1. Exploring with Hokusai! The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Ukiyo-e Prints
    Katsushika Hokusai, Snow at the Sumida River, from the series Snow, Moon and Flowers, The Sumida Hokusai Museum (1st term)
  2. Exploring with Hokusai! The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Ukiyo-e Prints
    Katsushika Hokusai, The Nori Seaweed Shop Patronized by Tōeizan Temple, The Sumida Hokusai Museum (1st term)
  3. Exploring with Hokusai! The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Ukiyo-e Prints
    Katsushika Hokusai, Urashima Tarō Enters the Dragon Palace, from the series Newly Published Perspective Pictures, The Sumida Hokusai Museum (2nd term)

Exploring with Hokusai! The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Ukiyo-e Prints

  • Art
  • The Sumida Hokusai Museum, Ryogoku
Sébastien Raineri
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Time Out says

Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) stands tall as one of Japan’s most celebrated artists, renowned for his dazzling imagination, bold compositions and mastery of line. While his brush paintings reveal his singular vision, ukiyo-e prints – commercially produced, widely circulated images – were what cemented his global legacy. These prints, once everyday commodities, now serve as invaluable windows into the culture, lifestyles and visual sensibilities of the period.

The Sumida Hokusai Museum’s ‘Exploring with Hokusai! The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Ukiyo-e Prints’ delves deep into the medium that shaped Hokusai’s fame. Rather than simply showcasing masterpieces, the exhibition illuminates the evolution of ukiyo-e technology, from early monochromatic sumizuri-e to the vivid nishiki-e that revolutionised colour printing. You’ll get to discover the ingenuity of carvers, printers and publishers, whose finely tuned collaboration brought each work to life.

The exhibition also highlights ukiyo-e as Edo-period (1603–1868) media. Portraits of actors, travel images, fans and advertisements reveal a lively society recorded through prints that doubled as entertainment and information. Together, the works on display offer a richly layered portrait of Edo’s visual culture and the enduring appeal of ukiyo-e.

Details

Address
The Sumida Hokusai Museum
2-7-2 Kamezawa, Sumida
Tokyo
Transport:
Ryogoku Station (Sobu, Oedo lines)
Price:
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
Opening hours:
9.30am-5.30pm / closed Mon (except Jan 12 & Feb 23), Dec 29-Jan 2, Jan 13, Jan 20

Dates and times

The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
The Sumida Hokusai Museum 09:30
¥1,000, college and high school students ¥700, junior high school students ¥300, younger children free
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