c. 19901
Little information is available on the life of Yuki Rei, a sōsaku hanga artist who exhibited internationally and co-authored Japanese Printmaking, A Handbook of Traditional & Modern Techniques with the well-known artist Yoshida Tōshi (1911-1995) in 1966. His work is held in a number of museums including the British Museum; Carnegie Museum of Art; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Osaka National Museum of International Art; Cincinnati Art Museum; Musée Vivant-Denon, France; Yokohama Museum; and the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In 2005, a catalogue raisonne of his work was published under the title 由木礼全版画集 Rei Yuki Complete Print Works Catalogue Raisonné.
What is known is that he was born Uemura Noria in Tokyo in 1928 and graduated from Athenee-Francais, Tokyo, a French language school, in 1952. He studied mokuhan (woodblock printing) with the artist Shinagawa Takumi (1908-2009) after graduating and started exhibiting in 1954 with Nihon Hanga Kyokai (Japanese Print Association), which he joined in 1967. In 1970 two of his prints were accepted at the 47th Shun'yō-kai (Spring Principle Association) exhibition and he became a member in 1976.2 His work appeared in numerous international competitions including the Xylon International Print Triennial, Switzerland in 1970 and 1990; the Biennial of Paris in 1975; the Premio International Print Biennial, Italy in 1991; and in 1992 the Mexico-Japan Print Exhibition, Mexico City.
In describing Rei's work Francis Blakemore called his prints “delicate fantasies, scenes of landscape that can exist only in the imagination” and goes on to say:
The texture of the woodblock itself creates dappled tones and fragile shades. The works are light, yet the source of the light is hidden behind fences and arches. It is a light defined by shadows, creating a mood of timeless suspension.
Leafless branches cast foreground shadows, mysteriously real and abstract, stark and delicate. The texture of the block, structural unity of the geometric ground figures, subdued coloration and shading, and magical, waving forms together create a locus, a place that is both definite and infinite, haunting and unassuming, vague and too vivid to be mere fantasy.3
In describing his own work the artist has said "In my case, I draw lines almost automatically to let a conception or emotion emerge; I seldom sketch something objective."4
An article on a 1995 exhibition of Japanese prints at Princeton University notes that the "newly invented ball-bearing baren designed by the renowned woodblock artist Rei Yuki. . . enable[s] artists to avoid the often debilitating bursitis caused by the constant pressing and pushing of traditional barens in making their prints. Truly an improvement, the ball-bearings help the tool to slide effortlessly across the paper, resulting in excellent transfers of the ink to the paper."
Rei Yuki Complete Print Works Catalogue Raisonné [Yuki Rei zen hangashū], Rei Yuki, Reifū Shobō [玲風書房], 2005.
礼 Rei
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