BEGIN:VCALENDAR
METHOD:PUBLISH
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:-//Refresh Web Development//Helios Calendar//EN
VERSION:1.0
X-FROM-URL:http://www.hnlnow.com/events/index.php?com=details&eID=58613104
X-WR-RELCALID:HNLnow.com: Where and When in Honolulu Kawase Hasui: Capturing The Ephemeral 20120522T100000
BEGIN:VEVENT
URL;VALUE=URI:http://www.hnlnow.com/events/index.php?com=detail&eID=58613104
DTSTART:20120522T100000-1000Z
DTEND:20120522T163000-1000Z
SUMMARY:Kawase Hasui: Capturing The Ephemeral
DESCRIPTION:March 22\, 2012 - June 17\, 2012 Exhibition Overview Early in the 20th century\, publisher Watanabe Sh&amp;#333;zabur&amp;#333; (1885-1962) launched an effort to revitalize traditionally made woodblock prints. Watanabe sought to preserve the collaborative process (between publisher\, designer\, block-carvers and printers) while introducing updated subjects and styles that were commercially viable for a contemporary audience. He eventually coined the term shin-hanga\, or &quot;New Prints\,&quot; for this artistic movement. Although shin-hanga has been criticized for its conservatism\, and\, until recently\, under-recognized by art historians\, it nevertheless represents one of the most successful trends in 20th-century Japanese art.  Watanabe worked with many designers\, but developed a special relationship with Kawase Hasui (1883-1957)\, with whom he collaborated for nearly 40 years. Hasui excelled in capturing the atmospheric effects of rain\, mist and snow\, seasonal imagery\, and evocative lighting in his nostalgic scenes of the vanishing traditional countryside. In this sense\, Hasui can be considered a leading Japanese landscape artist of the 20th century\, building upon the foundation established by predecessors like Hokusai (1760-1849) and Hiroshige (1797-1858).  On September 1\, 1923\, Tokyo was struck by a massive earthquake\, devastating the city and killing more than 100\,000 people. Both Hasui\'s home and Watanabe\'s studio were destroyed\, resulting in the loss of most of the blocks used for Hasui\'s print designs. For this reason\, the prints produced by Watanabe and Hasui before the earthquake are now exceptionally rare. This exhibition focuses on Hasui\'s pre-earthquake prints\, beginning with the artist\'s earliest designs and continuing through his first major series.\n______________________________\nThis Event Downloaded From a Helios Calendar Powered Site
LOCATION:Honolulu Academy of Arts - 900 S. Beretania St. , Honolulu, HI  96814
CATEGORIES:HNLnow.com: Where and When in Honolulu Events
PRIORITY:0
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR