Collection: Japanese woodblock prints
Discover a curated collection of Japanese art prints inspired by the refined world of Ukiyo-e woodblock prints. From serene landscapes to delicate bird-and-flower compositions, each piece captures the essence of traditional Japanese aesthetics and transforms your space into a place of calm and beauty.
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Earth Spider, Yoshitoshi ukiyo-e print
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Chickadee on paulownia branch, Ohara Koson
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Octopus Games, Utagawa Kuniyoshi
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Asakusa Ricefields, Utagawa Hiroshige
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Road to Nikko — Hasui Kawase
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Tennoji Temple in Osaka – Hasui Kawase Poster
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Blue Irises — Ohara Koson
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The Temple Zōjōji in Shiba, Kawase Hasui poster
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Shimohonda machi, Kanazawa
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Poppies in bloom — Ohara Koson
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Flycatchers on a nandina bush, Ohara Koson
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Hasui Kawase poster : Late Autumn in Ichikawa
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Evening snow at Edo River, Hasui Kawase
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Sailing Boat by Yoshida Hiroshi, fine art print
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Snow at Nezu-Gongen Shrine, Hasui Kawase
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Saishoin Temple, Hirosaki, Kawase Hasui
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Konjikodo in the snow, Hiraizumi - Hasui Kawase poster
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Crytomeria Avenue (Sugi Namiki), Yoshida Hiroshi
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Black Cat and Tomato Plant, Takahashi Hiroaki poster
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Miyazu in Tango, Kawase Hasui
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Snow at Hie Shrine — Kawase Hasui
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Fuji no yukibare, Tagonoura
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Flowering Water Lily — Ohara Koson
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Roaring tiger Poster - Ohara Koson
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Japanese Woodblock Prints — Five Centuries of Ukiyo-e Mastery
Ukiyo-e (浮世絵) — literally 'pictures of the floating world' — is one of the most
influential art forms in history. Born in Japan's Edo period (1603–1868), it captured the beauty of landscapes, the drama of kabuki theatre, the elegance of
courtesans, and the raw power of nature through the meticulous craft of carved
wooden blocks and water-based inks. 'Ukiyo' (浮世), imbued with Buddhist
connotations, evokes the fleeting beauty of the earthly world — vibrant,
ephemeral, deeply human.
Featured blog article : The History of Japanese Prints: from Ukiyo-e to Shin-hanga
The Masters of Our Collection
Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849), whose Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji — including the iconic Great Wave off Kanagawa — transformed the landscape print into a global symbol of artistic ambition.
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858), whose atmospheric Fifty-Three Stations of the Tōkaidō and One Hundred Famous Views of Edo redefined how light, weather, and distance could be rendered in woodblock.
Kawase Hasui (1883–1957), the central figure of the Shin-hanga ('new prints') revival, whose moonlit temples and snow-covered courtyards are held today in the
Smithsonian Institution and the British Museum.
Ohara Koson (1877–1945), master of kacho-e (bird-and-flower pictures), whose meticulous natural compositions bridged scientific precision and poetic beauty.
Kawanabe Kyōsai (1831–1889), the 'Demon of the Brush', whose satirical frogs, dancing
skeletons, and yōkai imagery pioneered a visual language that directly
influenced modern manga.
The Craft: How a Woodblock Print Is Made
Each ukiyo-e print is the product of an extraordinary collaborative process. The
artist designs the composition; a master carver (horishi) transfers it to
multiple cherry wood blocks, one per colour. A master printer (surishi) then
applies water-based pigments to each block and prints them in precise
registration on dampened washi paper, building the image layer by layer. A
single print might require twenty separate blocks and as many printing passes.
Printmaking explained by Kawase Hasui
The Themes of Japanese Woodblock Art
Ukiyo-e explored the full range of Edo culture: bijin-ga (elegant portraits of women),
yakusha-e (kabuki actor prints), meisho-e (famous landscapes and travel scenes
from the Tōkaidō road to Mount Fuji), musha-e (samurai and warrior imagery),
and kacho-e (birds and flowers). The Shin-hanga movement of the early 20th
century added Western-influenced naturalism — subtle atmospheric light, tonal
depth — while preserving the traditional woodblock process.
Museum Quality, for Your Walls
Every print in our collection is produced from ultra-high-definition archival scans
and printed using professional giclée techniques on premium fine art paper with fade-resistant archival inks — faithful to the colour, texture, and atmosphere
of the originals. Whether you are discovering ukiyo-e for the first time or
deepening a collection, these reproductions are built to last and designed to transform any space.
→ Follow Wallango on YouTube (youtube.com/@Wallango), Instagram
(@wallango.prints) and Facebook for artist stories, curatorial notes, and interior inspiration.
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