Difference between revisions of "Bibliography"

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=== MFA Publications ===
 
=== MFA Publications ===
  
* '''"Characterization of Yellow and Red Natural Organic Colorants on Japanese Woodblock Prints by EEM Fluorescence Spectroscopy"''' by Michele Derrick, Richard Newman, and Joan Wright in ''JAIC'', 2017.  [http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01971360.2016.1275438 link]
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* '''"Characterization of Yellow and Red Natural Organic Colorants on Japanese Woodblock Prints by EEM Fluorescence Spectroscopy"''' by Michele Derrick, Richard Newman, and Joan Wright in ''JAIC'', 2017.  [https://doi.org/10.1080/01971360.2016.1275438 Link]
  
:Excitation–emission matrix (EEM), or 3D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used to characterize natural yellow and red organic colorants in 18th-century Japanese woodblock prints as part of a project designed to systematically identify the colorants. This analysis technique collected emission spectra in the visible region for a sequence of excitation wavelengths at 10 nm steps from 250 to 600 nm. The resultant data set provided characteristic excitation/emission patterns that were used to identify several natural colorants, including safflower, madder, sappanwood, gamboge, flavonoids, berberines, and turmeric. In combination with other non-sampling methodologies, including x-ray fluorescence (XRF) and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS), most colorants on the prints were quickly and non-destructively characterized. Based on examination of 213 prints, several patterns of colorant use were observed. The prints often contained more than one yellow, red, or blue colorant. From 1781 to 1801, considered the Golden Age, it was common to find multiple types of yellows, reds, and blues on a single print. The colorant madder was identified on many of the prints, while gardenia and berberine-containing dyes were not found. This paper presents the theory, experimental parameters, and limitations of the EEM fluorescence technique.
+
:Excitation Emission Matrix (EEM), or 3D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used to characterize natural yellow and red organic colorants in 18th century CE Japanese woodblock prints as part of a project designed to systematically identify the colorants. This analysis technique collected emission spectra in the visible region for a sequence of excitation wavelengths at 10 nm steps from 250 to 600 nm. The resultant data set provided characteristic excitation/emission patterns that were used to identify several natural colorants, including safflower, madder, sappanwood, gamboge, flavonoids, berberines, and turmeric. In combination with other non-sampling methodologies, including x-ray fluorescence (XRF) and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS), most colorants on the prints were quickly and non-destructively characterized. Based on examination of 213 prints, several patterns of colorant use were observed. The prints often contained more than one yellow, red, or blue colorant. From 1781 to 1801, considered the Golden Age, it was common to find multiple types of yellows, reds, and blues on a single print. The colorant madder was identified in many of the prints, while gardenia and berberine-containing dyes were not found. This paper presents the theory, experimental parameters, and limitations of the EEM fluorescence technique.
  
  
* '''"Plant Dye Identification in Japanese Woodblock prints"''' by Michele Derrick, Joan Wright, and Richard Newman in ''Arnoldia'' 74/3, February 2017. [http://arnoldia.arboretum.harvard.edu/pdf/articles/2017-74-3-plant-dye-identification-in-japanese-woodblock-prints.pdf link]
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* '''"Plant Dye Identification in Japanese Woodblock prints"''' by Michele Derrick, Joan Wright, and Richard Newman in ''Arnoldia'' 74/3, February 2017. [https://arboretum.harvard.edu/stories/plant-dye-identification-in-japanese-woodblock-prints/ Website]
  
 
:Three non-destructive analysis techniques were used in the analysis and identification of natural colorants used in the production of Japanese woodblock prints. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) was used to determine the presence of any inorganic compounds, and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) was used to distinguish between indigo and dayflower in the blue, green, and purple regions. A third technique, excitation emission matrix (EEM), or 3-D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used for the characterization of the red and yellow plant-based colorants.
 
:Three non-destructive analysis techniques were used in the analysis and identification of natural colorants used in the production of Japanese woodblock prints. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) was used to determine the presence of any inorganic compounds, and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) was used to distinguish between indigo and dayflower in the blue, green, and purple regions. A third technique, excitation emission matrix (EEM), or 3-D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used for the characterization of the red and yellow plant-based colorants.
  
  
* '''"The Colors of Desire: ''Beauties of the Yoshiwara'' Observed"''' by Joan Wright, Michele Derrick, and Michiko Adachi in ''Suzuki Harunobu'' exhibition catalog, 2017.
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* '''"The Colors of Desire: ''Beauties of the Yoshiwara'' Observed"''' by Joan Wright, Michele Derrick, and Michiko Adachi in ''Suzuki Harunobu'' exhibition catalogue, 2017. [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/1022945441 Worldcat]
  
 
:Published during the final year of his life, Suzuki Harunobu’s five volume ''Beauties of the Yoshiwara'' (1770) is considered to be one of the first full-color printed books and can be seen not only as a masterpiece of his designs for book illustration but also as a compelling example of how artisan-printers might have developed a palette during the early years of full-color printing. Within these five volumes, the profusion of colors and innovative mixtures seen in the first two volumes appears to give way in the last three volumes to a comparatively restrained palette. During the years that followed Harunobu and as print production matured, the development of a standardized palette was likely advantageous for both efficiency and economy within the increasingly commercialized world of publishing.
 
