Hashiguchi Goyo — Japanese Shin-hanga artist

Hashiguchi Goyo

橋口五葉

Also known as: Hashiguchi Kiyoshi

1880–1921

Japan

Biography

Hashiguchi Goyo, born Hashiguchi Kiyoshi in 1880 in Kagoshima, on the southern island of Kyushu, was one of the most gifted and tragically short-lived artists of the shin-hanga movement. Despite producing only a small number of woodblock prints during a concentrated period of creative activity from approximately 1915 to 1921, Goyo created some of the most exquisite and highly valued prints in the entire canon of modern Japanese printmaking. His bijin-ga (beautiful women prints) are considered by many connoisseurs to be the finest ever produced, surpassing even those of the great ukiyo-e masters in their combination of technical perfection, psychological depth, and aesthetic refinement.

Goyo was born into a cultured family with artistic connections. His father, Hashiguchi Kanemitsu, was a painter in the Kano school tradition, and the young Kiyoshi grew up surrounded by art and cultural discourse. He showed exceptional artistic talent from childhood and was encouraged by his family to pursue a career in art. In 1899, at the age of nineteen, Goyo enrolled at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts (Tokyo Bijutsu Gakko), where he studied Western-style oil painting under Kuroda Seiki, the most important Western-trained Japanese painter of the Meiji era. This training in Western art gave Goyo a thorough grounding in anatomy, perspective, and the rendering of light and shadow — skills that would later distinguish his woodblock prints from those of artists trained exclusively in Japanese traditions.

At the Tokyo School of Fine Arts, Goyo also studied Japanese art history and developed a deep appreciation for the works of the great ukiyo-e artists, particularly Kitagawa Utamaro, whose bijin-ga prints from the late eighteenth century represented the pinnacle of the genre. Goyo became a devoted student of Utamaro's compositions and techniques, spending many hours studying original prints and developing an intimate understanding of the aesthetic principles underlying the finest ukiyo-e. This dual training in both Western and Japanese artistic traditions would prove crucial to his later achievement.

After graduating from the Tokyo School of Fine Arts in 1905, Goyo initially pursued a career as a painter and graphic designer. He became involved in the burgeoning commercial art scene of Meiji-era Japan, producing illustrations, book designs, and decorative art. Most notably, he designed the cover for the first edition of Natsume Soseki's novel "I Am a Cat" (Wagahai wa Neko de Aru), one of the landmarks of modern Japanese literature. His graphic design work demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of both Japanese and Western aesthetic traditions and established his reputation as an artist of exceptional refinement and taste.

Goyo's turn to woodblock printmaking came relatively late in his career, around 1915, inspired in part by the example of Watanabe Shozaburo's shin-hanga publishing enterprise. However, unlike most shin-hanga artists who entrusted the carving and printing of their designs to Watanabe's craftsmen, Goyo insisted on supervising every aspect of production himself. He selected his own carvers and printers, chose the paper and pigments, and directed the printing process with obsessive attention to detail. This self-publishing approach gave him complete artistic control but also meant that production was slow and editions were small. Many of his prints were produced in editions of fewer than one hundred impressions, and some exist in only a handful of copies.

Goyo's woodblock prints fall primarily into two categories: bijin-ga and landscape studies. His bijin-ga prints, which constitute the most celebrated part of his oeuvre, depict women in moments of private toilette — bathing, combing their hair, drying themselves after the bath, or sitting in quiet contemplation. The most famous of these is "Woman Combing Her Hair" (Kami suki), completed around 1920, which depicts a seated woman drawing a fine-toothed comb through her long black hair. The print is remarkable for the sensuous naturalism of its figure drawing, the exquisite rendering of the woman's skin and hair, and the subtle psychological presence of the subject, who seems lost in thought as she performs this daily ritual. "Woman Combing Her Hair" is considered one of the supreme achievements of Japanese printmaking and commands extraordinary prices at auction.

Other major bijin-ga prints by Goyo include "Woman at the Bath" (Yokujo no onna), showing a nude woman seated on the edge of a wooden bath, and several variants of women in hot spring settings. These prints combine the frank naturalism of Western figure painting with the decorative elegance and technical refinement of the Japanese woodblock tradition. The flesh tones in Goyo's prints are achieved through multiple applications of translucent pigment, creating a luminous warmth that seems to glow from within the paper. The hair, rendered in deep, lustrous black, provides a striking contrast that frames the face and body with graphic boldness.

Goyo's landscape prints, while fewer in number and less well known, are also of exceptional quality. His views of Kominato and other coastal scenes demonstrate a subtle mastery of atmospheric effects, with soft gradations of color suggesting the play of light on water and sky. These landscapes share with his figure prints a quality of stillness and contemplative beauty that is distinctly Goyo's own.

