All Thinkers

Katsushika Hokusai

Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) was a Japanese painter and printmaker of the Edo period, widely regarded as the greatest artist of the ukiyo-e tradition and one of the most influential artists in world history. He was born in the commoner district of Edo (modern Tokyo) to an artisan family. Apprenticed at fifteen to a woodblock cutter, he entered the studio of the print designer Katsukawa Shunsho at eighteen and spent his twenties learning the trade. He changed his artistic name over thirty times across his long career, each change marking a stylistic shift or a new artistic ambition. The name Hokusai, meaning north studio, dates from his middle years. He produced an enormous body of work: book illustrations, sketches, paintings, and the printed series for which he is most famous. In his early seventies he began the series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, which includes the Great Wave off Kanagawa and Red Fuji — two of the most widely recognised images in the world. He also produced the Hokusai Manga, fifteen volumes of drawings covering every conceivable subject, from birds and fish to grimacing faces and imaginary creatures. He lived in poverty for much of his life, moved house more than ninety times, and continued working into his late eighties. He died at eighty-eight, lamenting that he had not been given another ten years of life to become a true artist.

Origin
Japan (Edo / Tokyo)
Lifespan
1760-1849
Era
18th-19th century
Subjects
Art Japanese Art Printmaking Landscape Ukiyo E
Why They Matter

Hokusai matters because he transformed the ukiyo-e tradition of Japanese woodblock printing and, through his work's accidental passage to Europe in the nineteenth century, helped reshape Western art. In Japan, ukiyo-e had been primarily associated with portraits of actors, courtesans, and scenes of pleasure. Hokusai turned it toward landscape, toward the natural world, and toward the everyday lives of ordinary people. His Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji showed the sacred mountain from every angle and in every weather, seen through the lives of travellers, fishermen, farmers, and craftsmen. This attention to how a single subject appears differently from different positions, at different times, and to different people was a formal and philosophical achievement. When Japanese prints began reaching Europe in the 1850s and 1860s, often as packing paper for porcelain, they astonished European artists. The flat colours, the bold asymmetric compositions, the unconventional perspectives, and the dignified attention to ordinary life were unlike anything in the European tradition. Manet, Degas, Monet, Van Gogh, Cassatt, and many others studied Japanese prints and especially Hokusai. His influence ran through Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, and into twentieth-century graphic design. His Great Wave has become one of the most reproduced images ever made, and the artistic tradition he developed continues to shape how millions of people see the world.

Key Ideas
1
One subject seen many ways
Hokusai's most famous series, Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, does what its title says. The same mountain is shown thirty-six times — from far and near, in fine weather and storm, behind a wave, between buildings, across a rice field, through the legs of a group of travellers. Each view is different. The mountain does not change, but what we see depends on where we stand, what we are doing, and what is around us. This is a simple idea with deep consequences. It teaches that a single object can be honestly seen in many different ways, and that no single view contains the whole truth of a thing. The principle applies far beyond painting.
2
Everyday life as serious subject
