Experience the breathtaking masterworks of one of the most influential
artists in Japan's history.
Hokusai's Brush is a companion to the Freer Gallery of Art's yearlong
exhibition that celebrates the artist's fruitful career. The Freer, home
to the world's largest collection of paintings by Japanese artist
Katsushika Hokusai, has put on view for the first time in a decade his
incredible and rarely seen sketches, drawings, and paintings. Together
with essays that explore his life and career, Hokusai's Brush offers
an in-depth breakdown of each painting, providing amazing commentary
that highlight Hokusai's mastery and detail.
While best known for his woodblock print series Thirty-six Views of
Mount Fuji and particularly the widely recognizable The Great Wave off
Kanagawa, Hokusai is said to have produced 30,000 pieces of art. He
lived to ninety years old, and his last words were reportedly to say
that if heaven were to grant him another five or ten years, then he
could become a true painter. Every stunning page of Hokusai's Brush is
a testament to the humility of that statement, emphasizing his artistry
and skill, the likes of which shaped the Impressionist movement by
inspiring artists such as Monet, Degas, and van Gogh.