
Katsushika Hokusai
葛飾北斎
Also known as: Hokusai, Shunro, Sori, Kako, Taito, Iitsu, Gakyo Rojin Manji
1760–1849
Biography
Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾北斎, 1760–1849) stands as one of the most prolific, inventive, and internationally influential artists in the history of Japanese art. Over a career spanning more than seven decades, he produced an estimated thirty thousand paintings, sketches, woodblock prints, and illustrated books, reinventing himself and his art with a restlessness that became legendary. His most iconic image, "The Great Wave off Kanagawa," is arguably the single most recognized work of Japanese art in the world, a composition so powerful that it transcended its origins to reshape the visual imagination of artists across Europe and beyond.
Hokusai was born on October 31, 1760, in the Katsushika district of Edo, the sprawling capital that would later become Tokyo. The details of his earliest years remain somewhat obscure. He was likely born into an artisan family; by some accounts his father was Nakajima Ise, a mirror-maker for the shogun, though Hokusai may have been adopted. What is certain is that from a young age he displayed an insatiable curiosity about the visual world. He later recalled that by the age of six he had developed an obsession with drawing the forms of things.
At around fourteen, Hokusai was apprenticed to a wood-block engraver, where he learned the technical craft of carving the blocks used to produce printed images. This hands-on knowledge of the printing process would inform his work for the rest of his life, giving him an unusual command over the relationship between design and reproduction. In 1778, at the age of eighteen, he entered the studio of Katsukawa Shunsho, one of the leading ukiyo-e masters of the day, renowned for his portraits of kabuki actors. Under Shunsho's guidance, the young artist adopted the name Shunro and began producing actor prints and illustrations in the house style. His earliest published works, appearing around 1779, were competent contributions to the genre, but they already hinted at a restless ambition that would not be contained by any single school or tradition.
The death of Shunsho in 1793 marked a turning point. Hokusai was expelled from the Katsukawa school — or left of his own accord, depending on the source — and entered a period of intense experimentation. He immersed himself in the study of Chinese painting, classical Japanese Yamato-e and Rinpa traditions, and, remarkably, Western copper-engraving techniques that had filtered into Japan through the Dutch trading post at Nagasaki. This eclectic absorption of styles was reflected in the bewildering succession of names he adopted: Sori, Kako, Taito, Iitsu, and eventually Gakyo Rojin Manji, "the old man mad about painting." Over the course of his lifetime, he changed his artistic name more than thirty times, each new name signaling a fresh phase of creative ambition.
During the 1790s and early 1800s, Hokusai turned his attention to surimono — privately commissioned prints of exceptional refinement, produced in small editions for poetry clubs and wealthy patrons. These exquisite works, often combining verse with images of still lifes, birds, landscapes, and seasonal motifs, allowed him to experiment with lavish metallic pigments, embossing, and other techniques that were prohibitively expensive for commercial editions. Simultaneously, he became one of the most sought-after book illustrators in Edo, contributing designs to novels, poetry anthologies, and instructional manuals.
It was during this middle period that Hokusai began to develop the landscape sensibility that would define his greatest achievements. While ukiyo-e had traditionally focused on the "floating world" of courtesans, actors, and urban pleasures, Hokusai increasingly turned his eye toward the natural world — mountains, rivers, waterfalls, and the ocean — as well as the daily lives of ordinary working people. He was not the first ukiyo-e artist to depict landscapes, but he brought to the genre a compositional boldness, a sense of cosmic scale, and a feeling for the dynamic forces of nature that had no precedent in the tradition.