In Hokusai's tradition, painting and printing had usually focused on famous actors, courtesans, myths, and great historical events. Hokusai turned his attention to fishermen hauling nets, farmers planting rice, pilgrims crossing bridges, carpenters at their benches. The daily work of ordinary people became his subject. This was not sentimental; he showed the effort, the weather, the postures of bodies at labour. The choice was a quiet democratic claim: the lives of ordinary people are worth the same careful attention that had been reserved for aristocrats and heroes. The European Impressionists would later make a similar choice, partly under Japanese influence, and partly for their own reasons.
3
The Great Wave: a small moment held
The Great Wave off Kanagawa, probably the most reproduced image in world art, shows three small boats caught in heavy seas off the coast near Edo, with Mount Fuji visible in the distance through the trough of a breaking wave. The wave is vast and beautifully drawn, its crest decomposing into droplets that echo the fallen snow on Fuji. The fishermen crouch in their boats, enduring rather than heroic. The image holds a single moment — the instant before the wave breaks — and it holds it with an attention that makes the moment feel both specific and permanent. A vast natural force and the small human lives in its path are held in the same frame without one dominating the other.
Key Quotations
"From the age of six I had a mania for drawing the shapes of things."
— Preface to One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji, 1834
Hokusai is describing the beginning of his lifelong compulsion to draw. He uses the word mania — an obsessive, involuntary pull towards one activity. This is not an achievement to be boasted about; it is a fact about how his mind worked. The line has a quiet honesty. An artist who draws for more than eighty years has been pulled in a direction they did not choose, not one they elected. The recognition that serious artistic work often has this unchosen quality is something Hokusai understood early and stated clearly.
"By seventy-three I had come to understand the true shapes of things."
— Preface to One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji, 1834
Hokusai is placing his own development on a long timeline that most artists would not dare to use. At seventy-three he claims to be beginning to grasp what he has been trying to draw for nearly seventy years. Nothing before that, by his own account, was of real value. The claim is striking in its patience. Whether taken literally or as a rhetorical gesture of humility, it describes a view of artistic development as slow, patient, and never finished. It is worth placing next to any culture's tendency to celebrate youthful genius as the normal pattern of artistic achievement.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Creative Expression When introducing how the same subject can be shown many ways
How to introduce
Show students several of Hokusai's views of Mount Fuji side by side — the Great Wave with Fuji in the distance, Red Fuji, Fuji behind a wooden scaffolding, Fuji through a rice field. Ask: is this the same mountain in each picture? Most students will see quickly that it is, and that the mountain is not really the subject — or rather, that the subject is how the mountain looks to someone standing in each particular place. Set students a short exercise: choose a familiar object in the classroom or outside the window, and draw or describe it from three different positions or at three different times.
Creative Expression When examining attention to everyday life as subject of art
How to introduce
Show students Hokusai prints that focus on ordinary working life — carpenters sawing timber, fishermen hauling nets, pilgrims climbing a path. Ask: who in your own community does work like this? Why are their activities not usually the subject of painting and photographs that get celebrated and displayed? Introduce Hokusai's choice to treat such subjects with the same care that had been reserved for kings and heroes. Ask students to describe in writing or draw a scene from everyday work in their own surroundings. What does careful attention to such a scene reveal that quick glance does not?
Further Reading