The technical quality of Goyo's prints is universally acknowledged as extraordinary, even within the high standards of the shin-hanga movement. He used the finest handmade hosho paper, selected natural mineral pigments of the highest quality, and insisted on the use of traditional keyblock techniques refined to an unprecedented degree of precision. The embossing (karazuri) in his prints — used to suggest the texture of skin, the weave of fabric, and the softness of hair — is among the most sophisticated in the history of woodblock printing. Each impression required multiple passes through the press, with some prints requiring twenty or more separate color applications.

Tragically, Goyo's printmaking career was cut short by illness. He was diagnosed with stomach cancer and died on February 24, 1921, at the age of only forty-one. At the time of his death, he had completed only about fourteen finished print designs, with several additional works left unfinished or in preliminary stages. His premature death robbed the world of an artist who was arguably at the height of his creative powers and who might have produced many more masterworks had he been granted a longer life.

The rarity and exceptional quality of Goyo's prints have made them among the most coveted and valuable of all Japanese woodblock prints. His "Woman Combing Her Hair" has sold at auction for prices exceeding one hundred thousand dollars, placing it among the most expensive Japanese prints ever sold. Major collections of his work are held at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, the British Museum, the Tokyo National Museum, the Honolulu Museum of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago. Despite the small size of his oeuvre, Hashiguchi Goyo's influence on subsequent generations of printmakers and his reputation as one of the supreme artists of the woodblock medium remain undiminished. His prints stand as testament to what can be achieved when extraordinary artistic vision is combined with uncompromising technical standards and complete creative control.

Key Facts

Active Period
1880–1921
Nationality
🇯🇵Japan
Movement
Shin-hanga
Works Indexed
154

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Hashiguchi Goyo known for?

Hashiguchi Goyo, born Hashiguchi Kiyoshi in 1880 in Kagoshima, on the southern island of Kyushu, was one of the most gifted and tragically short-lived artists of the shin-hanga movement. Despite producing only a small number of woodblock prints during a concentrated period of creative activity from approximately 1915 to 1921, Goyo created some of the most exquisite and highly valued prints in the entire canon of modern Japanese printmaking. His bijin-ga (beautiful women prints) are considered by many connoisseurs to be the finest ever produced, surpassing even those of the great ukiyo-e masters in their combination of technical perfection, psychological depth, and aesthetic refinement.

When was Hashiguchi Goyo active?

Hashiguchi Goyo was active from 1880 to 1921. They were associated with the Shin-hanga movement.

What artistic movements influenced Hashiguchi Goyo?

Hashiguchi Goyo's work was shaped by the Shin-hanga tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Shin-hanga: The "new prints" movement (c.

What subjects did Hashiguchi Goyo depict?

Hashiguchi Goyo's prints frequently feature portraits, landscapes, seascapes, urban scenes, birds & flowers, rivers & lakes.

Where can I see Hashiguchi Goyo's original prints?

Original prints by Hashiguchi Goyo can be found in collections including Art Institute of Chicago, Harvard Art Museums, Ohmi Gallery, Honolulu Museum of Art.

How much do Hashiguchi Goyo prints cost?

Hashiguchi Goyo prints are among the most expensive and sought-after in the entire field of modern Japanese printmaking. He created only 14 woodblock print designs before his death in 1921 at age 40, and this extreme rarity, combined with the extraordinary quality of his work, drives prices well into five figures for the best examples. The auction record stands at $40,075 for "Yokujo no Onna" (Woman at the Bath), sold at Bonhams New York in 2020. For collectors, the critical distinction is between lifetime editions (printed before Goyo's death in 1921) and posthumous editions printed by his family or later publishers. Lifetime editions of Goyo's bijin-ga (beautiful women) prints: $10,000–$40,000. Posthumous editions of the same designs: $2,000–$5,000. Even his landscape prints, which are less celebrated than his figure studies, command strong prices due to the overall scarcity of his work. A handful of Goyo's earliest designs were published by Watanabe Shozaburo before he became self-publishing — these carry the Watanabe seal and are especially scarce. Goyo's prints are considered the pinnacle of the shin-hanga bijin-ga tradition, often compared favorably to the work of Utamaro. The average price at auction is approximately $3,000, but this figure is heavily influenced by the predominance of posthumous editions. Early lifetime editions in fine condition are rare enough that they almost always exceed their estimates. Look for the embossed artist seal and the quality of the mica backgrounds on his bijin-ga prints as indicators of early impressions.

