Art Of The Game: Ukiyo-e Heroes (2017)
Runtime:97 minutes
Director:Toru Tokikawa
Countries:United States, Canada, Japan
Genre:Documentary
Writers:
(writer)
(writer)
Production company:
Plots:
A Canadian craftsman and an American designer with a father and son generation gap collaborate to revive the ancient Japanese woodcut using pop-culture icons: Mario and Pokémon.
Keyword:father

Table of Contents

Ukiyo e Heroes

A Tokyo-based Canadian craftsman and an American designer team up to make Japanese woodblock prints depicting video game pop culture icons in . Ukiyo-e is the 400 year old art of Japanese woodblock printing. David Bull moved to Japan from Canada in the 1980s to learn this art and now he is one of the only 10 remaining ukiyo-e craftsman remaining in Japan. David is contacted by Utah-based designer/illustrator Jed Henry, who wants to produce ukiyo-e prints based on video game pop culture icons, such as Super Mario and Pokemon. The Ukiyo-e Heroes series ends up being a huge success and breathes some new life into a dying art form.

Traditional Japanese culture meets modern gaming pop culture in Ukiyo-e Heroes. The art of Japanese woodblock printing involves painstakingly hand-crafting designs onto multiple wooden blocks and applying colours like a stamp onto a special handmade Japanese paper. Ukiyo-e Heroes provides both look into the technique of ukiyo-e, while also looking into how David Bull’s partnership with Jed Henry has helped to introduce this art form to a new generation.

Ukiyo-e is 400 year old Japanese art form, which now nearly extinct, as it has been replaced in Japanese culture by more modern printing methods. However, David Bull does make note of the longevity of these woodblock prints and he surmises that the Ukiyo-e Heroes prints he does with Jed Henry might still be around in 200 years. Altogether, Ukiyo-e Heroes features an interesting melding of traditional Japanese culture with gaming pop culture.

8 / 10 stars
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