For a short introduction: Matthi Forrer's Hokusai: Prints and Drawings (1991, Prestel) is a well-illustrated introduction with careful text. For the major series in high quality reproduction: The Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji is published in many editions; the British Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago all offer excellent free online galleries of Hokusai's prints. The 2017 British Museum exhibition Hokusai: Beyond the Great Wave produced an accessible catalogue of the same name.

Key Ideas
1
Mastery as lifelong revision
Hokusai changed his artistic name more than thirty times. Each change marked a new direction in his work, a new level of mastery, or a new ambition. He once wrote that nothing he had done before the age of seventy was of any value — that only from seventy had he begun to grasp the real forms of nature. This is not false modesty; it is a picture of artistic development as lifelong revision. The artist does not reach a fixed level of skill and then reproduce it. Each stage of practice reveals new inadequacies and new possibilities. This view of mastery as a continuing reach, rather than an achieved condition, runs through Hokusai's long career and is one of his most distinctive convictions.
2
The Hokusai Manga: drawing as description of the world
Between 1814 and 1878, Hokusai and his followers published the Hokusai Manga — fifteen volumes containing thousands of drawings of everything the artist encountered or imagined. Birds, fish, plants, tools, buildings, human faces in every expression, dancers in every pose, ghosts, landscapes, insects. The Manga is not a novel or a story; the word here means sketches rather than the later sense of comic narrative. It is closer to a visual encyclopedia of the world as Hokusai saw it. The work was meant partly as a teaching resource for other artists but functioned also as a record of a culture and a way of seeing. Its sheer breadth is itself a philosophical statement: nothing in the world is too small or too strange to deserve careful drawing.
3
The woodblock print as collaborative craft
A ukiyo-e print is not the work of one person. The designer, in this case Hokusai, drew the image. A block cutter carved the image into cherry-wood blocks — one block for the outlines and often separate blocks for each colour. A printer inked the blocks and pressed the paper. A publisher commissioned the work and sold the prints. A finished print like the Great Wave is the result of all these hands. When we admire such a work, we are admiring a collaboration in which the designer is only one participant. Understanding this does not diminish Hokusai's achievement; it locates it within a system of shared labour that made the prints possible. Many of the great works of world art were made this way.
Key Quotations
"If heaven had given me five more years, I should have become a real painter."
— Reported deathbed remark, 1849
Hokusai reportedly said this on his deathbed at eighty-eight. He had been working for nearly eight decades. He had produced some of the most influential images ever made. And he believed he had just begun to see what was really there. The remark is at once devastating and liberating. Devastating, because it seems to deny everything he had achieved. Liberating, because it refuses the idea that any amount of practice produces a finished master. It leaves a path open for every younger artist: there is always more to see, always more to learn, always another reach to make.
"At ninety I should penetrate the mystery of things; at one hundred I should certainly have reached a marvellous stage; and when I am one hundred and ten, everything I do, be it but a dot or a line, will be alive."
— Preface to One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji, 1834
Hokusai wrote this in his early seventies. He is projecting his development decades ahead. The progression — from seventy-three onwards, deeper at ninety, marvellous at one hundred, and fully alive at one hundred and ten — has the look of boast but reads better as commitment. He is telling himself, and his readers, what he will continue to try to do if given the years. The line about every dot and line being alive captures a core conviction: every mark on paper should carry the vitality of the world it refers to. Dead marks are decorative; living marks are art.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining how art moves between cultures
How to introduce
Tell students the story of how Japanese prints first reached Europe: often as packing paper wrapped around porcelain, discovered by artists who immediately recognised their importance. Ask: what does it mean that some of the most influential art of the nineteenth century reached its new audience by accident? Discuss the European artists who were shaped by Hokusai — Van Gogh, Monet, Degas — and how their work incorporated Japanese compositional ideas. Ask: when an artistic tradition moves to a new culture, is it being shared, taken, or something in between? Connect to Diop on the international circulation of cultural influence.
Research Skills When teaching sustained observation of a single subject
How to introduce
Introduce Hokusai's practice of returning to the same subject — Mount Fuji, waterfalls, bridges — and showing it again and again from different angles. Ask students to pick a single object and observe it every day for a week, recording each time what they notice. It could be a tree, a window view, a particular corner of a room. Discuss what sustained observation reveals that a single glance does not. Connect to scientific fieldwork: Mary Anning's knowledge of a specific stretch of coastline came from exactly this kind of sustained attention. Careful observation is a shared skill across art and science.
Scientific Thinking When discussing how artistic perception parallels scientific observation
How to introduce
Present one of Hokusai's detailed studies from the Manga — a bird, an insect, a plant. Ask students what they see. Point out how the drawing captures structure, posture, weight, and movement with precision. Discuss the relationship between artistic drawing and scientific illustration: both require sustained looking and accurate representation. Before photography, scientific understanding of the natural world depended heavily on drawings. Hokusai's Manga was not a scientific work but it was informed by the same careful attention. Connect to Darwin's scientific illustrators and to the broader question of what it means to see something well.
Further Reading

Timothy Clark's Hokusai

The Great Picture Book of Everything (2021, Thames and Hudson) focuses on a recently rediscovered set of drawings and provides broader context for his working practice.

Henry Smith's Hokusai

One Hundred Views of Mt. Fuji (1988, George Braziller) is the standard scholarly treatment of one of his major series.

For ukiyo-e more broadly

Richard Lane's Images from the Floating World (1978) remains a thorough introduction.