:Published during the final year of his life, Suzuki Harunobu’s five volume ''Beauties of the Yoshiwara'' (1770) is considered to be one of the first full-color printed books and can be seen not only as a masterpiece of his designs for book illustration but also as a compelling example of how artisan-printers might have developed a palette during the early years of full-color printing. Within these five volumes, the profusion of colors and innovative mixtures seen in the first two volumes appears to give way in the last three volumes to a comparatively restrained palette. During the years that followed Harunobu and as print production matured, the development of a standardized palette was likely advantageous for both efficiency and economy within the increasingly commercialized world of publishing.
  
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 +
* '''"EEM Fluorescence Spectroscopy of Natural Red and Yellow Organic Colorants in Japanese Woodblock Prints"''' by Richard Newman, Michele Derrick, and Erin Mysak in "Springer Series on Fluorescence", 2023. [https://doi.org/10.1007/4243_2022_41 Link]
  
 
=== Other Publications and Resources===
 
=== Other Publications and Resources===
*'''On Japanese Pigments''' by Toyokichi Takamatsu, 1878. [https://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16028coll4/id/23939/ ]
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*'''On Japanese Pigments''' [https://libmma.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16028coll4/id/23939/ Digital book]
 +
:Toyokichi Takamatsu, 1878.
 +
 
 +
*'''Tokuno Gift''' [https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/tokuno-gift Museum website]
 +
:National Museum of American History, 1889. A group of prints, woodblocks, tools and sample pigments that were gifted to the Smithsonian in 1889 by Michimasa Tokuno who was the head of the Japanese bureau of engraving and printing.
 +
 
 +
*'''Nishikie no hori to suri''' (錦絵の彫と摺) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/181286908 Worldcat]
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:Kendo Ishii, 1929. In Japanese. A translation by Tim Clark is available. [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/40730331 Worldcat]
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 +
*'''The making of Japanese prints and the history of Ukiyo-é''' [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/4292350 Worldcat]
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:Chie Hirano, 1939. An excerpt is available [http://woodblock.com/encyclopedia/entries/011_06/011_06.html here.]
 +
 
 +
*'''Identification of traditional organic colorants employed in Japanese prints and determination of their rates of fading''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934097102301551 AATA Getty]
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:Robert L. Feller, Mary Curran, and Catherine W. Bailie in "Japanese woodblock print: a catalogue of the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection, 1984"
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*'''Pursuit of Prussian Blue in Modern Asia''' (近世(十八世紀後半以降)のアジアに於けるプルシァン・ブルーの追跡) [https://tamabi.repo.nii.ac.jp/records/711 Link]
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:Seiichi Sasaki, 1985. In Japanese with English abstract.
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*'''Non-destructive determination of colorants used for traditional Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints by the three-dimensional fluorescence spectrum using fiber optics''' (光ファイバーを用いる三次元蛍光スペクトルによる日 来の浮世絵版画に使用された着色料の非破壊同定) [https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/bunsekikagaku1952/47/2/47_2_93/_pdf PDF]
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:Susumu Shimoyama, Yasuko Noda and Shinya Katsuhara, 1998. In Japanese with English abstract.
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 +
*'''The connoisseruship problem of discolored lead pigments in Japanese woodblock prints''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934099726501551 AATA Getty]
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:Judith Walsh, Barbarar H. Berrie and Michael Palmer in "IPC conference papers London, 1997: proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the Institute of Paper Conservation, 6-9 April 1997", 1998.
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*'''The analysis and conservation of aniline-dyed, nineteenth-century Japanese prints''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934099984401551 AATA Getty]
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:Pamela De Tristan in "IPC conference papers London, 1997: proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the Institute of Paper Conservation, 6-9 April 1997", 1998.
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*'''The ozone fading of traditional Japanese colorants''' [https://doi.org/10.1179/sic.1988.33.1.29 Link]
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:Paul M. Whitmore and Glen R. Cass, 1998.
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 +
*'''Aobana and aobanagami''' (アオバナと青花紙 : 近江特産の植物をめぐって) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/674622087 Worldcat]
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:Sadao Sakamoto and Yukino Ochiai, 1998. In Japanese.
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*'''Analysis of Metallic Pigments Used in 19th Century Japanese Prints''' [https://doi.org/10.1017/S1431927600016299 Link]
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:GW Bailey, WG Jerome, S McKernan, JF Mansfield, RL Price, RY Hashimoto, ESK Menon, J Fiorillo, 1999.
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*'''An electronic transmission analysis of metallic particles in nineteenth century Japanese woodblock prints'''
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:John Fiorillo, Richard Hashimoto, and Sarath Menon in "Andon", 2000.
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*'''Seeing red: investigating Japanese woodblock prints and organic colorants using spectrophotometry''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934099521201551 AATA Getty]
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:Michelle Facini at Papers presented at the 27th annual conference of ANAGPIC, April 19-21, 2001.
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*'''Review of MA Paper Conservation: Japanese prints''' [http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/journals/conservation-journal/issue-38/review-of-ma-paper-conservation-japanese-prints/ Museum website]
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:Shiho Sasaki, 2001.
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*'''The History of Pigments''' (顔料の歴史) [https://doi.org/10.4011/shikizai1937.75.189 PDF]
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:Eiichi Tsuruta, 2002. In Japanese.
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*'''A study of dayflower blue used in Ukiyo-e prints''' [https://doi.org/10.1179/sic.2002.47.s3.038 Link]
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:Shiho Sasaki and Pauline Webber, 2002.
 +
 
