One of the world’s most important contemporary Japanese print galleries lives in Cleveland. It stretches back seven decades.
The Japanese market has grown 11 percent since 2019, outperforming the global market’s modest 1 percent growth.
The study, authored by economist Clare McAndrew, also reveals that Japanese collectors buy far less at art fairs or online ...
Traveler and author Pico Iyer explains what makes Japan so unique and why he’s made it his home. Social and medical ...
Carpenters wielding traditional tools like the chona (hand plane) and nomi (chisel) sculpt wood with such precision that it's ...
In his latest exhibition, artist Takashi Murakami uses artificial intelligence to help recreate ancient Japanese paintings. CNN’s Kristy Lou Stout reports.
The martial art is little known outside of Japan and deals with drawing a sword so skillfully your opponent is doomed.
Yet, despite these notable amendments, it is a near-perfect copy of a painting designated a “National Treasure” by the Japanese government — rendered, in part, using artificial intelligence.
“Japanese Art History à la Takashi Murakami,” on view at the gallery’s Grosvenor Hill space until March 8, 2025. At its center is Matabei’s Rakuchū-Rakugai-zu Byōbu (Scenes in and ...