Antique Japanese Woodblock Print, Mounted & Framed with J. J. Patrickson & Son, Chelsea, London label on verso

Have 8 of these framed prints so if you're interested in more than one, please reach out and I'll try to work in a discount


Artist: Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892)


Series: Yoshitoshi's Courageous Warriors

Yoshitoshi musha burui 

芳年 武者 旡類

Print: No. 16

Titled: Taira no Tadamori and the oil priest


Lovely print

Includes signatures on left hand margin


Print from a master artist!


Framed Size: 45.5 x 35cm; Inset: 33 x 22.5cm

Framed & mounted beautifully in gilted frame



More about the Artist:

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Japanese月岡芳年; also named Taiso Yoshitoshi 大蘇芳年; 30 April 1839 – 9 June 1892) was a Japanese printmaker.[1]

Yoshitoshi has widely been recognized as the last great master of the ukiyo-egenre of woodblock printing and painting. He is also regarded as one of the form's greatest innovators. His career spanned two eras – the last years of Edo periodJapan, and the first years of modern Japan following the Meiji Restoration. Like many Japanese, Yoshitoshi was interested in new things from the rest of the world, but over time he became increasingly concerned with the loss of many aspects of traditional Japanese culture, among them traditional woodblock printing.

By the end of his career, Yoshitoshi was in an almost single-handed struggle against time and technology. As he worked on in the old manner, Japan was adopting Western mass reproduction methods like photography and lithography. Nonetheless, in a Japan that was turning away from its own past, he almost singlehandedly managed to push the traditional Japanese woodblock print to a new level, before it effectively died with him.

His life was summed up by John Stevenson:

Yoshitoshi's courage, vision and force of character gave ukiyo-e another generation of life, and illuminated it with one last burst of glory.

— John Stevenson, Yoshitoshi's One Hundred Aspects of the Moon, 1992