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Other details :
Artwork on wood. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
31.5x47.2in
About this artwork
The famous Japanese woodblock print maestro Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) named a series of his most famous prints - now adorning mugs and mouse-mats worldwide - '36 views of Mt Fuji.' This painting aims to replicate some woodblock print effects and was originally entitled 'One View Of Autumn In Japan, Somewhere Near Kyoto'. Ably aided by Google Translate this is what the artist thought he was writing on the left of the painting. Photo Translator… App, however, thinks otherwise. The painting contains another more deliberate error. Early Japanese woodblock prints involves carving an image from paper onto a wood block and then inking the block and printing the image. Although it would have been possible virtually no Japanese woodblock prints depicts any shadows or reflections on water. In western myth ghosts do not cast shadows; in Japanese folklore shadows and reflections signify similar demons. So, on reflection, for the avoidance of doubt, this is not a genuine woodblock print.
« MODERN ART = I COULD DO THAT + YEAH BUT YOU DIDN'T. -Craig Damrauer »
Steve White, a painter based in the Netherlands, has extensively exhibited his works nationally, as well as in the United Kingdom. While he appreciates that art can stir emotions and have great meaning for people, he has a more practical approach to creation. For example, one of the tests he does for his own works is simple - he asks himself, "Would this look good over someone's sofa?". White's abstract realist compositions also combine elements of minimalism.