



Haku Maki - Collection - 883
Modern | Sōsaku Hanga Woodblock Print
Haku Maki’s 1988 embossed woodblock print Collection-883 features a simple black chawan, rendered in beautiful relief against a white background. The embossed surface, lacquer details, and subtle tones capture the vessel’s wonderful warmth & tactility, elevating this classic tea bowl into a tremendous work on paper. 🍵✨
- Year & Edition: 1988 · Collection-883 · Ed. 52/150, (signed, titled & editioned in pencil).
- Series: Collection (1977 - late 1980s) - an elaborately coloured, embossed and textured suite celebrating Japanese chawan, tokkuri and gui vessels. Maki’s prints from this period showcase his sharpest mastery of texture and colour, reflecting the tactile elegance of these cultural icons.
- Medium: Embossed Woodblock.
- Dimensions: Paper H: 22.00 cm × W: 22.00 cm.
- Condition: Lovely condition - paper clean, crisp, and intact.
- Notes: This impression from the later phase of Maki’s Collection series showcases his refined use of embossing to mimic natural textures. His ceramic and pottery prints came in two phases: 1977 - 1980 as Collection (alphabetically titled) and 1983 - late 1980s with sub-series such as Tokkuri & Gui, resuming his numbered catalogue format after a health-related hiatus. This chawan embodies the series’ peak of tactile refinement. 👁️✨
About the Artist
Haku Maki (1924-2000) was an influential Japanese printmaker known for merging traditional kanji and ancient Chinese seal scripts with abstract, modern compositions. A self-taught artist and wartime survivor, Maki gained international acclaim through innovative cement-relief embossing techniques and vibrant colours. His distinctive works - including series like Poem, Persimmons, and Festive Wine - are celebrated globally, combining deep cultural resonance with contemporary abstract aesthetics. [ ← View All Works by Haku Maki]
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