Key Ideas
1
The influence on European art: Japonisme
When Japan was forced to open to foreign trade in the 1850s, Japanese prints began reaching Europe in significant numbers, sometimes arriving as packing material for more expensive goods. European artists encountered them with astonishment. The flat planes of colour, the unconventional points of view (looking up, looking down, from behind an object), the strong diagonals, the treatment of empty space, and the attention to ordinary life were alien to the European tradition and immediately compelling. Manet, Degas, Cassatt, Van Gogh, and Monet all collected Japanese prints and studied them. The movement in European art that drew on this influence came to be called Japonisme. Hokusai was one of its central sources. The Impressionist revolution in European art is partly a response to his work.
2
Composition by cutting and framing
One of Hokusai's technical innovations was the way he organised the space of a print. European painting of the time composed images by arranging them within a balanced frame, with subjects generally placed centrally. Hokusai often did the opposite. He would cut a subject with the edge of the image, let a large area of sky or sea dominate, place the main subject at the periphery, or use a foreground object to divide the scene unexpectedly. These choices produce a sense of immediacy, as if one had caught a glimpse rather than composed a scene. They anticipate the compositional habits of photography, which was being invented in Europe during Hokusai's last decades. Edgar Degas adopted such strategies directly from Japanese prints and used them in his scenes of Parisian life.
3
Ordinary devotion: Fuji as spiritual and national subject
Mount Fuji held religious significance in Japanese culture. Pilgrims climbed it. Shinto shrines marked its slopes. It was seen as a dwelling of spirits and as a symbol of the country itself. Hokusai's Thirty-six Views is not only a formal exercise; it is also a devotional and cultural project. By showing Fuji from so many ordinary viewpoints, he placed the sacred mountain within the fabric of daily life rather than elevating it to a remote iconic status. This blending of reverence and everyday attention is characteristic of much Japanese art and religion. Understanding it helps resist a purely formal reading of the series as a set of composition exercises and restores its cultural and spiritual weight.
Key Quotations
"Before the age of seventy, all I had produced was unworthy of notice."
— Preface to One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji, 1834
This is the most severe version of Hokusai's self-assessment. Everything he had made before seventy — including work that was already celebrated, collected, and imitated — he now regards as unworthy of notice. This cannot be taken as a literal judgment of the work; much of it is wonderful, and he knew that. It is better read as a statement about his own perception. Standing at seventy, he sees what his earlier work did not yet grasp. The earlier work served its purpose; it got him to the point where he could see what was still missing. The sentence honours the work that came later by refusing to be satisfied with what came before.
"Drawing is the discipline by which I constantly rediscover the world."
— Attributed, various sources
This sentence is attributed to Hokusai in later compilations of his sayings, and its exact original source is not certain. It is included here with that caveat because it captures something central to his practice: drawing was not a means of showing off what he already knew but a way of making himself look at the world again and see it more truly each time. This view of drawing — as an instrument of perception rather than an instrument of display — has been widely held by serious artists across cultures, and Hokusai's work embodies it at a very high level. Whether he wrote the exact words or not, the practice they describe is visible throughout his output.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When examining the idea that mastery is lifelong
How to introduce
Read Hokusai's statements about his own development: nothing worth notice before seventy, real understanding at seventy-three, still striving at eighty-eight. Ask: is this a literal account, or a rhetorical gesture? If it is literal, what does it say about artistic development? If it is rhetorical, what is it arguing for? Discuss the alternative picture — the prodigy who peaks young and declines — and compare how each picture shapes what artists and students try to do. Connect to Sor Juana's sustained scholarly discipline and to Grace Hopper's long career. What are the social conditions that allow or prevent lifelong development?
Cultural Heritage and Identity When examining the craft basis of a celebrated artistic tradition
How to introduce
Introduce the collaborative craft of the ukiyo-e print: designer, cutter, printer, publisher. Hokusai drew the image, but other hands cut the blocks and pressed the paper, and a publisher commissioned and sold the prints. Ask: how does this change how we understand the Great Wave? Discuss the broader question of art as collaborative labour. Many famous paintings had studio assistants, many films have hundreds of credited workers, many architectural masterpieces are joint achievements. Connect to Fazlur Khan's collaboration with Bruce Graham and to the broader pattern of collective work receiving a single name in cultural memory.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The Great Wave is a painting.

What to teach instead

The Great Wave off Kanagawa is a woodblock print, not a painting. Hokusai designed it, but the physical object was produced by carving his drawing into cherry-wood blocks, inking those blocks, and pressing them onto paper. Thousands of prints were made from the original blocks, and versions have been reprinted since. The piece exists in many copies, not a single unique original, which is part of how it became so widely known. Calling it a painting obscures both the specific craft tradition it belongs to and the reason it could be seen by so many people in so many places.

Common misconception

The wave in The Great Wave is a tsunami.

What to teach instead

This is a common modern reading, but most scholars now interpret the wave as a very large storm wave or rogue wave, not a tsunami. The setting is the open sea near the entrance to Edo Bay, with boats engaged in everyday coastal transport; the print is part of a series about Mount Fuji rather than about disaster. The association with tsunamis has strengthened in modern times, partly because the image has been used in contexts related to the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. Hokusai himself would not have thought of the wave this way. The misreading is instructive: a powerful image can acquire new associations that travel with it across cultures and centuries.

Common misconception

Hokusai's work was unknown and unappreciated in Japan during his lifetime.

What to teach instead

Hokusai was a working commercial artist who made his living from his prints and illustrations throughout his career. His work was popular, widely sold, and commercially important enough to be reprinted many times. He was not a neglected genius discovered after death. He was, however, considered a popular rather than high artist in his own time; ukiyo-e was regarded in Japan as commercial printwork rather than as fine art. The status of his work changed over the following century, partly because of its reception in Europe. Correcting the neglected genius myth also corrects the related mistake of treating the Europeans as his discoverers rather than as an audience that reshaped his reputation.

