
Bamboo (right)
- Date:
- 1960
- Medium:
- Woodblock print
- Format:
- Oban
- Source:
- Japanese Art Open Database

$200–$2,000. Common Kyoto views: $200–$500. Key value factors: Kotozuka's Kyoto prints are popular and affordable. Seasonal temple scenes and garden views are most sought after.
"Bamboo" is a [shin-hanga](/glossary/shin-hanga) print by Kotozuka Eiichi, created during the Showa period. This work captures the enduring presence of trees with the contemplative sensitivity that characterizes the artist's finest nature prints.
Kotozuka Eiichi renders the subject with masterful control of the printing medium, using the interplay of carved line, color, and paper texture to evoke the tree's form, atmosphere, and symbolic resonance. Trees have long held special significance in Japanese art as symbols of endurance, seasonal change, and the beauty of the natural world.
This print represents Kotozuka Eiichi's contribution to the shin-hanga tradition during the Showa period. As with all works by this artist, it reflects both individual artistic vision and the broader cultural moment in which it was created. For collectors and admirers of Japanese printmaking, it offers a window into the sophisticated aesthetic world that produced some of the most beloved images in art history.
Curated cross-cuts that include this print.
Bamboo (right) was created by Kotozuka Eiichi (琴塚英一) in 1960.
Bamboo (right) depicts trees.