 +
*'''Color as language in traditional Japanese prints''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934098554001551 AATA]
 +
:Roger S. Keyes and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "The broad spectrum: studies in the materials, techniques, and conservation of color on paper, 2002"
 +
 
 +
*'''Non-destructive analysis of ukiyo-e, traditional Japanese woodblock prints, using a portable x-ray fluorescence spectrometer''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934101817801551 AATA]
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:Yasuko Noda and Susumu Shimoyama, 2002.
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*'''Suzuki Harunobu''' (青春の浮世絵師 鈴木春信-江戸のカラリスト登場-) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/51090723 Worldcat]
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:Chiba City Museum and Hagi Uragami Museum, 2002. In Japanese. Exhibition catalogue.
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*'''Ultraviolet and infrared examination of Japanese woodblock prints:identifying reds and blues''' [https://cool.culturalheritage.org/coolaic/sg/bpg/annual/v23/bpga23-05.pdf PDF]
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:Betty Fiske and Linda Stiber Morenus, 2004.
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 +
*'''Dayflower blue: its appearance and lightfastness in traditional Japanese prints''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934098408001551 AATA Getty]
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:Shiho Sasaki, Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia: proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005"
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*'''The identification and light sensitivity of Japanese woodblock print colorants: the impact on art history and preservation''' [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA9934099943001551 AATA Getty]
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:Sandra A. Connors, Paul M. Whitmore, Roger S. Keyes, and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia: proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005"
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*'''Hokusai and the blue revolution in Edo prints''' [http://www.columbia.edu/~hds2/pdf/2005_Hokusai_and_the_Blue_Revolution.pdf PDF]
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:Henry D. Smith in "Hokusai and his age: ukiyo-e painting, printmaking and book illustration in late Edo Japan, 2005"
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*'''Non-Destructive Identification of Blue Colorants in Ukiyoe Prints by Visible-Near Infrared Reflection Spectrum Obtained with a Portable Spectrophotometer Using Fiber Optics''' (光ファイバー接続簡易携帯型分光器を用いる可視-近赤外反射スペクトルによる浮世絵版画青色着色料の非破壊同定) [https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/bunsekikagaku/55/2/55_2_121/_pdf PDF]
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:Susumu Shimoyama, Hideo Matsui, and Yasuko Shimoyama, 2006. In Japanese with English abstract.
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*'''Western Blue- A Tour of Prussian Blue''' (西洋の青: プルシアンブルーをめぐって) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/423683012 Worldcat]
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:Kobe City Museum, 2007. In Japanese.
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*'''Environmental Degradation vs. Artistic Intention: The Darkening of Lead Pigments on Japanese Woodblock Prints''' [https://www.academia.edu/4281355/Environmental_Degradation_vs._Artistic_Intention_The_Darkening_of_Lead_Pigments_on_Japanese_Woodblock_Prints_Finlayson_Shugar_and_Walsh_ Poster]
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:Christina Finlyason, Aaron Shugar, and Judith Walsh, 2009.
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*'''Deterioration of Ferric Ferrocyanide Pigment in Ukiyo-e Printed in the Late Edo Period''' (江戸時代の浮世絵版画に用いられたフェロシアン化鉄顔料の劣化) [https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jinstmet/74/3/74_3_158/_pdf/-char/ja PDF]
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:Keiko Kida and Masahiro Kitada, 2010. In Japanese with English abstract.
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*'''Characterization of traditional Japanese colorants in woodblock printing using multispectral imaging''' [https://www.culturalheritage.org/docs/default-source/annualmeeting/5-characterizationoftraditional.pdf?sfvrsn=2 Poster]
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:Gwenanne Edwards, Cyntia Karnes, and Lynn Brostoff, 2012.
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*'''後期浮世絵木版画に使用された色材の変遷に関する研究''' (translation: The change in colorants used in late ukiyo-e prints) [http://blog.tuad.ac.jp/prizeworks/?p=159 Website]
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:Asuka Yamato, 2013. In Japanese.
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*'''The Effect of Iron Ions from Prussian Blue Pigment on the Deterioration of Japanese Paper''' [https://doi.org/10.1515/res-2015-0009 Link]
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:Keiko Kida, Antje Potthast, Masamitsu Inaba, and Noriko Hayakawa, 2015.
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*'''Development of molecular distribution analysis method of color pigments on Japanese woodblock prints by Raman spectral-imaging''' (ラマン散乱分光イメージング法による多色摺木版画の色材分子分布解析法の開発) [https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jsik/26/1/26_2015_021/_pdf/-char/ja PDF]
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:Takeo Minamikawa, Daiki Nagai, Takaaki Kaneko, and Ittetsu Taniguchi, 2015. In Japanese with English abstract.
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*'''The Red of the Earth-Distinctive ''Bengara'' (Ferric Oxide) Spaces''' (大地の赤 ベンガラ異空間) [https://search.worldcat.org/title/909237916 Worldcat]
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:INAX Live Museum, 2015. In Japanese.
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*'''Analysis of the Used Colorants in the Ukiyo-e Wood Prints Made during the End of Edo-Period and the Beginning of Meiji-Period : Red, Yellow and Green''' (幕末明治期の錦絵に用いられた色材調査 : 赤色,黄色,緑色について) [https://rekihaku.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/2289/files/kenkyuhokoku_200_05.pdf PDF]
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:Yoshiko Shimadzu, 2016. In Japanese.
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*'''Synthetic arsenic sulfides in Japanese prints of the Meiji period''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-016-0087-0 Research article]
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:Yanbing Lueo, Elena Basso, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2016.
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*'''The Anatomy of Colors''' (色の博物誌 : 江戸の色材を視る・読む) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/982187763 Worldcat]
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:Meguro Museum of Art, Tokyo, 2016. In Japanese.
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 +
*'''View of Shogetsu Pond by Eisen Keisei'''  [https://brooklynmuseum.tumblr.com/post/154245983195/eisen-keisais-woodblock-print-view-of-shogetsu Museum website]
 +
:Elyse Driscoll, 2016.
  
