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Hokusai: original mangaka
Posted by Mark Sinclair, 28 October 2011, 11:32 Permalink Comments (4)

The sketchbooks of 18th century artist Katsushika Hokusai are packed with humour, charm and glimpses of everyday life. Pie Books in Japan has just published them as a beautiful collected edition...


Shunro, Taito, and, later in life, Gakyo Rojin or ‘Old man mad about painting': Japanese artist and illustrator Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) went by several pseudonyms.

But the Hokusai moniker by which he's best known was adopted when he was 38 and used for the next 18 years. In showcasing the pick of his ‘manga' sketches in a new 700-page edition, Pie has revealed a man who was certainly crazy for his art.

Hokusai drew anything and everything but his cartoons of human figures, sketched in just a few bold lines, convey character, expression and movement in a way that we can still relate to. Some of them look like they are straight out of contemporary manga. Just look at the sketches of hands (above) – the one on the right seems to depict someone deterring an unwanted grope.

Hokusai's take on ‘Ukiyo-e' woodblock printing depicts ordinary folk and the houses they lived in, tackles proverbs and the Japanese landscape (his most famous and most recognisable series of works is probably Mount Fuji in 36 views).


With Hokusai Manga, Pie has produced a wonderful book that includes a brief but astute commentary on a man whose work proved to be an influence on Art Nouveau but, in his own time, captured the breadth and character of everyday life in Japan.
Pie Books; £35. More details at piebooks.com.

4 Comments
Beautiful. It still seems so modern. Thanks for posting.
http://corey-jackson.tumblr.com/
2011-10-28 16:04:57
I just received my copy. I can't stop looking at it. My one caveat: I was hoping for the complete Manga and I believe this is just a selection.
2011-11-01 14:28:53
I have an admirer of Hokusai's prints for many years.
Hokusai had many pupils, one of the best was Hokkei. Here is a link to his work Hokusai - Hokkei
2012-03-03 07:51:16
I was a child in the years 70-80 and Italy were sent many Japanese cartoons. This is why almost all people of my generation are related to Japanese culture. The oriental symbolism, it is very difficult to understand for a Westerner, also studying the Japanese culture for years, you can hardly grasp the concepts that represent the symbols (eg there is a complex symbolism related to animals, very different from the West).
I just look at their designs without awareness, and I am always fascinated.
2012-03-03 19:54:26
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