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HOKUSAI (r 76o–1849)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 577 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HOKUSAI (r 76o–1849)  , the greatest of all the
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Japanese painters of the Popular School (Ukiyo-ye), was born at Yedo (Tokyo) in the 9th month of the loth
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year of the period Horeki, i.e .
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October-November 176o . He came of an artisan
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family, his
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father having been a mirror-maker, Nakajima Issai . After some practice as a wood-engraver he, at the age of eighteen, entered the studio of Katsugawa Shunsho, a painter and designer of colour-prints of considerable importance . His disregard for the
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artistic principles of his master caused his expulsion in 1785; and thereafter—although from time to time Hokusai studied various styles, including especially that of Shiba Gokan, from whom he gained some fragmentary knowledge of
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European methods—he kept his
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personal independence . For a time he lived in extreme poverty, and, although he must have gained sums for his
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work which might have secured him comfort, he remained poor, and to the end of his
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life proudly described himself as a peasant . He illustrated large numbers of books, of which the
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world-famous Mangwa, a pictorial
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encyclopaedia of Japanese life, appeared in fifteen volumes from 1812 to 1875 . Of his colour-prints the "
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Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji " (the whole set consisting of
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forty-six prints) were made between 1823 and 182g; " Views of Famous Bridges" (I I), " Waterfalls " (8), and " Views of the Lu-chu Islands " (8), are the best known of those issued in series; but Hokusai also designed some superb broadsheets published separately, and his surimono (small prints made for
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special occasions and ceremonies) are unequalled for delicacy and beauty . The "
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Hundred Views of Mount Fuji " (1834–1835), 3 vols., in monochrome, are of extraordinary originality and variety . As a painter and draughtsman Hokusai is not held by Japanese critics to be of the first rank, but this verdict has never been accepted by Europeans, who place him among the greatest artists of the world . He possessed
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great powers of observation and characterization, a singular technical skill, an unfailing gift of good humour, and untiring industry . He was an eager student to the end of his long life, and on his
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death-bed said, " If Heaven had lent me but five years more, I should have become a great painter." He died on the loth of May 1849 .

See E. de

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Goncourt, Hokousab (1896); M . Revon, Etude sur Hokusai (1896); E . F . Fenollosa, Catalogue of the
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Exhibition of Paintings by Hokusai at T61:yo (1901); E . F . Strange, Hokusai (1906) . (E . F .

End of Article: HOKUSAI (r 76o–1849)
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