*'''Tokuno Gift''' at the National Museum of American History, 1889. [https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/tokuno-gift ]
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*'''Not fade away: preventive conservation on Hokusai prints''' [https://blog.britishmuseum.org/not-fade-away-preventive-conservation-on-hokusai-prints/ Musuem website]
 +
:Capucine Korenberg and Andrew Shore, 2017.
  
:A group of prints, woodblocks, tools and sample pigments that were gifted to the Smithsonian in 1889 by Michimasa Tokuno who was the head of the Japanese bureaud of engraving and printing.
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*'''Analytical imaging of colour pigments used in Japanese woodblock prints using Raman microspectroscopy''' [https://doi.org/10.1002/jrs.5263 Link]
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:Takeo Minamikawa, Daiki Nagai, Takaaki Kaneko, Ittetsu Taniguchi, Mariko Ando, Ryo Akama, and Kenji Takenaka, 2017.
  
*'''Nishikie no hori to suri''' by Kendo Ishii, 1929. Translation by Tim Clarke is also available.
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*'''A timeline for the introduction of synthetic dyestuffs in Japan during the late Edo and Meiji periods''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0187-0 Research article]
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:Anna Cesaratto, Yan-Bing Lueo, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2018.
  
*'''Identification of traditional organic colorants employed in Japanese prints an determination of their rates of fading''' by Robert L. Feller, Mary Curran, and Catherine W. Bailie in "Japanese woodblock print: a catalogue of the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection, 1984" [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA99207 AATA Getty]
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*'''Natural and synthetic arsenic sulfide pigments in Japanese woodblock prints of the late Edo period''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0195-0 Research article]
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:Stephanie Zaleski, Yae Takahashi, and Marco Leona, 2018.
  
*'''The ozone fading of traditional Japanese colorants''' by Paul M. Whitmore and Glen R. Cass, 1998. [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1179/sic.1988.33.1.29]
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*'''Colours and pigments in late ukiyo-e art works: A preliminary non-invasive study of Japanese woodblock prints to interpret hyperspectral images using in-situ point-by-point diffuse reflectance spectroscopy''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2018.02.015 Link]
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:Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, David Rupérez, David Almazán, and Nerea Díez-de-Pinos, 2018.
  
*'''Non-desctructive determination of colorants used in traditional Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints by the three-dimensional fluorescence spectrum using fiber optics''' by Susumu Shimoyama, Yasuko Noda and Shinya Katsuhara, 1998. [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA14999 AATA Getty]
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*'''Probing some organic ukiyo-e Japanese pigments and mixtures using noninvasive and mobile infrared spectroscopies''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00216-018-1305-2 Link]
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:Carole Biron, Gwénaëlle le Bourdon, Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2018.
  
*'''The connoisseruship problem of discolored lead pigments in Japanese woodblock prints''' by Judith Walsh, Barbarar H. Berrie and Michael Palmer in "IPC conference papers London, 1997: proceedings of the Fourth Internation Conference of the Institute of Paper Conservation, 6-9 April 1997, 1998" [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA110482 AATA Getty]
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*'''Red and blue colours on 18th–19th century Japanese woodblock prints: In situ analyses by spectrofluorimetry and complementary non-invasive spectroscopic methods''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2018.04.023 Link]
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:A. Mounier, G. Le Bourdon, C. Aupetit, S. Lazare, C. Biron, J. Pérez-Arantegui, D. Almazán, J. Aramendia, N. Prieto-Taboada, S. Fdez-Ortiz de Vallejuelo, and F. Daniel, 2018.
  
*'''Seeing red: investigating Japanese woodblock prints and organic colorants using spectrophotometry''' by Michelle Facini at Papers presented at the 27th annual conference of ANAGPIC, April 19-21, 2001. [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA110206 AATA Getty]
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*'''s.a.m.@ PAM: Suzuki Harunobu and Color in Japanese Prints''' [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hY8fILgSOlA Video]
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:Portland Art Museum, 2018.
  
*'''A study of dayflower blue used in Ukiyo-e prints''' by Shiho Sasaki and Pauline Webber, 2002. [https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1179/sic.2002.47.s3.038]
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*'''青花紙製作技術に関する共同調査報告書''' (translation: A joint research report on the production technology of aobanagami) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/1120936723 Worldcat]
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:Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, 2018. In Japanese.
  
*'''Non-destructive analysis of ukiyo-e, traditional Japanese woodblock prints, using a portable x-ray fluorescence spectrometer''' by Yasuko Noda and Susumu Shimoyama, 2002. [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA45087 AATA Getty]
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*'''Characterisation of organic colourants in ukiyo-e prints by Fourier transform near infrared fibre optics reflectance spectroscopy''' [https://www.impopen.com/subs/nir/v19/R17_0015.pdf PDF]
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:C. Biron, F. Daniel, G. Le Bourdon, R. Chapoulie and L. Servant, 2019.
  
