
Biography
Hiroshi Yoshida (1876–1950) was a Japanese painter and woodblock print artist widely regarded, alongside Kawase Hasui, as one of the greatest artists of the shin-hanga movement. Distinguished by his fusion of Western oil painting techniques with traditional Japanese woodblock printmaking, Yoshida created approximately 260 print designs over his career, many depicting landscapes from his extensive travels across Asia, Europe, and North America.
Born Hiroshi Ueda on September 19, 1876, in Kurume, Fukuoka Prefecture on the island of Kyushu, he was the son of Ueda Tsukane, a schoolteacher from an old samurai family. At age fifteen, his exceptional painting talent was discovered by Kasaburo Yoshida, a junior high school art teacher who, together with his wife Rui, adopted the boy into the Yoshida family. Around 1893, at approximately seventeen, Yoshida traveled to Kyoto to study Western-style oil painting under Tamura Soryu and Miyake Kokki. After two years, he moved to Tokyo and entered the Fudosha, a private painting school run by the leading yoga painter Koyama Shotaro, where he studied for approximately three years. He also joined the Meiji Bijutsukai, the first Western-style art organization in Japan, and established himself as an accomplished oil painter before the age of twenty-five.
Yoshida's extraordinary career was defined by travel. In October 1899, he and fellow painter Nakagawa Hachiro departed for the United States, exhibiting at the Detroit Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The sales success financed onward travel to Europe, where Yoshida attended the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1900 and won a prize. He returned to Japan around 1901. In 1902, he co-founded the Taiheiyo Gakai (Pacific Painting Association), a successor to the Meiji Fine Arts Society. A second major trip to the United States and Europe followed from 1904 to 1907, during which he exhibited at the Rhode Island School of Design and the St. Louis World Exposition, and traveled extensively through Switzerland, Spain, North Africa, and Egypt. Upon his return to Japan in 1907, he married Fujio Yoshida, who was herself a distinguished artist.
Yoshida's transition to woodblock printmaking came around 1920, at the age of forty-four, when he produced his first prints at the Watanabe Print Workshop under the publisher Watanabe Shozaburo. The Great Kanto Earthquake of September 1, 1923, destroyed Watanabe's workshop along with Yoshida's original woodblocks. Following a trip to the United States and Europe from late 1923 through August 1925—partly to raise funds for earthquake victims—Yoshida was deeply impressed by the Western esteem for Japanese woodblock prints. This experience galvanized his commitment to the medium, and in 1925 he established his own independent workshop in Tokyo, employing professional carvers and printers under his direct supervision.
The period from 1925 to 1941 marked Yoshida's peak printmaking years. His 1926 output was especially remarkable, with forty-one or forty-two prints produced in a single year, including several of his most celebrated series. The Twelve Scenes in the Japan Alps, completed in 1926, is considered among his finest achievements, capturing the grandeur of the Japanese mountains he loved and climbed annually for over thirty years. The Seto Inland Sea series, also from 1926, includes the famous Sailing Boats set, in which six prints depict the same maritime scene at morning, forenoon, afternoon, evening, night, and in mist, demonstrating his innovative betsuzuri technique of reusing the same woodblocks with different color schemes to portray changing light conditions. The Ten Views of Mount Fuji, begun in 1926 and completed in 1928, further cemented his reputation as a master landscape artist.
Yoshida's travels continued to inspire major bodies of work. From late 1929 through early 1931, he journeyed through India and Southeast Asia, visiting Agra, Delhi, Jaipur, Lahore, Benares, Madurai, and Ellora. This trip produced thirty-two prints including six celebrated variations of the Taj Mahal shown at different times of day. A 1936 sketching trip to Korea and Manchuria with his son Toshi yielded five additional works the following year.
