Floating Through Time: Ota Memorial Museum of Art

692

Hi hi! Jess again!
Long time no see! We returned to Harajuku to take a look at one of its hidden gems – the Ota Memorial Museum of Art, a small museum bursting with an incredible archive of traditional woodblock prints, known as ukiyo-e.
You’ve probably seen examples of ukiyo-e, especially the work of Hokusai, a renowned master of the art.

Hokusai’s 1831 masterpiece, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, is well-known worldwide.

But our interview with the curator at the Ota Memorial Museum reveals that ukiyo-e goes so much deeper than majestic imagery of Mt. Fuji or portraits of powerful warlords. Woodblock printing made mass production of art possible, and accessible to ordinary people — and it spanned a vast array of applications, including illustrations of popular literature, famous actors, advertisements, comical scenes, fliers, calendars, and of course, depictions of scenery and nature.

 

 

A very spooky image – Kuniyoshi Utagawa’s depiction of the Umibōzu, or “Sea Monk”, appearing before a sailor, demanding him to name the most horrible thing he knows. The sailor replies that his profession is the most horrible thing he knows, and the Umibōzu disappears.

 

 

 

 

Please to view this content. (Not a member? Join Today!)
You do not have permission to view the comments.

Please Login to post a comment

CAPTCHA