Animals Prints (865)
Animal subjects in Japanese woodblock prints extend well beyond the birds-and-flowers genre to encompass a wide range of creatures — horses, cats, fish, insects, rabbits, foxes, and mythological beasts — each carrying distinct cultural associations and artistic challenges. Animals appear as primary subjects, as symbolic elements within larger compositions, and as characters in narrative prints drawn from folklore and literature. Cats and tigers were favored subjects of Utagawa Kuniyoshi, whose playful cat prints and dramatic tiger compositions influenced generations of artists. Horse prints documented both the practical role of horses in Japanese transportation and warfare and their symbolic associations with strength and nobility. Fish prints, particularly carp, carried auspicious connotations and demanded technical virtuosity in rendering scales and aquatic movement through woodblock carving. Mythological animals — dragons, kirin, phoenixes, and the fox spirits (kitsune) of Japanese folklore — provided opportunities for dramatic, imaginative compositions unconstrained by naturalistic observation. The sosaku-hanga movement brought new approaches to animal subjects, with artists like Tokuriki Tomikichiro and Saito Kiyoshi creating stylized animal prints that balanced decorative design with observed natural form.
Artists Known for Animals

White fox 1
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Fox In a moonlit evening
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Boy Washing horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Green and blue Horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse In snow
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

White horse mountain
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Ninetailed Fox
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Godzilla And polar bear
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Godzilla and fox
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Girl Holding a snow hare
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Girl with hobby horse
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse Jump
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Young girl holding a snow rabbit
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Girl with snow rabbit
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Two children with a snowman and a girl with a snow rabbit
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Rabbit in dish
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse in the morning sun
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Camelia and tiger
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse and girl
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Horse barn
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Monkey gazing
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

The Hours of Worldly Beauties (Fûzoku bijin dokei): The Hour of the Horse (Noon) - Shrine Maiden (Uma no koku - miko)
Related Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Animal subjects in Japanese woodblock prints extend well beyond the birds-and-flowers genre to encompass a wide range of creatures — horses, cats, fish, insects, rabbits, foxes, and mythological beasts — each carrying distinct cultural associations and artistic challenges. Animals appear as primary subjects, as symbolic elements within larger compositions, and as characters in narrative prints drawn from folklore and literature.
Ishiwata Koitsu, Ohara Koson, and Jun'ichiro Sekino are among the artists most associated with animals in our collection. Browse the full list of artists who explored this subject above.
Hanga currently catalogues 865 prints tagged with animals, spanning ukiyo-e, shin-hanga, and sōsaku-hanga traditions where applicable.





