Goyo Hashiguchi, Woman Holding a Towel, Shin Hanga

Sold
SKU
JG051912-1
free-shipping-auth

Original Japanese woodblock print.

Goyo Hashiguchi, Japanese woodblock print, japanese antique, shin hanga, modern print, kimono
Goyo Hashiguchi, Japanese woodblock print, japanese antique, shin hanga, modern print, kimono Goyo Hashiguchi, Japanese woodblock print, japanese antique, shin hanga, modern print, kimono

Artist: Goyo Hashiguchi (1880-1921)
Title: Woman Holding a Towel
Date: Originally published in 1920
Dimensions: 29.3 x 44.9 cm
Condition: Tape residue on back from the previous mounting.

 

 

After a bath, a young woman pats her face dry with a towel. Decorating her faded black yukata robe, pastel pink and blue butterflies flutter around falling petals, matching the soft colour palette of her towel. Around her eyes, a faint beige shows her face flushed from the heat of bathing. Although enjoying a particularly traditional Japanese past-time of visiting a bath house, her ring, dusted with silver mica powder, shows the model as a modern lady open to Western fashions and trends.

Goyo Hashiguchi


In the genre of Japanese Art, Goyo Hashiguchi was a painter and printmaker. He was one of the key artists of the beginning of the 20th century in Japan. Born in Kagoshima, he received an early influence in the arts from his father who was a hobbyist painter. It is believed that at the age of fourteen Goyo studied locally with the Kano painter Uchiyama Ikkan (1823-97). In 1899, he moved to Tokyo where he studied nihonga and yoga styles of painting. In 1904 he began to receive commissions for illustrations, lithographs and woodblock printed covers particularly from literary and art magazines. Some of his works appeared on book covers by popular writers of the day such as Natsume Soseki and Tanizaki Jun’ichiro. In 1911, he won a poster competition for the prestigious Mitsukoshi department store with a design of a young woman dressed in kimono with a fashionable contemporary pattern and sporting an up-to-date hairstyle. From then onwards, Goyo became more interested in traditional ukiyo-e forms from the Edo period with admiration for artists such as Hiroshige I Utagawa, Suzuki Harunobu and Kitagawa Utamaro.

In 1915, urged by the shin-hanga publisher Watanabe Shozaburo, he designed a print for artisans to produce under Watanabe’s direction. ‘Woman at Her Bath’ became an iconic design. Without the use of shading and using only defined lines, Goyo masterfully depicted a woman's body and graceful charm. After deepening his understanding of the production process of woodblock prints, he decided to self-publish his own designs. His craftmanship was of extremely high standard from the paper he chose to the lush pigments applied. He also drew from live models, capturing women and their gestures in a pensive, almost meditative state.

His body of work only amounts to a handful of woodblock prints, as the artist met his untimely death at 41 years old following a sudden illness. Despite this, with their elegance and a great deal of subtlety, his pictures of beauties have made Goyo highly appraised as one of the best Taisho artists in both Japan and overseas.

More Information
Print FormatOther
ArtistGoyo Hashiguchi
SubjectBeauty & Female, Modern/Shin-Hanga
Dimensions29.3 x 44.9 cm