Abstract Prints (2049)
Abstract prints represent a revolutionary departure in Japanese printmaking, emerging primarily through the sosaku-hanga (creative prints) movement of the mid-twentieth century. While traditional ukiyo-e and shin-hanga were rooted in representational imagery, abstract works embraced non-figurative composition, exploring color, texture, and form for their own expressive potential. The abstract turn in Japanese printmaking gained international recognition in the 1950s and 1960s, when artists like Yoshida Hodaka, Maki Haku, and Tajima Hiroyuki won major prizes at the Sao Paulo and Venice Biennales. These artists developed distinctive approaches to abstraction — from Maki's layered cement-and-ink surfaces to Tajima's vibrant geometric compositions — that drew on Japanese aesthetic principles while engaging with global modernist movements. The woodblock medium proved uniquely suited to abstract expression, offering possibilities for textural experimentation through woodgrain impression, selective inking, and the interaction between handmade washi paper and carved surfaces. Many abstract printmakers exploited the material qualities of the block itself, allowing the wood's natural grain to become an active compositional element rather than merely a vehicle for an image.
Artists Known for Abstract

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nomura-yoshimitsu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (ito-takashi)
Woodblock print

Untitled (shufu-miyamoto)
Woodblock print

Untitled, Pilgrim
Woodblock print

Untitled (hodo-nishimura)
Woodblock print

Untitled (maeda-toshiro)
Woodblock print

Untitled (maeda-toshiro)
Woodblock print

Untitled (nakao-yoshitaka)
Woodblock print
![Untitled [Still life of fruit] by Toru Mabuchi](https://1.api.artsmia.org/800/136033.jpg)
Untitled [Still life of fruit]
Late 1950s–early 1960s
Woodblock print, ink and color on paper

Untitled (watanabe-seitei)
1896
Woodblock print
Untitled, flags
Woodblock print
Unknown, abstract face
Woodblock print

Untitled (tekiho-imoto)
Woodblock print

Untitled (tekiho-imoto)
Woodblock print

Untitled (tekiho-imoto)
Woodblock print

Untitled (soseki-komori)
Woodblock print

Untitled (yoshimune-arai)
Woodblock print

Untitled (kazuma-oda)
Woodblock print

Untitled (kazuma-oda)
Woodblock print

Patterns of my life
2007
Woodblock Print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print

Untitled (kimura-yoshiharu)
Woodblock print

Untitled (tomoo-inagaki)
Woodblock print

Untitled (kazuma-oda)
Woodblock print

Untitled (kazuma-oda)
Woodblock print

Untitled (kazuma-oda)
Woodblock print

Untitled (takashi-henmi)
Woodblock print

Untitled (takashi-henmi)
Woodblock print

Untitled (takashi-henmi)
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print

Untitled (tsuchiya-rakuzan)
Woodblock print

Untitled (gesso-yoshimoto)
Woodblock print

Untitled (koho-shoda)
Woodblock print

Untitled- church
Woodblock print

Untitled, farm harvest
Woodblock print

Kimono Pattern
着物の柄
1930
Color woodblock print

Long Undergarment (light blue ground, pattern on kimono) (Nagajuban)
July 1929
Woodblock print
Untitled (lithograph)
Lithograph
abstract, face
Woodblock print

Untitled (hodo-nishimura)
Woodblock print

Untitled (hodo-nishimura)
Woodblock print

Untitled (hodo-nishimura)
Woodblock print

Untitled
2021
Woodblock print on Japanese paper
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Untitled
Woodblock print
Related Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Abstract prints represent a revolutionary departure in Japanese printmaking, emerging primarily through the sosaku-hanga (creative prints) movement of the mid-twentieth century. While traditional ukiyo-e and shin-hanga were rooted in representational imagery, abstract works embraced non-figurative composition, exploring color, texture, and form for their own expressive potential.
Maki Haku, Onchi Koshiro, and Nana Shiomi are among the artists most associated with abstract in our collection. Browse the full list of artists who explored this subject above.
Hanga currently catalogues 2049 prints tagged with abstract, spanning ukiyo-e, shin-hanga, and sōsaku-hanga traditions where applicable.





