<b>TANCHO CRANE</b> / Toshi Yoshida1988<b>SOLD</b></em>
ARTIST: Toshi Yoshida (1911-1995)
TITLE: Tancho Crane
MEDIUM: Woodblock print
EDITION: 377/1,200
DATE: 1988
DIMENSIONS: 12 x 24 1/4 inches
CONDITION: Excellent, no condition problems to note
SOLD
ARTIST: Toshi Yoshida (1911-1995)
TITLE: Tancho Crane
MEDIUM: Woodblock print
EDITION: 377/1,200
DATE: 1988
DIMENSIONS: 12 x 24 1/4 inches
CONDITION: Excellent, no condition problems to note
SOLD
ARTIST: Toshi Yoshida (1911-1995)
TITLE: Tancho Crane
MEDIUM: Woodblock print
EDITION: 377/1,200
DATE: 1988
DIMENSIONS: 12 x 24 1/4 inches
CONDITION: Excellent, no condition problems to note
SOLD
Details
Toshi Yoshida was the oldest son of Hiroshi and Fujio Yoshida. In early childhood, one of Yoshida’s legs was paralyzed. Unable to attend school, the young Yoshida enjoyed watching and sketching animals as well as being in his father’s print shop. As Yoshida grew older he showed interest in making prints and under his father’s tutelage started carving and printing in the family studio. Yoshida carved and printed his father’s designs.
Yoshida’s first original designs date to the mid-1920s, and his career started in earnest in the late 1930s with a series of chuban-size landscapes that advanced his father’s style but demonstrated a sensitivity and flair for color that was all his own. In the 1950s, after the death of his father, the young Yoshida experimented with various styles and began working in abstraction concurrently producing highly representational designs. Like his father, Toshi Yoshida traveled the world in search of inspiration and produced a large body of work featuring foreign subjects. Yoshida’s diverse abilities as well as the spirit of experimentation set himself apart from his father, advancing his own style and artistic perspective, and bolstering the Yoshida family legacy.
“Tancho Crane” is one of Yoshida’s masterworks. The design demonstrates the artist’s ability at realism, articulating a scene taken directly from nature and providing the viewer with the realism of a photograph shot out in the wild as well as providing a keen scene of movement. The print illustrates a flock of cranes as they ascend into flight. The scene is striking and graceful with a strong cinematic affect—the composition depicts each of the five cranes caught in a separate and distinct aspect within the process of flight that provide the design a lyrical upward movement that works quite effectively in concert with the background, rendered in long squiggly lines that further support suggestion of flight.
Connoisseur's Note
This work is a rare lifetime impression produced by the artist himself not a later posthumous impression done after his death. Lifetime impressions bear a live pencil signature at the bottom right margin, in contrast to the later one with stamp signatures that closely resemble pencilwork. Later impressions also showcase the name and information of the current publisher on the reverse, which this print lacks. This impression was never framed or displayed for extended periods of time ensuring the colors are in a pristine state of preservation, appearing as vivid today as they were the day the work was produced.