*'''Color as language in traditional Japanese prints''' by Roger S. Keyes and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "The broad spectrum: studies in the materials, techniques, and conservation of color on paper, 2002" [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA108088 AATA Getty]
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*'''Developing a systematic approach to determine the sequence of impressions of Japanese woodblock prints: the case of Hokusai's 'Red Fuji''' [https://heritagesciencejournal.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40494-019-0250-5 Research article]
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:Capucine F. Korenberg, Lucia Pereira-Pardo, Peter J. McElhinney, and Joanne Dyer, 2019.
  
*'''Ultraviolet and infrared examination of Japanese woodblock prints:identifying reds and blues''' by Betty Fiske and Linda Stiber Morenus, 2004. [https://cool.culturalheritage.org/coolaic/sg/bpg/annual/v23/bp23-05.pdf]
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*'''Examining the Utility of Three-Dimensional Excitation Emission Fluorescence Spectroscopy in the Identification of Organic Colorants Used in Woodblock Prints from the Late Edo to Meiji Period''' (江戸後期から明治期の錦絵に用いられた有機色材の同定に関する三次元励起蛍光スペクトル分析法および可視分光反射スペクトル分析法の有用性の検討) [https://search.worldcat.org/en/title/8754093741 Worldcat]
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:Asuka Yamato, 2019. In Japanese.
  
*'''The identification and light sensitivity of Japanese woodblock print colorants: the impact on art history and preservation''' by Sandra A. Connors, Paul M. Whitmore, Roger S. Keyes, and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia:proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005" [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA107234 AATA Getty]
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*'''Evidence of early amorphous arsenic sulfide production and use in Edo period Japanese woodblock prints by Hokusai and Kunisada''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-019-0318-2 Research article]
 +
:Marc Vermeulen and Marco Leona, 2019.
  
*'''Dayflower blue: its appearance and lightfastness in traditional Japanese prints''' by Shiho Sasaki, Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia:proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005" [https://aata.getty.edu/permalink/f/1kjitv/GETTY_AATA107225 AATA Getty]
+
*'''Colours of the « images of the floating world ». Non-invasive analyses of Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints (18th and 19th centuries) and new contributions to the insight of oriental materials''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2019.104374 Link]
 +
:Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Josefina Pérez Arantegui, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, Clodoaldo Roldán, David Almazán, Nerea Díez-de-Pinos, and Floréal Daniel, 2019.
  
*'''Hokusai and the blue revolution in Edo prints''' by Henry D. Smith in "Hokusai and his age: ukiyo-e painting, printmaking and book illustration in late Edo Japan, 2005" [http://www.columbia.edu/~hds2/pdf/2005_Hokusai_and_the_Blue_Revolution.pdf]
+
*'''Creation and reference characterization of Edo period Japanese woodblock printing ink colorant samples using multimodal imaging and reflectance spectroscopy''' [https://heritagesciencejournal.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40494-019-0330-6 Research article]
 +
:Tana Villafana and Gwenanne Edwards, 2019.
  
*'''Non-Destructive Identification of Blue Colorants in Ukiyoe Prints by Visible-Near Infrared Reflection Spectrum Obtained with a Portable Spectrophotometer Using Fiber Optics''' by Susumu Shimoyama, Hideo Matsui, and Yasuko Shimoyama, 2006. [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/239412287_Non-Destructive_Identification_of_Blue_Colorants_in_Ukiyoe_Prints_by_Visible-Near_Infrared_Reflection_Spectrum_Obtained_with_a_Portable_Spectrophotometer_Using_Fiber_Optics]
+
*'''A blue can conceal another! Noninvasive multispectroscopic analyses of mixtures of indigo and Prussian blue''' [https://doi.org/10.1002/col.22467 Link]
 +
:Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2019.
  
*'''Environmental Degradation vs. Artistic Intention: The Darkening of Lead Pigments on Japanese Woodblock Prints''' by Christina Finlyason, Aaron Shugar, and Judith Walsh, 2009. [https://www.academia.edu/4281355/Environmental_Degradation_vs._Artistic_Intention_The_Darkening_of_Lead_Pigments_on_Japanese_Woodblock_Prints_Finlayson_Shugar_and_Walsh_]
+
*'''Non-Invasive Identification of Dyes and Pigments in Japanese Woodblock Prints by Katsushika Hokusai''' [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337926692_Japonske_drevorezy_Kacusiky_Hokusaie_Neinvazivni_identifikace_barviv_a_pigmentu_Non-Invasive_Identification_of_Dyes_and_Pigments_in_Japanese_Woodblock_Prints_by_Katsushika_Hokusai Link]
 +
:Radka Sĕfců, 2019.
  
*'''Synthetic arsenic sulfides in Japanese prints of the Meiji period''' by Yanbing Lueo, Elena Basso, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2016. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-016-0087-0]
+
*'''Japanese Woodblock Prints and Collectors in the Czech Lands''' [https://www.academia.edu/41490474/Japanese_Woodblock_Prints_and_Collectors_in_the_Czech_Lands Link]
 +
:Markéta Hánová, 2019.
  
