Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Kōshirō Onchi was a key figure in the sōsaku-hanga movement. He not only provided essential aesthetic and spiritual leadership, but his aristocratic background made him a forceful advocate of printmaking within the hostile bureaucracy of Japan's hierarchical art world. Onchi admired the nonobjective images of Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky and the Expressionist style of the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch, whose works shared a kinship with his own interests in the expressive power of nonrepresentational and abstracted figural compositions as well as color. Onchi was particularly attracted to the medium of woodcut in which he felt he was forced to simplify his forms and thus intensify the expression of his emotion while cutting, gouging, and scraping the image into the block.
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Paul Gauguin — Te faruru (Here We Make Love), from the Noa N
Paul Gauguin (French, 1848–1903) — Noa Noa: Manao Yupapau (
Edgar Degas (French, 1834–1917) — Nude Woman Standing, Dryin
Paul Gauguin — Manao tupapau (She Thinks of the Ghost or The
Paul Gauguin — Te faruru (Here We Make Love), from the Noa N
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner — Man's Head with Nude
Paul Gauguin — Manau tupapau (She Thinks of the Ghost or The