Hanga
Joshua Rome — Japanese Contemporary Mokuhanga artist

Joshua Rome

1953

United States

Biography

Joshua Rome (born 1953) is an American mokuhanga artist who has developed a distinctive body of abstract woodblock prints that explore the expressive possibilities of the traditional Japanese medium. His work, which draws on both his Western artistic training and his study of Japanese printmaking techniques, investigates the visual and material properties of the woodblock process itself — the texture of carved wood, the behavior of water-based pigments, the quality of handmade paper — transforming these technical elements into the very subject of his art.

Born in 1953, Rome studied art in the United States before encountering mokuhanga and recognizing its potential as a vehicle for contemporary abstract expression. He undertook sustained study of Japanese woodblock printing techniques, eventually achieving sufficient mastery to employ the traditional process with both technical confidence and creative freedom. His commitment to mokuhanga reflects a conviction that the medium's unique material qualities — the warmth of hand-printed color, the visible grain of the woodblock, the receptive surface of washi paper — offer expressive possibilities unavailable through any other printing method.

Rome's prints are abstract compositions that emphasize texture, layering, and the interplay of printed and unprinted surfaces. His images are built up through multiple passes of the block, creating complex surfaces in which colors overlap, textures accumulate, and the grain of the wood contributes its own graphic pattern. The resulting prints have a richness and depth that reward close examination, revealing subtle variations and happy accidents that arise from the hand-printing process.

His color palette ranges from earthy, subdued tones — browns, grays, muted greens — to more vivid combinations that exploit the luminous translucency of water-based pigments. In many prints, the natural color and texture of the washi paper itself play an active role in the composition, with unprinted areas of paper contributing warmth and light to the overall image.

Rome has exhibited in the United States and internationally, and his work is represented in private collections and at print fairs. He is recognized within the mokuhanga community as a thoughtful practitioner who brings a rigorous abstract sensibility to the Japanese woodblock tradition.

Key Facts

Active Period
1953
Nationality
🇺🇸United States
Works Indexed
50

Frequently Asked Questions

Joshua Rome (born 1953) is an American mokuhanga artist who has developed a distinctive body of abstract woodblock prints that explore the expressive possibilities of the traditional Japanese medium. His work, which draws on both his Western artistic training and his study of Japanese printmaking techniques, investigates the visual and material properties of the woodblock process itself — the texture of carved wood, the behavior of water-based pigments, the quality of handmade paper — transforming these technical elements into the very subject of his art.

Joshua Rome was active born in 1953. They were associated with the Contemporary Mokuhanga movement.

Joshua Rome's work was shaped by the Contemporary Mokuhanga tradition in Japanese woodblock printmaking. Contemporary Mokuhanga: Contemporary mokuhanga (literally "wood-block print") encompasses artists working from approximately 1970 to the present who continue or reinvent traditional Japanese woodblock printing techniques.

Original prints by Joshua Rome can be found in collections including Japanese Art Open Database, Ohmi Gallery, robynbuntin, Minneapolis Institute of Art.

Woodblock Prints by Joshua Rome (50)