A1381

小林清親

| 1847-09-10 | 1915-11-28

KOBAYASHI Kiyochika

| 1847-09-10 | 1915-11-28

Names
  • 小林清親
  • KOBAYASHI Kiyochika (index name)
  • Kobayashi Kiyochika (display name)
  • 小林清親 (Japanese display name)
  • こばやし きよちか (transliterated hiragana)
Date of birth
1847-09-10
Birth place
Edo (current Tokyo)
Date of death
1915-11-28
Death place
Tokyo
Gender
Male
Fields of activity
  • Printmaking

Wikipedia

Kobayashi Kiyochika (小林 清親, 10 September 1847 – 28 November 1915) was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist, best known for his colour woodblock prints and newspaper illustrations. His work documents the rapid modernization and Westernization Japanese underwent during the Meiji period (1868–1912) and employs a sense of light and shade called kōsen-ga inspired by Western art techniques. His work first found an audience in the 1870s with prints of red-brick buildings and trains that had proliferated after the Meiji Restoration; his prints of the First Sino-Japanese War of 1894–95 were also popular. Woodblock printing fell out of favour during this period, and many collectors consider Kobayashi's work the last significant example of ukiyo-e.

Information from Wikipedia, made available under theCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

VIAF ID
311169311
ULAN ID
500121369
AOW ID
_00802074
Benezit ID
B00099109
Grove Art Online ID
T047045
NDL ID
00033162
Wikidata ID
Q3121142
  • 2023-02-20