*'''Characterization of traditional Japanese colorants in woodblock printing using multispectral imaging''' by Gwenanne Edwards, Cyntia Karnes, and Lynn Brostoff, 2012. [http://www.conservation-us.org/docs/default-source/annualmeeting/5-characterizationoftraditional.pdf?sfvrsn=2]
+
*'''Beyond the connoisseurship approach: creating a chronology in Hokusai prints using non-invasive techniques and multivariate data analysis''' [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-020-00406-y Research article]
 +
:Marc Vermeulen, Lucia Burgio, Nathalie Vandeperre, Elyse Driscoll, Madeleine Viljoen, Janie Woo and Marco Leona, 2020.
  
*'''Analytical imaging of colour pigments used in Japanese woodblock prints using Raman microspectroscopy''' by Takeo Minamikawa, Daiki Nagai, Takaaki Kaneko, Ittetsu Taniguchi, Mariko Ando, Ryo Akama, and Kenji Takenaka, 2017. [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jrs.5263]
+
*'''Revealing the colours of ukiyo-e prints by short wave infrared range hyperspectral imaging (SWIR)''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2020.104782 Link]
 +
:Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2020.
  
*'''A timeline for the introduction of synthetic dyestuffs in Japan during the late Edo and Meiji periods''' by Anna Cesaratto, Yan-Bing Lueo, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2018. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0187-0]
+
*'''Non-invasive identification of pigments in Japanese coloured photographs''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2020.105017 Link]
 +
:Laura Rampazzi, Valentina Brunello, Francesco Paolo Campione, Cristina Corti, Ludovico Geminiani, Sandro Recchia, and Moira Luraschi
  
*'''Colours and pigments in late ukiyo-e art works: A preliminary non-invasive study of Japanese woodblock prints to interpret hyperspectral images using in-situ point-by-point diffuse reflectance spectroscopy''' by Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, David Rupérez, David Almazán, and Nerea Díez-de-Pinos, 2018 [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0026265X17308998]
+
*'''Multi-analytic characterization of colorants in two impressions of an Utagawa Toyoharu perspective print''' [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2020.04.016 Link]
 +
:Gwenanne Edwards and Tana Villafana, 2020.
  
*'''Probing some organic ukiyo-e Japanese pigments and mixtures using noninvasive and mobile infrared spectroscopies''' by Carole Biron, Gwénaëlle le Bourdon, Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2018. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00216-018-1305-2]
+
*'''Integrating liquid chromatography mass spectrometry into an analytical protocol for the identification of organic colorants in Japanese woodblock prints''' [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-77959-2 Research article]
 +
:Marc Vermeulen, Diego Tamburini, Emily M. K. Müller, Silvia A. Centeno, Elena Basso, and Marco Leona, 2020.
  
*'''Natural and synthetic arsenic sulfide pigments in Japanese woodblock prints of the late Edo period''' by Stephanie Zaleski, Yae Takahashi, and Marco Leona, 2018. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-018-0195-0]
+
*'''Establishing the production chronology of the iconic Japanese woodblock print ‘Red Fuji’''' [https://www.openscience.fr/IMG/pdf/iste_artsci21v5n1_2.pdf PDF]
 +
:Capucine Korenberg, Michele Derrick, Lucía Pereira Pardo, and Ryoko Matsuba, 2021.
  
*'''Evidence of early amorphous arsenic sulfide production and use in Edo period Japanese woodblock prints by Hokusai and Kunisada''' by Marc Vermeulen and Marco Leona, 2019. [https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40494-019-0318-2]
+
*'''The Change in the Blue Colorants Used in the Making of Green and Purple Colors in Nishiki-e''' (錦絵の緑・紫の混色表現における青色色材の変遷について) [https://rekihaku.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/2821/files/kenkyuhokoku_230_10.pdf PDF]
 +
:Asuka Yamato, 2021. In Japanese.
  
*'''Creation and reference characterization of Edo period Japanese woodblock printing ink colorant samples using multimodal imaging and reflectance spectroscopy''' by Tana Villafana and Gwenanne Edwards, 2019. [https://heritagesciencejournal.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40494-019-0330-6]
+
*'''From Materials to Technique: A Complete Non-Invasive Investigation of a Group of Six Ukiyo-E Japanese Woodblock Prints of the Oriental Art Museum E. Chiossone (Genoa, Italy)''' [https://doi.org/10.3390/s22228772 Research article]
 +
:Marco Gargano, Margherita Longoni, Valeria Pesce, Maria Chiara Palandri, Aurora Canepari, Nicola Ludwig, and Silvia Bruni, 2022.
  
*'''Characterisationof organic colourants in ukiyo-e prints by Fourier transform near infrared fibre optics reflectance spectroscopy''' by C. Biron, F. Daniel, G. Le Bourdon, R. Chapoulie and L. Servant, 2019 [https://www.impopen.com/subs/nir/v19/R17_0015.pdf]
+
*'''The Colorful World of Ukiyo-e''' [https://www.loc.gov/ghe/cascade/index.html?appid=2ea96b5ec90e4378a363c01d10131192 Library website]
 +
:Gwenanne Edwards and Chloe Joyner

Latest revision as of 19:02, 20 August 2024

MFA Publications

  • "Characterization of Yellow and Red Natural Organic Colorants on Japanese Woodblock Prints by EEM Fluorescence Spectroscopy" by Michele Derrick, Richard Newman, and Joan Wright in JAIC, 2017. Link
Excitation Emission Matrix (EEM), or 3D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used to characterize natural yellow and red organic colorants in 18th century CE Japanese woodblock prints as part of a project designed to systematically identify the colorants. This analysis technique collected emission spectra in the visible region for a sequence of excitation wavelengths at 10 nm steps from 250 to 600 nm. The resultant data set provided characteristic excitation/emission patterns that were used to identify several natural colorants, including safflower, madder, sappanwood, gamboge, flavonoids, berberines, and turmeric. In combination with other non-sampling methodologies, including x-ray fluorescence (XRF) and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS), most colorants on the prints were quickly and non-destructively characterized. Based on examination of 213 prints, several patterns of colorant use were observed. The prints often contained more than one yellow, red, or blue colorant. From 1781 to 1801, considered the Golden Age, it was common to find multiple types of yellows, reds, and blues on a single print. The colorant madder was identified in many of the prints, while gardenia and berberine-containing dyes were not found. This paper presents the theory, experimental parameters, and limitations of the EEM fluorescence technique.