External Resources

Woodblock Prints by Hashiguchi Goyo (154)

Woman with Sash by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman with Sash

1920 (posthumous edition)

Woodblock print

Ibuki Mountain in Snow by Hashiguchi Goyo

Ibuki Mountain in Snow

1920

Woodblock print

Woman Dressing by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman Dressing

1920

Woodblock print

Matron at Her Dressing Table by Hashiguchi Goyo

Matron at Her Dressing Table

ca. 1920

Woodblock print

Aiko - Demon Gold by Hashiguchi Goyo

Aiko - Demon Gold

1921

Woodblock print

Woman Combing her Hair (Kami sukeru onna) by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman Combing her Hair (Kami sukeru onna)

1928

Woodblock print

Girl in Summer Attire (Natsu yosooi no musume) [Portrait of Nakatani Tsuru] by Hashiguchi Goyo

Girl in Summer Attire (Natsu yosooi no musume) [Portrait of Nakatani Tsuru]

1920 (printed early 1950s)

Color woodblock print

Woman Holding a Hand Towel by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman Holding a Hand Towel

early 1950s

Woodblock print, ink and color on paper with mica

At a Hot Spring Inn (Onsen yado) [Portrait of Nakatani Tsuru] by Hashiguchi Goyo

At a Hot Spring Inn (Onsen yado) [Portrait of Nakatani Tsuru]

1920 (printed early 1950s)

Color woodblock print

Girl in Summer Clothes by Hashiguchi Goyo

Girl in Summer Clothes

1952

Woodblock print, ink and color on paper with mica

At a Hot Springs Inn by Hashiguchi Goyo

At a Hot Springs Inn

1952

Woodblock print, ink and color on paper with mica and embossing

Woman Folding a Kimono by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman Folding a Kimono

1953

Woodblock print, ink on paper

Woman at a Hot Spring by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman at a Hot Spring

1953

Woodblock print, ink and color on paper

Woman Cutting Her Toenails by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman Cutting Her Toenails

1953

Woodblock print, ink on paper

Various by Hashiguchi Goyo

Various

Not set

Woodblock print

Sunrise — 日の出 by Hashiguchi Goyo

Sunrise — 日の出

Not set

Woodblock print

Yabakei (landscape with a Peasant Cart in the Rain) by Hashiguchi Goyo

Yabakei (landscape with a Peasant Cart in the Rain)

19th–20th century

Woodblock print

Portfolio of Eight Prints of Beautiful Women (Bijin) by Hashiguchi Goyō by Hashiguchi Goyo

Portfolio of Eight Prints of Beautiful Women (Bijin) by Hashiguchi Goyō

20th century

Printed fabric-covered folding portfolio containing eight modern Japanese woodblock prints

Spring field — 春の野 by Hashiguchi Goyo

Spring field — 春の野

4

Woodblock print

Woman taking a catnap by Hashiguchi Goyo

Woman taking a catnap

description

Woodblock print

Bijin at Nihonbashi — 日本橋美人 by Hashiguchi Goyo

Bijin at Nihonbashi — 日本橋美人

Not set

Woodblock print

Seated Nude by Hashiguchi Goyo

Seated Nude

Not set

Woodblock print

Nikai Zashiki no Zu- repro by Hashiguchi Goyo

Nikai Zashiki no Zu- repro

Not set

Woodblock print

Richard Kruml by Hashiguchi Goyo

Richard Kruml

c. 1915–1921

Drawing

Oomori- repro by Hashiguchi Goyo

Oomori- repro

Not set

Woodblock print

Cart in Rainy Landscape by Hashiguchi Goyo

Cart in Rainy Landscape

description

Woodblock print

Maiko- Dancing Girl by Hashiguchi Goyo

Maiko- Dancing Girl

Not set

Woodblock print

Commemorative Edition Goyo Print Set published by Tanseisha Publisher by Hashiguchi Goyo

Commemorative Edition Goyo Print Set published by Tanseisha Publisher

Not set

Woodblock print

Bijin 2 by Hashiguchi Goyo

Bijin 2

Not set

Woodblock print

Kazashi no Hana by Hashiguchi Goyo

Kazashi no Hana

Not set

Woodblock print

Kurenai, Red Flower by Hashiguchi Goyo

Kurenai, Red Flower

Not set

Woodblock print

Mandarin Ducks — 鴛鴦鴨 by Hashiguchi Goyo

Mandarin Ducks — 鴛鴦鴨

Not set

Woodblock print

13 print set by Hashiguchi Goyo

13 print set

Not set

Woodblock print

Nude After Bath- watercolour by Hashiguchi Goyo

Nude After Bath- watercolour

Not set

Woodblock print