This exhibition celebrates the work of renowned Japanese printmaker Toshi Yoshida exploring the artist’s process, as well as his international travels. Yoshida’s woodblock prints are associated with the sosaku-hanga movement in Japanese art, which reimagined the collaborative enterprise of printmaking by focusing on the artist as the sole creator versus traditional methods which compartmentalized skills into different rolls such as draftsman, carver, printer and publisher.
This exhibition is guest curated by William and Mary professors of history and art and art history, Hiroshi Kitamura and Xin Wu, respectively, along with students enrolled in the woodblock exhibition curation course.
For more information and to purchase tickets, click here.
Docent led-tours are available every Saturday & Sunday
Date(s): Oct 16, 2014 to Jan 11, 2015
Time: Tue – Fri: 10 AM – 5 PM|Sat – Sun: Noon – 4 PM | Monday: Closed
Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William & Mary
603 Jamestown Road
Williamsburg, VA 23187

