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HERE, THERE, AND EVERYWHERE Japanese prints showcased on the Cape, plus a wine lover’s tour of France Travel news you can use By Necee Regis Globe Correspondent,Updated June 19, 2025, 11:00 a.m.
Japanese publisher Hanzō is keeping the ukiyo-e tradition alive with unique reinterpretations of traditional woodblock prints that feature popular characters like Doraemon, Crayon Shinchan, and ...
The American businessman Alan Medaugh, 81, has spent 50 years building up an unparalleled collection of woodblock prints by the famed Japanese artist Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858).
ISLAMABAD: Japanese Ambassador Mitsuhiro Wada on Tuesday inaugurated the exhibition ‘Moku-Hanga, prints from Pakistan’ at the National Art Gallery, showcasing a unique fusion of traditional ...
When it comes to antiques, trusting your instincts can pay off — sometimes even in a big way. “I knew they were something,” Christina Kean says about the three Japanese woodblock prints she ...
Put together by the Worcester Art Museum in Massachusetts, it is derived from the estate of businessman John Chandler Bancroft, which donated 3,700 Japanese woodblock prints to the museum in 1901.
Why Images of Ghosts Have Endured in Japan for Centuries A new exhibition at the National Museum of Asian Art displays haunting, colorful woodblock prints ...
Japanese prints capturing country's evolution come to life at SF's Legion of Honor exhibit The exhibit is now open and runs through mid-August ...
While many are familiar with traditional Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints, modern woodblock art is far less known. Hajime Namiki is part of the post-war Sosaku-hanga ("creative prints") art movement.
In Junk in the Trunk 14, Lark Mason III appraises Kawase Hasui Japanese woodblock prints, ca. 1922. Funding for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is provided by Ancestry and American Cruise Lines.
Ahead of TEFAF Maastricht, Tamio Ikeda, of the Paris gallery Tanakaya, shares the complex history behind the woodblock print, and how mutual admiration may have saved it.