Hokusai's greatest series were produced when he was already in his seventies. Between approximately 1830 and 1832, he designed "Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji" (Fugaku Sanjurokkei), the series that would secure his immortality. Originally planned as thirty-six prints, the set proved so popular that ten additional compositions were added, bringing the total to forty-six. The series presented Japan's sacred mountain from every conceivable angle and distance — glimpsed through barrel-makers' hoops, looming behind fishing boats in a storm, framed by cherry blossoms, or dominating the horizon as travelers crossed vast plains. The first print in the series, "The Great Wave off Kanagawa," depicted a towering, claw-like wave threatening to engulf small fishing boats while Mount Fuji sat serene and diminutive in the background. Its composition — the dramatic diagonal of the wave, the contrast between human vulnerability and natural force, the startling use of imported Prussian blue pigment — was unlike anything seen before in Japanese or Western art.
Another monumental late work was the "Hokusai Manga," a fifteen-volume collection of sketches that Hokusai began publishing in 1814 and which continued to appear posthumously until 1878. The volumes contain thousands of images depicting everything from human figures in every posture and occupation to animals, plants, landscapes, architectural studies, supernatural beings, and pure abstractions of natural forces like wind and water. The Manga was conceived partly as a drawing manual for students, but it transcended that purpose to become a vast visual encyclopedia of the observable world, animated by Hokusai's inexhaustible curiosity and impish wit.
When Japan ended its long period of isolation in the 1850s, Japanese woodblock prints began to flood into Europe, where they ignited the phenomenon of "Japonisme" that swept through the French art world in the 1860s and 1870s. Hokusai was at its center. Claude Monet hung Japanese prints in his dining room at Giverny. Edgar Degas studied their asymmetric compositions and flattened perspectives. James McNeill Whistler drew on their tonal subtlety. The Art Nouveau movement absorbed their flowing organic lines. Hokusai's prints helped European artists break free from the conventions of academic perspective, contributing directly to the development of Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and early modernism.
Hokusai died on May 10, 1849, in Edo, at the age of eighty-eight. According to a widely reported account, his last words were: "If only Heaven will give me just another ten years... just another five more years, then I could become a real painter." Today, Hokusai is recognized not only as the supreme master of the Japanese woodblock print but as one of the most important artists in world history. His works are held in major collections worldwide, including the British Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the dedicated Sumida Hokusai Museum in Tokyo.
Key Facts
- Active Period
- 1760–1849
- Movement
- Ukiyo-e
- Works Indexed
- 200
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Katsushika Hokusai known for?
Katsushika Hokusai (葛飾北斎, 1760–1849) stands as one of the most prolific, inventive, and internationally influential artists in the history of Japanese art. Over a career spanning more than seven decades, he produced an estimated thirty thousand paintings, sketches, woodblock prints, and illustrated books, reinventing himself and his art with a restlessness that became legendary. His most iconic image, "The Great Wave off Kanagawa," is arguably the single most recognized work of Japanese art in the world, a composition so powerful that it transcended its origins to reshape the visual imagination of artists across Europe and beyond.
When was Katsushika Hokusai active?
Katsushika Hokusai was active from 1760 to 1849. They were associated with the Ukiyo-e movement.
What artistic movements influenced Katsushika Hokusai?
Katsushika Hokusai's work was shaped by the Ukiyo-e tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Ukiyo-e: Ukiyo-e ("pictures of the floating world") is the dominant tradition of Japanese woodblock printing, flourishing from the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries.
Where can I see Katsushika Hokusai's original prints?
Original prints by Katsushika Hokusai can be found in collections including Victoria and Albert Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art.
External Resources
Woodblock Prints by Katsushika Hokusai (200)