Common misconception

Hokusai's images of Mount Fuji show a real mountain accurately.

What to teach instead

Hokusai's Fuji images are based on the real mountain, but they are not topographically accurate. The mountain's proportions, the colour of its slopes, and its relationship to surrounding landscape vary from print to print as the compositional needs of each image require. Hokusai was not trying to produce a guidebook to Fuji; he was using the mountain as a recurring subject through which different compositional and emotional possibilities could be explored. Treating his prints as realistic depictions of the mountain misses what he was actually doing, which was closer to the way a poet uses a recurring image than to the way a surveyor uses measurement.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced
Wassily Kandinsky
The broad movement of Japonisme, of which Hokusai was a central source, reshaped European art in ways that eventually fed into the abstract tradition Kandinsky helped found. The flat colour planes, the unconventional compositions, and the willingness to treat the picture surface as a designed area rather than a window onto the world were all elements that European painters first learned seriously from Japanese prints. By the time Kandinsky began his abstract experiments, these influences had been absorbed into European art for decades. The connection is not one of direct study but of a shared inheritance Kandinsky received through the painters who came before him.
In Dialogue With
Robin Wall Kimmerer
Hokusai and Kimmerer both demonstrate how deep attention to the ordinary natural world produces a kind of knowledge that casual looking does not. Kimmerer's ecological writing returns again and again to specific plants observed over years; Hokusai's prints return again and again to the same mountain seen from different viewpoints. Both trust sustained, patient observation of familiar things as a serious mode of understanding. The cultural contexts are very different — Potawatomi ecological tradition and Edo-period Japanese Buddhism and folk religion — but the underlying practice of learning through repeated attentive looking is shared.
Complements
Marshall McLuhan
McLuhan argued that the form of a medium shapes the content it can convey. Hokusai's work embodies this principle avant la lettre. The woodblock print — cheap, reproducible, available in thousands of copies — is a very different medium from a painting made for a palace wall. It can reach ordinary people, circulate widely, and treat everyday subjects in a way that expensive court painting cannot. Hokusai understood this and used the medium's characteristics deliberately. Reading his work through McLuhan's framework makes visible how his formal choices and his democratic subject matter were both shaped by the printmaking medium itself.
In Dialogue With
Al-Jazari
Al-Jazari's insistence that the work of craftsmen deserved serious written and visual documentation has a parallel in Hokusai's practice. Al-Jazari drew machines with precision that allowed later craftsmen to rebuild them; Hokusai drew everyday tools, workers, and activities in his Manga with a seriousness that made them part of a cultural record. Both treated the ordinary material world as worthy of sustained attention. Both produced reference works — engineering manuals and drawing manuals — that passed knowledge from one generation to the next. The comparison resists the tendency to treat craft knowledge as beneath the dignity of high art.
Complements
Mary Anning
Hokusai and Anning, near contemporaries working in very different fields, both practised an unfashionable seriousness of attention towards ordinary natural subjects. Anning looked at Dorset cliffs and the fossils they contained; Hokusai looked at Mount Fuji and the waves and fields around it. Neither was initially given the status their work deserved — ukiyo-e was commercial print work, fossil collecting was trade — and both had their importance more fully recognised over time. The comparison reveals how careful attention to specific subjects, across disciplines, tends to accumulate significance even when the immediate cultural status of the work is low.
In Dialogue With
Claude Lévi-Strauss
Lévi-Strauss wrote extensively about Japanese culture and was deeply respectful of the seriousness of its artistic traditions. His broader work argued that cultures different from one's own should be studied for what they are rather than ranked on a scale of sophistication. Hokusai's work has often been the meeting point where Western audiences have encountered Japanese artistic intelligence and been obliged to reckon with it on its own terms. Reading Hokusai's art and Lévi-Strauss's anthropology together reveals two complementary reasons to take non-Western traditions seriously: because they are beautiful and intelligent, and because comparing them with our own is how we learn what our own is.
Further Reading

For scholarly depth

Roger Keyes and others have produced detailed technical studies of Hokusai's working methods. The Hokusai volume in the Kadokawa Hokusai-kan series (in Japanese, but with excellent plates) is a standard reference.

For the reception in Europe

Siegfried Wichmann's Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western Art since 1858 (1981) traces the broader cultural movement in which Hokusai's work was central. For connection to contemporary Japanese visual culture: contemporary scholarship in manga and anime studies has repeatedly returned to the Hokusai Manga as a reference point.