
Biography
Yoko Akino is a Kyoto-born, Ireland-based printmaker who has been a member of Graphic Studio Dublin since 1996. After receiving her early training in printmaking in Kyoto, she emigrated to Ireland in the mid-1990s and joined Graphic Studio Dublin — Ireland's longest-established artist-run open print workshop — where she has remained as a working studio member and has built her career around copper-plate etching, aquatint, and gold and silver leaf technique.
Akino lives on the Cooley Peninsula by Carlingford Lough in County Louth, the landscape of which has become one of the recurring subjects of her work. Her print imagery moves between Irish topography (Errigal, Slieve Foye, Donn's Garden, Cliara, Scariff and Deenish, the Dursey Island view), Japanese visual references (the moku-hanga sheet The Sun Also Rises and the Heart of the Matter, references to Kyoto and Tokyo, the Bashō-inflected miniature etchings), and a more conceptual register that draws on Buddhist sayings, classical literature, Yeatsian and Joycean phrases, and Heian-period sensibility. Recurrent titles include 'Form is emptiness, emptiness is form,' 'In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities,' 'Nothing is as it appears,' and 'Negative Capability.'
Her technique is consistent and identifying: small to medium-format copper plates, etched line on aquatinted ground, frequently overlaid with applied gold leaf, silver leaf, or palladium that catches the gallery light against the matte ink. The luxurious surface, combined with intimate composition (most plates 20 × 20 cm to 50 × 65 cm), produces what reviewers have described as a 'still and slow-moving' visual register that bridges Western intaglio with Japanese material sensibility. She has occasionally produced mokuhanga (Japanese woodcut) sheets, including 'Between Heaven and Earth,' 'The sun also rises, and the sun goes down,' and 'The Heart of the Matter,' typically issued in editions of 10–30.
Akino is widely recognized as one of Ireland's leading contemporary printmakers. She is a long-standing member of Graphic Studio Dublin's professional cohort, has shown in successive Graphic Studio Gallery exhibitions, and was included in the studio's Kanreki 60th-anniversary mokuhanga survey. Her prints are also represented through SO Fine Art Editions (Dublin), Glasgow Print Studio, and the international print biennale circuit. Her work has appeared in 'Between Islands' (Glasgow Print Studio) and 'When We Believe' (Graphic Studio Dublin), and she is a regular at Dublin Gallery Weekend.
Her print catalogue at Graphic Studio Gallery currently comprises more than eighty plates, in editions of 10 to 100 — a high-volume body of work for a thirty-year career. Pricing ranges from approximately €115 (the 100-edition miniature 'Soon This Too Will Be A Memory') to €750 (the limited large-format 'The Exploit. The Endeavour. The Deed.'), with the median plate priced at €240–€340. Several plates are explicit homages to Buddhist iconography ('I is merely a designation,' 'Glimpse after Glimpse'), to Japanese folktale ('An Bradán Fease,' the Salmon of Knowledge in Irish-language framing), or to Joyce ('Yes I will Yes,' from Molly Bloom's soliloquy).
Key Facts
- Nationality
- 🇮🇪Ireland
- Movement
- Contemporary Mokuhanga
- Works Indexed
- 25
Frequently Asked Questions
Yoko Akino is a Kyoto-born, Ireland-based printmaker who has been a member of Graphic Studio Dublin since 1996. After receiving her early training in printmaking in Kyoto, she emigrated to Ireland in the mid-1990s and joined Graphic Studio Dublin — Ireland's longest-established artist-run open print workshop — where she has remained as a working studio member and has built her career around copper-plate etching, aquatint, and gold and silver leaf technique.
Yoko Akino'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.