Fuji from the Pass of Mishima, Koshu Province
1760–1849
color woodblock print

Group of Figures near a Brook
1760–1849
color woodblock print

Fuji from Ushibori, Province of Hitachi
1760–1849
color woodblock print

Fuji from Surugadai, in Yedo
1760–1849
color woodblock print

Lumber Yard
1760–1849
color woodblock print

Palace of the Queen Mother of the West (Seiōbo, Ch. Xiwangmu)
ca. 1779-94

Two Blind Men and Snowman
1780s
Woodblock print (surimono), ink and color on paper

Descending Geese for Bunshichi (Bunshichi no rakugan), from the series "Eight Views of Elegant Gallants (Furyu otokodate hakkei)"
1781/89
Color woodblock print; chuban

A Perspective View: The Two Deva Kings Gate of Kinryuzan Temple (Ukie: Kinryuzan niomon no zu)
1781/89
Color woodblock print

Hares and Roses
c. 1783
Color woodblock print; hashira-e

The Sumo Wrestlers Uzugafuchi Kandayu and Takasaki Ichijuro
1783–84
Color woodblock print; aiban

Patterns of Yayoi
1784-1785

The Chest Containing Various Teachings (Kyokun zonagamochi)
1784
Woodblock-printed book; 5 vols.

The Meguro Fudo Temple
1785-1787

Fashionable Places in Edo
1785-1787

The Mokuboji Temple by the Sumida River
1785-1787

Yoshiwara
1785-1787

The Myoken Hall of the Hosshoji Temple at Yanagishima
1785-1787

The Kibune Shrine
1785-1787

The Nezu Gongen Shrine
1785-1787

The Kanda Myojin Shrine
1785-1787

The Actor Segawa Kikunojo III as a Woman of a Samurai Family
c. 1786
Color woodblock print

Staff-Waving Dance
c. 1790
Woodblock print (nishiki-e), ink and color on paper

Chinese and Tartar Boys Quarreling over a Game of Go
c. 1790
Woodblock print; oban, keyblock proof impression

Offering Pails of Water
c. 1790
Woodblock print (nishiki-e), ink and color on paper

Traveler on Horseback under Bloomed Cherry Tree
1790s
Woodblock print (nishiki-e), ink and color on paper

Women on the Veranda Looking at a Girl Picking Flower
about 1790s
Color woodblock print; long surimono

The Day Before the Beginning of Spring
c. 1790
Woodblock print (nishiki-e), ink and color on paper

Women Painting Fans
1790s
Woodblock print (surimono), ink and color on paper

The Actor Ichikawa Komazo as a Woman with Dishevelled Hair
c. 1791
Color woodblock print; hosoban

An Actor of Woman's Roles
1791
Color woodblock print; hosoban

Ichikawa Danjuro VI
c. 1792/93
Color woodblock print

Fujieda station on the Tokaido
c. 1796
Color woodblock print; surimono

Gathering Herbs
c. 1796/97
Color woodblock print; long surimono

Three women beneath a plum tree at night
c. 1796
Color woodblock print; surimono

Waves of Potential Immigrants from Many Lands (Shikinamigusa)
1796
Color woodblock-printed book; 1 vol.

The gods of fortune Ebisu and Daikoku
1797
Color woodblock print; surimono, egoyomi

Two women stretching cloth
c. 1797/98
Color woodblock print; double-page illustration from book

Sparrows on Millstones with Hagi Bushes
1797
Color woodblock print; large surimono

Ferryboat
c. 1798
Color woodblock print

Women and Children Viewing the Fireworks
c. 1798
Color woodblock print

An Artisan’s Shop, from the album The Mist of Sandara (Sandara kasumi)
1798
Color woodblock print; album plate

Women on a Veranda Stretching Cloth to Dry
c. 1799
Color woodblock print; surimono

The Peony Show
c. 1799
Color woodblock print; ebangire, surimono

An Old Man and Attendants Watching the Sugoroku Game
1799
Color woodblock print; surimono

Tsukasa and Other Courtesans of the Ogiya Watching the Autumn Moon Rise Over Rice Fields from a Balcony in the Yoshiwara
1799
Surimono; color woodblock print

Two Women and a Child Beside a Goldfish Tank
c. 1800
color woodblock print

Women Distracting a Child whose Kite is caught in a Tree
c. 1800
color woodblock print

Dyers at Work
c. 1800
color woodblock print

Boats transporting rice on the Sumida River
c. 1800/05
Color woodblock print; nagaban, surimono

Shellfish gathering
c. 1800
Color woodblock print; surimono

Viewing votive paintings
c. 1800
Color woodblock print; nagaban, surimono

Boy releasing a kite
c. 1800/10
Color woodblock print; ebangire, surimono
Scene in May: The Boys' Festival (Gogatsu no kei)
c. 1800-1810
Woodblock print (naga surimono); ink and color on paper

Picnic party
c. 1801/07
Color woodblock print; surimono

Akutagawa
c. 1801/06
Color woodblock print; kokonotsugiri-ban, surimono

Courtly event modeled on the Lanting Gathering
c. 1801/07
Color woodblock print; ebangire, surimono

Visitors to Enoshima
c. 1801/04
Color woodblock print; ebangire, surimono

Mount Fuji with Cherry Trees in Bloom
c. 1801/05
Color woodblock print; surimono

Flowers and spring greens in a hat
c. 1801
Color woodblock print; ebangire, surimono