Tsuchiya koitsu biography of mahatma
Tsuchiya Kōitsu (Japanese: 土屋光逸) was a Japanese artist in the Shin-hanga movement.
At the age of fifteen, Tsuchiya moved to Tokyo to study under Matsuzaki, a woodblock carver for the prominent Meiji print artist Kobayashi Kiyochika. After publishing a series of prints during the Sino-Japanese — , Tsuchiya became a pupil of Kiyochika and served as a household member for the next nineteen years. After Kiyochika passed away in , Koitsu worked as a lithographer for the next sixteen years until meeting publisher Watanabe Shozaburo at a memorial exhibition in The two agreed on a mutual collaboration, and the following year Tsuchiya designed a landscape series published by Watanabe, Kawaguchi, and Doi.
His prints, like those of Kiyochika, are characterized by their dramatic use of light, seen in Cherry Blossom Viewing in the Evening at Gion c. Tsuchiya's masterful manipulation of light, reflected in the glow of street lamps and figures in the foreground lighted by lanterns, adds to the leisurely ambiance of the ancient capital. Following his artistic debut, Tsuchiya worked for publisher Doi Sadaichi from — and designed the series Nihon Fukei-Shu Collected Scenes of Japan , borrowing compositional elements of Kawase Hasui.
Autumn Moon at Ishiyama Temple , however, offers a slightly different perspective with added figures, exemplifying a more technical aspect of the creative process.
Tsuchiya Koitsu 土屋光逸 (Japan, – ) was a style illustrator ukiyo-e Missing: mahatma.
Tsuchiya thus fused meisho , or "famous places," with the ukiyo-e genre to create new meisho that combined power of place, prestige, and sparks of artistic creativity. Tsuchiya continued to produce shin hanga throughout the Pacific War until his death in at the age of seventy. All Artists.