Modern Japanese Printmaking and the Break from Tradition

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Written by Seth Sebastian

2026-01-09

Industrialization didn’t just change how people lived. It broke the visual logic artists had relied on for centuries. By the late 19th century, academic realism felt slow, ornamental, and dishonest. The world was moving faster than oil paint traditions could keep up.

Painters began loosening their grip. Impressionism fractured perspective and finish. Van Gogh pushed further, trading polish for pressure and emotion. These weren’t stylistic experiments so much as early symptoms of a deeper rupture.

That rupture became explicit in 1915, when Kazimir Malevich exhibited Black Square. The work wasn’t abstracted from reality. It rejected reality altogether. For the first time, a painting didn’t represent an object, a scene, or even an idea. It simply existed. That refusal reset the rules of Western art.

Ay-O, “Well! Well! Well!” (1974), silkscreen print, 28 1/2 × 20 inches. © Ay-O

After World War II, modernism spread globally, less as a style than as a mindset. In Japan, the response was neither imitation nor rejection. Artists looked outward while doubling down on local traditions, particularly ukiyo-e, whose graphic clarity proved surprisingly compatible with modern abstraction.

Printmaking became the testing ground. Portable, reproducible, and technically flexible, it allowed artists to merge old processes with new materials. Woodblock lived alongside silkscreen. Lithography absorbed pop color, industrial rhythm, and foreign influence without losing cultural specificity.

Modern Japanese Printmakers: New Waves and Eruptions, authored by Malene Wagner, documents this moment with precision rather than nostalgia. The book traces how artists like Takehisa Yumeji, Funsaka Yoshiuke, Ay-O, and Ruth Asawa used repetition, color systems, geometry, and organic form to stretch printmaking beyond craft into experimentation.

With more than 100 full-page reproductions, the volume treats modern Japanese printmaking not as a footnote to Western modernism, but as a parallel evolution shaped by its own pressures, technologies, and visual intelligence.

a lithograph by Ruth Asawa of a desert plant in pink, surrounded by yellow, emphasizing its geometrical branches and roundness Ruth Asawa, “Dessert Plant (TAM.1460)” (1965), lithograph. © 2025 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc., courtesy of David Zwirner
Takea Hideo, “The Heike Clan’s Capital” from the series ‘Genpei’ (1985-99), silkscreen print, 20 3/4 × 15 1/2 inches. © Hideo Takeda
Sato Ado, “Time Tunnel” (1968), silkscreen print, 25 1/2 × 30 inches. © Ado Sato, courtesy of the Ado Sato family
Funsaka Yoshiuke, “Lemon, Black and White, No. MM171” (2015), woodblock print, 8 1/4 × 8 inches. © Yoshisuke Funasaka
Yoshida Hideshi, “Why is this coffee cup so small?” (2024), woodblock print, 13 × 9 1/2 inches. © Hideshi Yoshida
Ruth Asawa, “Untitled (TAM.1558-II, Addie’s Chair (Reverse))” (1965), lithograph. © 2025 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc., courtesy of David Zwirner
Yoshida Hodaka, “Mambo” (1956), monoprint, 32 3/4 × 46 1/2 inches. © Ayomi Yoshida