Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Maki Haku is the artistic name of Maejima Tadaaki, who was born in Ibaraki Prefecture. He was a sōsaku-hanga artist in the 20th century. During World War II, he was trained as a kamikaze pilot in the Japanese air force, but the war ended before he was assigned a mission. Haku had no formal art training but studied for two years with the sōsaku-hanga artist Onchi Kōshirō. In 1962, he started adding texture to his prints. In 1965, he began embossing designs into an unprinted paper by using a press to transfer a design created in cement on a carved plywood board and then adding color with stencils. Maki Haku participated in the Tokyo International Print Biennale in 1957–60. The Art Institute of Chicago, the Cincinnati Art Museum, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Philadelphia Museum of Art are among the public collections holding prints by Maki Haku.
1960s Japanese Vintage Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
19th Century Japanese Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Glass, Wood, Paint
Late 19th Century Japanese Taisho Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Wood
Late 17th Century Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Gold Leaf
Late 19th Century Japanese Meiji Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Wood, Paper, Glass
1670s Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
1670s Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
1670s Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
20th Century Japanese Showa Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Fabric
Late 19th Century Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
1670s Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Gold Leaf
1670s Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper
Early 17th Century Japanese Edo Antique Haku Maki Asian Art and Furniture
Paper