close-up of light-colored iris: swaths of grey and white at R arc towards center, ending with yellow and orange at the tips; outlines of pedals and veins in green; white forms with green outlines at center; darker colored swaths at L, with a hint of purple at ULC

%C2%A9 Yoshida Fujio

Iris, 1954

Not on Viewexpand_more

The print is from a series created by Yoshida Fujio in the early 1950s, featuring close-up views of flowers common to the Japanese islands. Using traditional Japanese woodblock printing techniques, her pictures of the delicate, swirling insides of flowers like irises, gladioluses, and wild ginger border on abstraction. Yoshida Fujio was among the first women Japanese painters to work in the Western style. She was also the first female artist in the celebrated Yoshida family of painters, a leading artistic family dating back to the early 1800s. After traveling throughout North America in the early 1900s, preparing numerous sketches and drawings that gained her wide acclaim within the United States, she returned to Japan. There, especially after the end of World War II in 1945, she focused on oil painting and woodblock printing.

Details
Title
Iris
Artist Life
1888 - 1987
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2013.29.530
Provenance
John MacGregor; H. Ed Robison. Clark Center for Japanese Art & Culture, 1995 - 2015
Curator Approved

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close-up of light-colored iris: swaths of grey and white at R arc towards center, ending with yellow and orange at the tips; outlines of pedals and veins in green; white forms with green outlines at center; darker colored swaths at L, with a hint of purple at ULC

© Yoshida Fujio

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