  • "Plant Dye Identification in Japanese Woodblock prints" by Michele Derrick, Joan Wright, and Richard Newman in Arnoldia 74/3, February 2017. Website
Three non-destructive analysis techniques were used in the analysis and identification of natural colorants used in the production of Japanese woodblock prints. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) was used to determine the presence of any inorganic compounds, and fiber optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) was used to distinguish between indigo and dayflower in the blue, green, and purple regions. A third technique, excitation emission matrix (EEM), or 3-D fluorescence spectroscopy, was used for the characterization of the red and yellow plant-based colorants.


  • "The Colors of Desire: Beauties of the Yoshiwara Observed" by Joan Wright, Michele Derrick, and Michiko Adachi in Suzuki Harunobu exhibition catalogue, 2017. Worldcat
Published during the final year of his life, Suzuki Harunobu’s five volume Beauties of the Yoshiwara (1770) is considered to be one of the first full-color printed books and can be seen not only as a masterpiece of his designs for book illustration but also as a compelling example of how artisan-printers might have developed a palette during the early years of full-color printing. Within these five volumes, the profusion of colors and innovative mixtures seen in the first two volumes appears to give way in the last three volumes to a comparatively restrained palette. During the years that followed Harunobu and as print production matured, the development of a standardized palette was likely advantageous for both efficiency and economy within the increasingly commercialized world of publishing.


  • "EEM Fluorescence Spectroscopy of Natural Red and Yellow Organic Colorants in Japanese Woodblock Prints" by Richard Newman, Michele Derrick, and Erin Mysak in "Springer Series on Fluorescence", 2023. Link

