Collection: Shin-hanga

Shin-hanga (新版画, 'new prints') emerged in early 20th-century Japan during the Taishō and Shōwa periods as a revival of traditional ukiyo-e woodblock printing. Rooted in the collaborative "hanmoto" system, where artists, carvers, printers, and publishers divided labor, it sought to modernize Edo and Meiji-era aesthetics while preserving their technical foundations.

The movement was initiated by publisher Watanabe Shōsaburō (1885–1962), who commissioned artists such as Kawase Hasui and Hashiguchi Goyō to reinterpret classical themes through contemporary lenses.

Shin-hanga prints incorporated Western-influenced techniques, including layered "baren suji-zuri" (baren marks) and "goma-zuri" (speckled textures), applied to thicker, less-moistened paper. Themes included landscapes ("fukeiga"), famous sites ("meishō"), beauties ("bijinga"), kabuki actors ("yakusha-e"), and birds-and-flowers ("kachō-e"). The movement emphasized atmospheric effects and individual mood, avoiding the emulation of hand-drawn brushstrokes in favor of deliberate printmaking innovation. Watanabe’s focus on "geijutsu" (fine art) separated shin-hanga from mass-produced "shinsaku-hanga" souvenirs.

Though interrupted by World War II, shin-hanga continued into the 1950s and 1960s, its influence seen in the global dissemination of Japanese printmaking. The movement’s fusion of ukiyo-e craftsmanship with impressionistic sensibilities influenced mid-century modernist circles, where its layered techniques and romanticized naturalism found appreciation.