Description
Purest of poems, a haiku contains in its seventeen syllables a seasonal allusion as well as a distinct pause or shift. Cherry blossoms and swallows mean spring; red maple leaves and deer convey autumn. Nature and its ephemeral beautythis is haiku. Japanese woodblock artists have often drawn their water from the same wells of creativity used by haiku poets. A pleasure boat on a moonlit lake, a dozing bird beside a turning leafit should surprise no one that Bashō, greatest of haiku poets, was an accomplished painter. Paired here are haikus old and new, prints from the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, all found in two Pomegranate books: Haiku: Japanese Art and Poetry and Shin Hanga: The New Print Movement of Japan. Contains five each of the following notecards: Water Lilies, c. 1930s, by Nishimura Hodō Blue Birds at Night, early 20th century, by Watanabe Seitei (Shōtei) Monkey Bridge in Kai Province, #13 from Famous Views of the Sixty-Odd Provinces, 18531856, by Andō Hiroshige Spring Rain at Matsushima, 1936, by Tsuchiya Kōitsu - INDIVIDUAL ITEM RRP £14.99