Woman Picking Chrysanthemum

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Art Print
Satin Canvas
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Honey Oak Frame
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Important notice: colors on screen always differ a littlebit from reality, so the colors of the physical wall arts will never look exactly the same as what you see on your screen. Our products are reproductions.

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printed on FSC® papers
Suzuki Harunobu: Woman Picking Chrysanthemum, 50x70cm Framed Art Reproduction With Black Frame

Woman Picking Chrysanthemum

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The Artwork: Woman Picking Chrysanthemum

Woman Picking Chrysanthemum is a print by Suzuki Harunobu (c. 1725–1770), the artist who helped bring full-colour printing to ukiyo-e. A slender figure reaches for a chrysanthemum, the flower of autumn, in a quiet garden moment held with Harunobu's characteristic grace.

The design is a nishiki-e, or brocade print — the first kind of full-colour ukiyo-e, built from many woodblocks, a technique Harunobu helped refine around 1765. He draws his women small and doll-like, with fine line and soft, harmonised colour, the chrysanthemum given its own clear place in the composition.

In a room the print reads as gentle and seasonal, a breath of autumn. Its soft, balanced colour suits a bedroom, a study, or a dressing room, and it sits easily beside pale wood and natural textiles. Beside other figure prints it builds a wall around the elegance of early ukiyo-e.

Each print is made to order in three forms. The paper edition is printed on thick snow-white stock. The fra . . . Read More >>


Japan historical period: Edo 江戸 (1603-1868)

Check out other artwork of Suzuki Harunobu


The Artist: Suzuki Harunobu

Suzuki Harunobu (circa 1725–1770) was a pivotal figure in the history of Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints, credited with the popularization and technical development of nishiki-e ('brocade pictures'), the first full-color Ukiyo-e prints, around 1765.

Details of his early life are scarce, but he was active in Edo (now Tokyo). It is believed he may have studied under Nishimura Shigenaga or another artist of the Kanō school, but his style became distinctly his own. Before the advent of nishiki-e, Ukiyo-e prints were either monochrome (sumizuri-e), hand-colored (urushi-e, benizuri-e), or printed with a limited number of color blocks. Harunobu, in collaboration with skilled block carvers and printers, and often supported by wealthy patrons within literary circles who commissioned private prints (surimono) and calendar prints (egoyomi), perfected the technique of using multiple woodblocks to apply a wide range of vibrant colors with precision. This innovation revolutionized the Ukiyo-e medium, bringing a n . . . Read More >>

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We have put tremendous amount of work into the manual graphical enhancement and remixing of each classic art piece we offer, while fully respecting the original vision of the artist masters

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Our prints are made with the highest quality 12-color Japanese water-based printing technology and pigment ink. We print on acid-free, archival quality, FSC®-certified paper.

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