Tetsuya Ishida was a Japanese artist known for his painting that often depicted themes of isolation, consumerism, academic & professional workplace anxieties, and urban banality. His work is ...
Tech icon Steve Jobs was fascinated by Japanese culture, and was particularly passionate about shin-hanga woodblock prints. Interviews with former colleagues and friends reveal that his lifelong ...
The Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago, nestled within a serene courtyard, lush with trees, native plantings and a small cheery green grass hill... Asian Art Week began with a strong ...
Huang Yongyu is a contemporary Chinese artist known for both his prints and paintings. Huang’s ink works are often scenes of wildlife ... Today, his works are held in the collections of the ...
The library holds a large collection of affordable artworks by national artists. View the list of art prints or come in to the Media Centre to browse them.
has been an active fine-art dealer for more than 35 years, specializing in 18th- through 20th-century Japanese prints, antique maps, the China Trade and natural history plates. Mr. Castle owned ...
Saffronart’s contemporary south asian sale ( 21st – 22nd 0ctober ) of 55 lots raises a toast to some of the finest names in ...
As features editor at The Canberra Times, I love telling people things they didn't know - or even things they've always known ...
Ms. May recently curated a show of Japanese prints at the museum. (Many museums have Japanese print collections, but they are rarely on view for long periods because the inks used in these prints ...
A previous sale of another version of Banksy’s Girl With Balloon was destroyed at a Sotheby’s auction in October 2018, and became the work Love Is In The Bin. Last month, a separate print of Girl With ...
What is a Japanese spider crab? They may look like something from a 1950s sci-fi film, but Japanese spider crabs are gentle giants. And giants they are. Of the 60,000 species of crustaceans on ...
MOVING WALL The "moving wall" represents the time period between the last issue available in JSTOR and the most recently published issue of a journal. Moving walls are generally represented in years.