikichiro (1902 – 2000) Japan, Showa era, 1954; woodblock print; ink and color on paper; on loan from the Ken and Kiyo Hitch Collection; image courtesy of Kyoto Tokuriki Hangakan, Inc.

Japan Modern: Prints in the Age of Photography
September 29, 2018 – January 24, 2019

Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
1050 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC

When photography arrived in Japan in the mid-nineteenth century, traditional woodblock printmakers were forced to adapt their craft to keep pace with the new medium.

In the decades that followed, major upheavals—a new system of government, a devastating earthquake, and the onset of world war—continued to influence Japanese prints.

This exhibition explores Japanese artists’ reactions to the challenges of modernity from the late nineteenth to mid-twentieth century.

It first examines the collapse of the traditional woodblock-printmaking industry in the face of the printing press and photography.

Then, it traces the medium’s resurrection as an art form, through which printmakers recorded scenes of their changing country in striking new ways.

Complemented by Japan Modern: Photography from the Gloria Katz and Willard Huyck Collection

https://www.freersackler.si.edu/exhibition/japan-modern-prints/

Japan Modern is generously sponsored by Mitsubishi Corporation.