A goshawk grips a pine bough weighed down with snow, its head turned and its eye sharp against the cold. The print is by Ohara Koson (1877–1945), a central figure of the shin-hanga revival and one of the finest bird-and-flower, or kachō-e, artists of the period. Winter subjects suited his eye for stillness, and here the hawk holds the centre of a quiet, frozen scene.
Working in the shin-hanga manner, Koson relied on a team of carver and printer to translate his design into colour woodblock. The snow is left largely as the pale of the paper, while the bird's barred plumage is built from close, deliberate lines. Soft tonal shifts give weight to the bough and depth to the cold air around it.
On a wall the image brings a composed, wintry calm. It sits well in a study, a bedroom or an entry, and its narrow palette of white, grey and muted brown keeps company with wood, stone and natural textiles without competing for attention.
This is a gallery-style edition: a . . . Read More >>
A goshawk grips a pine bough weighed down with snow, its head turned and its eye sharp against the cold. The print is by Ohara Koson (1877–1945), a central figure of the shin-hanga revival and one of the finest bird-and-flower, or kachō-e, artists of the period. Winter subjects suited his eye for stillness, and here the hawk holds the centre of a quiet, frozen scene.
Working in the shin-hanga manner, Koson relied on a team of carver and printer to translate his design into colour woodblock. The snow is left largely as the pale of the paper, while the bird's barred plumage is built from close, deliberate lines. Soft tonal shifts give weight to the bough and depth to the cold air around it.
On a wall the image brings a composed, wintry calm. It sits well in a study, a bedroom or an entry, and its narrow palette of white, grey and muted brown keeps company with wood, stone and natural textiles without competing for attention.
This is a gallery-style edition: a wide printed border surrounds the image like a matted gallery print, and that border belongs to the artwork, holding its proportion at every size. Choose it as an unframed fine-art paper print, framed behind shatter-resistant acrylic, or as a satin-coated cotton canvas.
Frequently asked questions
What bird is shown in this print?
A goshawk, a powerful woodland hawk, perched on a pine bough laden with snow.
What is kachō-e?
The Japanese genre of bird-and-flower pictures. Ohara Koson was among its leading practitioners in the shin-hanga period.
Why does the snow look so plain?
In shin-hanga winter prints the snow is often left as the bare pale of the paper, so the bird and bough carry the detail.
What does "gallery-style" mean here?
A wide border is printed around the image, like a matted gallery print. The border is part of the artwork and keeps its proportion at every size.
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Japan historical period: Showa 昭和 (1926-1989)
Check out other artwork of Ohara Koson