Katsushika Hokusai.

Hokusai spent his life pursuing a single thing: the true line. « At seventy-three I have come to understand a little of the structure of nature », he wrote, convinced that real mastery would come only after a hundred years. The Great Wave, its claw of foam held above the boats, was born of that stubborn patience.
Born in the working-class district of Honjo, in Edo, he changed his name more than thirty times and his home nearly a hundred. Engraver, novel illustrator, painter of surimono, he passed through every genre before settling, past the age of sixty, on landscape as his great subject.
The Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, around 1831, established the mountain as a presence and as a measure of the floating world. When these sheets reached Europe they shook Monet, Degas and Van Gogh. Japonisme begins here, in the Prussian blue of a wave.
Galerie Yanaka has gathered Hokusai's prints since 2016, with particular attention to early impressions of the Fuji series.
Works in the catalogue



Public domain reproductions, via Wikimedia Commons (MET, MFA Boston, Chester Beatty, Rijksmuseum).
-
2026Le Monde
flottant.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2023Sous
la vague.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2019Hokusai:
cent vues d'une obsessionGalerie Yanaka, Tōkyō -
2016Premier
regard.Galerie Yanaka, Tōkyō