
Biography
William Evertson is an American mokuhanga artist whose work was featured in the Sumi-Fusion Juried International Exhibition at the 2021 International Mokuhanga Conference (IMC 2021) held in Nara, Japan. Selection for the IMC juried exhibition represents recognition within the international community of water-based woodblock printing practitioners.
Evertson is part of the growing community of American artists who have adopted mokuhanga as their printmaking medium, drawn to the traditional Japanese technique's water-based, non-toxic process and its distinctive aesthetic qualities.
Key Facts
- Nationality
- 🇺🇸United States
- Movement
- Contemporary Mokuhanga
- Works Indexed
- 22
Frequently Asked Questions
William Evertson is an American mokuhanga artist whose work was featured in the Sumi-Fusion Juried International Exhibition at the 2021 International Mokuhanga Conference (IMC 2021) held in Nara, Japan. Selection for the IMC juried exhibition represents recognition within the international community of water-based woodblock printing practitioners.
William Evertson'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.
William Evertson is a contemporary printmaker working in the mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock) tradition. Their work contributes to the living tradition of Japanese woodblock printing. Prices for contemporary mokuhanga prints range from $100 for smaller works to $1,500 for major compositions. Most prints sell in the $180–$600 range. The global mokuhanga community has been growing, with increasing exhibition opportunities and collector interest. Contemporary mokuhanga represents an affordable entry point for collectors.




















