Loosening Ice (Saranac Lake, NY), 1955
36.5 x 50.0 cm
New Haven Green, 1954
50.5 x 38 cm
Kaidō (Malus Halliana, Hall Crabapple), 1953
24 x 16 cm
Lake Nojiri, (date unknown)
26.5 x 23.5 cm
Morning at the Mountain Cottage, 1946
91.0 x 117.0 cm
Sisters, 1924
50.0 x 60.5 cm
Inside the Room, 1957
29.0 x 41.5 cm
Landscape (Richmond, on the outskirts of London), 1957, 26.5 x 36 cm
Yoshichō (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1910, 38.1 x 25.2 cm
Nihonbashi (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1914, 38.0 x 25.4 cm
Akasaka (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1916, 36.3 x 25.4 cm
Mukōjima (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1915, 38.6 x 25.7 cm
Shinbashi (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1917, 38.9 x 25.6 cm
Asakusa (Twelve Scenes of Tokyo), 1917, 39.1 x 26.1 cm
Hakutei started his woodblock print series, "Twelve Scenes of Tokyo" in 1910 and completed the first two prints before he left for his first trip abroad in December of that year. He completed seven more scenes after he returned from Europe, but he stopped after the ninth one, so it is actually "Nine Scenes of Tokyo," not the twelve he originally planned. Apparently, the prints did not sell well and he just ran out of steam. As with most of his woodblock prints, Hakutei drew the picture and a skilled woodblock carver named Igami Bonkotsu made the actual woodblocks.
Kiba (Lumberyard), 1914, 24.0 x 18.0 cm
This woodblock print may be the most well-known of Hakutei's woodblock prints in Japan because it is one of the few which Hakutei carved himself.
Kuseyama, 1914, 24.5 x 17.5 cm
Noto Wagura Onsen (Hot Spring)
Noto Ushitsu Port
Morning from the summit of Kaga Hakusan Mountain
Kaga Yamanaka Onsen (Hot Spring)
Kaga Katayamazu in the Rain
The five woodblock prints above are part of the Hokuriku Region, Series # 1 of Japanese Landscape Woodblock Prints, 1917, 17.0 x 24.0 cm.
The prints above are part of landscape series of Korea and Shimōsa.
Top: Seoul, 1918, 18.0 x 25.0 cm
Bottom: Chōshi Inuwaka, 1917, 17.0 x 24.0 cm
Sukiyabashi (Tokyo), 1935, 30.0 x 42.0 cm
Peonies (date unknown), 175 x 39.5 cm (entire scroll dimensions)
Kinan Kinomoto-ura, 1909, 199.4 x 54.6 cm (entire scroll dimensions)
Sisters, 1907, oil
Hakutei's two younger sisters were his models.
Dōkanyama, 1917, oil
Near their home in Watanabe-chō that burned during the war
Mother and Child, 1921, oil
Wife Kayo and daughter Yutaka
Portrait of Twenty Nikakai Members, 1933, sketch with light coloring
Hakutei is 4th from the left in the back