Everybody speaks about globalization - the whole world one market place and the whole world a mix of Western commercial culture and local traditions. Strangely enough the field of contemporary Japanese printmaking is anything else than global. Japan has an immense affluence of great contemporary printmakers. But with a few exceptions most of them are little or not at all known outside Japan. We discovered Waichi Hayashi by recommendation of one of his students. His woodblock prints are mesmerizing.
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Since we decided at the end of 2005 to intensify our presentation of contemporary Japanese printmakers in our artelino auctions, we are feeling like on a discovery tour on some kind of a paradise island that has never been entered by a "gaijin" (Japanese word for foreigner) before.
We find great new artists nearly every week - artists of all ages who create works of stunning attraction that keep us on a permanent level of excitement. And different from the long-nosed Westerners trying to enter the forbidden country during the Edo period in the 17th and 18th century, we are welcomed with open arms. One artist recommends us to the next.
Waichi Hayashi was born in 1951 in Shizuoka prefecture. In 1974 he had graduated from the Department of Japanese Art at Kanazawa Art and Crafts College. The artist is active in more than one field of traditional Japanese arts. He works in woodblock prints, pottery and ceramics and in suiboku-ga. These are black and white sumi-ink paintings.
Waichi Hayashi is a member of several Japanese artists' associations. Shunyo-kai, Nihon Bijutsuka Renmei-kai (Nihon Artists League) and Hamamatsu Bijutsu Kyokai (Hamamatsu Art Association).
The artist's edition sizes are usually around 80. The prints are titled, dated, numbered and signed by the artist as usual for limited editions. His colors are often strong and the subjects are taken from nature.
The secret of the charm of Waichi Hayashi's woodblock prints has in our view several sources. It is his mastership of composition and color combinations. And in many of his images the artist uses a very special, tricky feature to fascinate the viewers' eye. It is the play with light in a very specific way. The effects of light were first discovered by the French impressionists. The Japanese shin hanga artists like Hasui Kawase masterly integrated the light-shadow effects into their woodblock prints. The use of light by Waichi Hayashi is different. He "plays" with spotlight effects as they sometimes can be seen at the end of strong showers/thunderstorms in mountain areas.
Our information is ending here. But we know that Waichi Hayashi continues to be very active in exhibiting his works.
Waichi Hayashi feels obliged to teach his art to others. He has published his experience and his view on arts in several books.
Art Gallery of Waichi Hayashi - home page of the artist in Japanese.
Dieter Wanczura
June 2006, updated August 2009)
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Saturday, November 07, 2009: On Active Events you find our thumbnail overview of current and coming auctions of Japanese prints. If you have any questions, please contact me. - Dieter