Hiroshi Yoshida

was a 20th-century Japanese painter and
woodblock printmaker. Along with
Hasui Kawase, he is regarded as one of the greatest artists of the
shin-hanga style, and is noted especially for his
landscape prints. Yoshida made numerous trips around the world, with the aim of getting to know different artistic expressions and making works of different landscapes. He traveled widely, and was particularly known for his images of non-Japanese subjects done in
traditional Japanese woodblock style, including the
Taj Mahal, the
Swiss Alps, the
Grand Canyon, and other
National Parks in the United States.
He was known as a in Japan and spent about half of the year on sketching travels. He was particularly fond of mountain landscapes and painted many of them, founding the Nihon Sangakugaka Kyōkai (Japan Mountain Painting Society, 日本山岳画家協会) in his later years. As a mountaineer, he climbed the mountains of the
Japanese Alps every summer and created his large paintings and woodblock prints after returning home.
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