Closed on Mondays
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Tue 10 am–9 pm
Wed to Sun 10 am–6 pm
Mon closed
17.3.1998—17.5.1998
MAK Works on Paper Room
Hardly any woodblock artist of the late Edo period was as familiar with all the themes of Ukyo-e as Keisai Eisen (1790-1848). A disciple of the woodblock artist Kikugawa Eizan (1787-1867), he began his career around 1824 by illustrating books and depicting "beautiful women". When representations of landscapes became fashionable in the 1830s Eisen discovered a new genre for himself. Next to the woodblock prints by Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1848) and Ando Hiroshige (1797-1858), Eisen's renderings of landscapes are among the best-known. "Crossing the Bridge" is the second exhibition on the theme of Japanese woodblock prints in the MAK Works on Paper Room.