Description
Mokuhanga, the traditional Japanese method of woodblock printing, is an elegant, green and low-tech process that works easily in a home studio and combines well with other printmaking methods. With its transparent waterborne pigments, which are applied with brushes and printed by hand, mokuhanga allows for soft and painterly relief prints. This workshop will introduce all aspects of the process: transferring images to wooden blocks, carving with Japanese tools, using the Kento registration system and printing with brushes and a baren. We will also focus on a few of the printing techniques particular to the Japanese method, especially how to create a bokashi (color graduation).
This workshop is suitable for beginners as well as students who have already taken a mokuhanga workshop and would like to sharpen their skills. Printmakers know the beauty of Japanese woodblock prints. Contemporary artists are enjoying this technique that develops their deep concentration, keen observation and hand skills using natural and non-toxic materials. We’ll explore the history, tools, materials, carving and printing. You will learn how to transfer your image onto two to four woodblocks using the kento registration, carve each block using traditional tools and methods, apply water-based pigment and rice paste to the blocks using Japanese brushes and use a baren to hand-print each color woodblock onto washi paper.
About the Instructor
Yuji Hiratsuka was born in Osaka, Japan. He has a B.S. in Art Education from Tokyo Gakugei University and degrees in printmaking from New Mexico State University (MA) and Indiana University (MFA). He has been teaching printmaking and drawing since 1987 and, until his retirement in 2022, served as a Professor of printmaking at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon. Hiratsuka has received numerous international awards. Since 2010, he has had 13 solo shows in the US, as well as in Korea, Canada and Northern Ireland.
Some of the public collections that include Hiratsuka’s art are The British Museum, The Art Institute of Chicago, Tokyo Central Museum, Panstwowe Museum in Poland; The House of Humor and Satire in Bulgaria, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cleveland Art Museum, Portland Art Museum, New York Public Library, The Library of Congress and The Smithsonian’s Museum of Asian Art.
Learn More
www.yujihiratsuka.com
Materials List
You will need to bring:
Basic drawing materials
Sketchbook pad (12″x 9″ or larger)
A set of wood carving tools
Provided by instructors:
Shina plywood
Thai Kozo printing paper
Baren printing tool
Printing inks
Printing brushes