Yoshida's artistic approach occupied a unique position between the shin-hanga and sosaku-hanga movements. While he employed professional carvers and printers in the traditional collaborative model of shin-hanga, he supervised every step of production personally and occasionally carved blocks himself to better understand and direct the craft. He applied a jizuri seal to prints made under his direct supervision as a guarantee of quality, and signed his prints in pencil in the Western manner. His style blended French Impressionist light and color with Japanese woodcut methods, and he was particularly fascinated by how lighting transformed landscapes at different times of day. He experimented with oversized prints as large as fifty-five by eighty-four centimeters and tried different papers, silk printing, alternative woods, and zinc plates.
During the Second World War, Yoshida served as an official war painter for the Japanese Department of Military Affairs, making three trips to central China between 1938 and 1940. No new prints were produced during the war years. He designed his last woodblock print in 1946 but continued painting in oils and watercolors until his death.
The Yoshida family represents one of the most influential artistic dynasties in Japanese printmaking, spanning four generations. His wife Fujio was a distinguished artist in her own right. His eldest son, Toshi Yoshida, inherited the family studio and became a prominent printmaker. His second son, Hodaka Yoshida, pursued a more abstract artistic direction, and subsequent generations including Hodaka's wife Chizuko and daughter Ayomi continued the family tradition.
Yoshida fell ill during a final sketching trip to Izu in 1949 and died on April 5, 1950, at his home in Tokyo. He is buried at Ryuun-in Temple in Koishikawa. His works are held in collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the British Museum, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, and the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo. His unique hybrid approach to printmaking—bridging East and West, traditional and modern—continues to influence artists and captivate collectors around the world.
Key Facts
- Active Period
- 1876–1950
- Nationality
- 🇯🇵Japan
- Movement
- Shin-hanga
- Works Indexed
- 296
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Hiroshi Yoshida known for?
Hiroshi Yoshida (1876–1950) was a Japanese painter and woodblock print artist widely regarded, alongside Kawase Hasui, as one of the greatest artists of the shin-hanga movement. Distinguished by his fusion of Western oil painting techniques with traditional Japanese woodblock printmaking, Yoshida created approximately 260 print designs over his career, many depicting landscapes from his extensive travels across Asia, Europe, and North America.
When was Hiroshi Yoshida active?
Hiroshi Yoshida was active from 1876 to 1950. They were associated with the Shin-hanga movement.
What artistic movements influenced Hiroshi Yoshida?
Hiroshi Yoshida's work was shaped by the Shin-hanga tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Shin-hanga: The "new prints" movement (c.
What subjects did Hiroshi Yoshida depict?
Hiroshi Yoshida's prints frequently feature landscapes, urban scenes, temples & shrines, mountains, rivers & lakes, night scenes.
Where can I see Hiroshi Yoshida's original prints?
Original prints by Hiroshi Yoshida can be found in collections including Cleveland Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, ukiyo-e.org.
How much do Hiroshi Yoshida prints cost?
Hiroshi Yoshida is one of the most collected Japanese print artists, and his market spans an enormous price range from a few hundred dollars to six figures. This wide range reflects the vast number of prints he produced, the multiple editions that exist for popular designs, and the significant quality differences between early lifetime impressions and later posthumous printings. The most important factor in pricing is the edition type. Jizuri editions (artist-supervised, bearing Yoshida's personal "jizuri" seal): $2,000–$6,000 for popular subjects, with major works reaching $10,000–$50,000. Lifetime editions without the jizuri seal (studio-printed during his life): $1,000–$3,000. Posthumous family studio editions (printed by the Yoshida family after his death in 1950): $300–$800. The jizuri seal — a small rectangular cartouche reading "self-printed" in Japanese — is the single most important value indicator. Later posthumous editions show visible woodblock wear and less vivid color gradations. The most sought-after subjects include his mountain landscapes (especially the "Japan Alps" series), architectural views of India and Southeast Asia (the "Taj Mahal" prints), and his famous sailing boat compositions. The auction record exceeds $167,000 for an exceptional early impression. For collectors entering the market, good posthumous editions offer an affordable entry point, while jizuri-sealed lifetime editions in good condition represent the sweet spot for serious collectors. Key factors affecting price: impression quality (early vs. late), jizuri seal presence, color freshness, condition, and subject rarity.



