
Biography
Yuhan Ito (伊藤雄半, active 1930s) was a Japanese woodblock print artist who worked within the shin-hanga tradition during the 1930s, producing landscape prints that are now scarce and infrequently documented. Very little biographical information has survived about this artist, and his works appear only rarely in the market or in reference literature on the shin-hanga movement.
The prints attributed to Yuhan Ito depict Japanese landscapes in the atmospheric style characteristic of the shin-hanga school, suggesting that he was working within the collaborative publisher model in which an artist provided designs that were carved and printed by skilled craftsmen. His subjects appear to have included views of rural Japan and natural scenery, rendered with the attention to weather, light, and seasonal mood that defined the shin-hanga aesthetic.
Yuhan Ito remains one of the many lesser-known artists who contributed to the shin-hanga movement but whose careers are poorly documented due to modest output, limited critical attention during their lifetimes, and the disruptions of wartime and postwar Japan. His surviving prints are of interest primarily to collectors seeking to explore the full breadth of the shin-hanga movement beyond its most famous practitioners.
Key Facts
- Nationality
- 🇯🇵Japan
- Movement
- Shin-hanga
- Works Indexed
- 72
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Yuhan Ito known for?
Yuhan Ito (伊藤雄半, active 1930s) was a Japanese woodblock print artist who worked within the shin-hanga tradition during the 1930s, producing landscape prints that are now scarce and infrequently documented. Very little biographical information has survived about this artist, and his works appear only rarely in the market or in reference literature on the shin-hanga movement.
What artistic movements influenced Yuhan Ito?
Yuhan Ito's work was shaped by the Shin-hanga tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Shin-hanga: The "new prints" movement (c.
Where can I see Yuhan Ito's original prints?
Original prints by Yuhan Ito can be found in collections including ukiyo-e.org, Harvard Art Museums, Japanese Art Open Database, Ohmi Gallery.