Masao Maeda
Masao Maeda (前田 政雄, Maeda Masao, December, 1904 - March 27, 1974) was a woodblock print artist, born in Hakodate on the island of Hokkaidō, Japan.
In 1923 Maeda met Hiratsuka Un'ichi, a leader of the sosaku-hanga "creative prints" movement. In 1925 he relocated to Tokyo and joined the Kawabata Painting School. He studied Western-style painting (Yōga) with Umehara Ryuzauro and started work in oils. He learned woodblock techniques via his association with the Yoyogi Group of print artists who met at Hiratsuka's house in the 1930s, and by 1940 Maeda was solely working as a printmaker.
Maeda joined the Ichimoku-kai1 (First Thursday Society), a sosaku-hanga group led by Onchi Koshiro. He contributed to One Hundred New Views of Japan in 1940, "the two Kitsutsuki Hanga-shu collections (1942-3) and nos 3-6 of the Ichimokushu collections (1947-50), as well as Tokyo Kaiko Zue (Scenes of Lost Tokyo) (1945) and Nihon Minzoku Zufu (1946)."
Maeda was mentioned and quoted in Oliver Statler's 1956 book Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: An Art Reborn.
"I think that woodprints suit the character of a Japanese. The materials are close to our life: wood, paper, even the baren with its bamboo cover. I think of trying etchings and lithographs but I never get around to them, and though I like Onchi's ideas of utilizing all sorts of odd materials, I just can't get away from wood."
Lawrence Smith's Modern Japanese Prints 1912-1989 describes him as "A typical sosaku hanga group artist in many ways, Maeda nevertheless showed untypically the influence of Nihonga native-style painting. He also produced fine mountain scenes a little in the vein of Umetaro Azechi."
References
- Smith, Lawrence. Modern Japanese Prints 1912-1989, British Museum Press, 1994, p. 29
- Statler, Oliver. Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: An Art Reborn, 1956
External links
- Maeda Masao (1904-1974) The Lavenberg Collection of Japanese Prints
- Artelino
- Huge Collection
- v
- t
- e
- Ukiyo-e
- Japanese woodblock printing
- List of ukiyo-e terms
of 17–19th centuries
- Asayama school
- Eishi school
- Furuyama school
- Furuyama Moromasa
- Harukawa Eizan school
- Harukawa Eizan
- Harunobu school
- Suzuki Harunobu
- Isoda Koryūsai
- Shiba Kōkan
- Hasegawa school
- Hishikawa school
- Hokusai school
- Ippitsusai Bunchō school
- Ishikawa Toyonobu school
- Kaigetsudō school
- Katsukawa school
- Kawamata school
- Keisai Eisen school
- Kitagawa school
- Kitao school
- Miyagawa school
- Nishikawa school
- Nishimura school
- Okumura school
- Ōoka school
- Osaka school
- Ryūkōsai school
- Shigenobu school
- Shunkōsai Fukushū school
- Torii school
- Toyohara school
- Utagawa school
- Utagawa Toyoharu
- Utagawa Toyohiro
- Utagawa Toyokuni I
- Utagawa Kunimasa
- Utagawa Kunisada
- Utagawa Kunisada II
- Utagawa Kunisada III
- Utagawa Sadahide
- Utagawa Kunimasu I
- Utagawa Toyokuni II
- Utagawa Kuniyasu
- Utagawa Kuniyoshi
- Ryusai Shigeharu
- Utagawa Yoshitsuya
- Utagawa Yoshitora
- Kawanabe Kyōsai
- Utagawa Yoshiiku
- Utagawa Yoshitoshi
- Utagawa Yoshifuji
- Utagawa Yoshifusa
- Utagawa Kuniteru I
- Utagawa Hiroshige
- Utagawa Hiroshige II
- Utagawa Hiroshige III
- Utagawa Hirokage
- Utagawa Sadafusa
- Adachi Ginkō
- List of Utagawa school members
- Not associated with any school
artists and movements
- Shin-hanga
- Sosaku-hanga
- Azechi Umetarō
- Eiichi Kotozuka
- Un'ichi Hiratsuka
- Itow Takumi
- Kitaoka Fumio
- Yasuhide Kobashi
- Sakuichi Fukazawa
- Masao Maeda
- Senpan Maekawa
- Maki Haku
- Matsubara Naoko
- Yoshitoshi Mori
- Shikō Munakata
- Tetsuya Noda
- Gihachiro Okuyama
- Kōshirō Onchi
- Kiichi Okamoto
- Saitō Kiyoshi
- Sekino Jun'ichirō
- Toko Shinoda
- Hiroyuki Tajima
- Sadao Watanabe
- Kanae Yamamoto
- Shōzaburō Watanabe
- Hodaka Yoshida
- Tōshi Yoshida
- Suwa Kanenori
- Fujimori Shizuo
- Reika Iwami
- Tadashige Ono
- Chosei Kawakami
- Others
- Kohno Michisei
- Tadashi Nakayama
- Fujio Yoshida
- Japanese painting
- Rinpa school
- Kanō school
- Akita ranga
- Hara school
- Hasegawa school
- Kyoto school
- Nanpin school
- Nanga
- Nihonga
- Shijō school
- Mochizuki school
- Yōga
- Ukiyo-e influenced non-Japanese art
- Japonisme
- Japonaiserie (Van Gogh)
- Impressionism
- Anglo-Japanese style
- Post-impressionism
- Art Nouveau
- Ligne claire