Other Publications and Resources

Toyokichi Takamatsu, 1878.
National Museum of American History, 1889. A group of prints, woodblocks, tools and sample pigments that were gifted to the Smithsonian in 1889 by Michimasa Tokuno who was the head of the Japanese bureau of engraving and printing.
  • Nishikie no hori to suri (錦絵の彫と摺) Worldcat
Kendo Ishii, 1929. In Japanese. A translation by Tim Clark is available. Worldcat
  • The making of Japanese prints and the history of Ukiyo-é Worldcat
Chie Hirano, 1939. An excerpt is available here.
  • Identification of traditional organic colorants employed in Japanese prints and determination of their rates of fading AATA Getty
Robert L. Feller, Mary Curran, and Catherine W. Bailie in "Japanese woodblock print: a catalogue of the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection, 1984"
  • Pursuit of Prussian Blue in Modern Asia (近世(十八世紀後半以降)のアジアに於けるプルシァン・ブルーの追跡) Link
Seiichi Sasaki, 1985. In Japanese with English abstract.
  • Non-destructive determination of colorants used for traditional Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints by the three-dimensional fluorescence spectrum using fiber optics (光ファイバーを用いる三次元蛍光スペクトルによる日 来の浮世絵版画に使用された着色料の非破壊同定) PDF
Susumu Shimoyama, Yasuko Noda and Shinya Katsuhara, 1998. In Japanese with English abstract.
  • The connoisseruship problem of discolored lead pigments in Japanese woodblock prints AATA Getty
Judith Walsh, Barbarar H. Berrie and Michael Palmer in "IPC conference papers London, 1997: proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the Institute of Paper Conservation, 6-9 April 1997", 1998.
  • The analysis and conservation of aniline-dyed, nineteenth-century Japanese prints AATA Getty
Pamela De Tristan in "IPC conference papers London, 1997: proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of the Institute of Paper Conservation, 6-9 April 1997", 1998.
  • The ozone fading of traditional Japanese colorants Link
Paul M. Whitmore and Glen R. Cass, 1998.
  • Aobana and aobanagami (アオバナと青花紙 : 近江特産の植物をめぐって) Worldcat
Sadao Sakamoto and Yukino Ochiai, 1998. In Japanese.
  • Analysis of Metallic Pigments Used in 19th Century Japanese Prints Link
GW Bailey, WG Jerome, S McKernan, JF Mansfield, RL Price, RY Hashimoto, ESK Menon, J Fiorillo, 1999.
  • An electronic transmission analysis of metallic particles in nineteenth century Japanese woodblock prints
John Fiorillo, Richard Hashimoto, and Sarath Menon in "Andon", 2000.
  • Seeing red: investigating Japanese woodblock prints and organic colorants using spectrophotometry AATA Getty
Michelle Facini at Papers presented at the 27th annual conference of ANAGPIC, April 19-21, 2001.
Shiho Sasaki, 2001.
  • The History of Pigments (顔料の歴史) PDF
Eiichi Tsuruta, 2002. In Japanese.
  • A study of dayflower blue used in Ukiyo-e prints Link
Shiho Sasaki and Pauline Webber, 2002.
  • Color as language in traditional Japanese prints AATA
Roger S. Keyes and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "The broad spectrum: studies in the materials, techniques, and conservation of color on paper, 2002"
  • Non-destructive analysis of ukiyo-e, traditional Japanese woodblock prints, using a portable x-ray fluorescence spectrometer AATA
Yasuko Noda and Susumu Shimoyama, 2002.
  • Suzuki Harunobu (青春の浮世絵師 鈴木春信-江戸のカラリスト登場-) Worldcat
Chiba City Museum and Hagi Uragami Museum, 2002. In Japanese. Exhibition catalogue.
  • Ultraviolet and infrared examination of Japanese woodblock prints:identifying reds and blues PDF
Betty Fiske and Linda Stiber Morenus, 2004.
  • Dayflower blue: its appearance and lightfastness in traditional Japanese prints AATA Getty
Shiho Sasaki, Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia: proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005"
  • The identification and light sensitivity of Japanese woodblock print colorants: the impact on art history and preservation AATA Getty
Sandra A. Connors, Paul M. Whitmore, Roger S. Keyes, and Elizabeth I. Coombs in "Scientific research on the pictorial arts of Asia: proceedings of the second Forbes Symposium at the Freer Gallery of Art, 2005"
  • Hokusai and the blue revolution in Edo prints PDF
Henry D. Smith in "Hokusai and his age: ukiyo-e painting, printmaking and book illustration in late Edo Japan, 2005"
  • Non-Destructive Identification of Blue Colorants in Ukiyoe Prints by Visible-Near Infrared Reflection Spectrum Obtained with a Portable Spectrophotometer Using Fiber Optics (光ファイバー接続簡易携帯型分光器を用いる可視-近赤外反射スペクトルによる浮世絵版画青色着色料の非破壊同定) PDF
Susumu Shimoyama, Hideo Matsui, and Yasuko Shimoyama, 2006. In Japanese with English abstract.
  • Western Blue- A Tour of Prussian Blue (西洋の青: プルシアンブルーをめぐって) Worldcat
Kobe City Museum, 2007. In Japanese.
  • Environmental Degradation vs. Artistic Intention: The Darkening of Lead Pigments on Japanese Woodblock Prints Poster
Christina Finlyason, Aaron Shugar, and Judith Walsh, 2009.
  • Deterioration of Ferric Ferrocyanide Pigment in Ukiyo-e Printed in the Late Edo Period (江戸時代の浮世絵版画に用いられたフェロシアン化鉄顔料の劣化) PDF
Keiko Kida and Masahiro Kitada, 2010. In Japanese with English abstract.
  • Characterization of traditional Japanese colorants in woodblock printing using multispectral imaging Poster
Gwenanne Edwards, Cyntia Karnes, and Lynn Brostoff, 2012.
  • 後期浮世絵木版画に使用された色材の変遷に関する研究 (translation: The change in colorants used in late ukiyo-e prints) Website
Asuka Yamato, 2013. In Japanese.
  • The Effect of Iron Ions from Prussian Blue Pigment on the Deterioration of Japanese Paper Link
Keiko Kida, Antje Potthast, Masamitsu Inaba, and Noriko Hayakawa, 2015.
  • Development of molecular distribution analysis method of color pigments on Japanese woodblock prints by Raman spectral-imaging (ラマン散乱分光イメージング法による多色摺木版画の色材分子分布解析法の開発) PDF
Takeo Minamikawa, Daiki Nagai, Takaaki Kaneko, and Ittetsu Taniguchi, 2015. In Japanese with English abstract.
  • The Red of the Earth-Distinctive Bengara (Ferric Oxide) Spaces (大地の赤 ベンガラ異空間) Worldcat
INAX Live Museum, 2015. In Japanese.
  • Analysis of the Used Colorants in the Ukiyo-e Wood Prints Made during the End of Edo-Period and the Beginning of Meiji-Period : Red, Yellow and Green (幕末明治期の錦絵に用いられた色材調査 : 赤色,黄色,緑色について) PDF
Yoshiko Shimadzu, 2016. In Japanese.
  • Synthetic arsenic sulfides in Japanese prints of the Meiji period Research article
Yanbing Lueo, Elena Basso, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2016.
  • The Anatomy of Colors (色の博物誌 : 江戸の色材を視る・読む) Worldcat
Meguro Museum of Art, Tokyo, 2016. In Japanese.
Elyse Driscoll, 2016.
  • Not fade away: preventive conservation on Hokusai prints Musuem website
Capucine Korenberg and Andrew Shore, 2017.
  • Analytical imaging of colour pigments used in Japanese woodblock prints using Raman microspectroscopy Link
Takeo Minamikawa, Daiki Nagai, Takaaki Kaneko, Ittetsu Taniguchi, Mariko Ando, Ryo Akama, and Kenji Takenaka, 2017.
  • A timeline for the introduction of synthetic dyestuffs in Japan during the late Edo and Meiji periods Research article
Anna Cesaratto, Yan-Bing Lueo, Henry D. Smith II, and Marco Leona, 2018.
  • Natural and synthetic arsenic sulfide pigments in Japanese woodblock prints of the late Edo period Research article
Stephanie Zaleski, Yae Takahashi, and Marco Leona, 2018.
  • Colours and pigments in late ukiyo-e art works: A preliminary non-invasive study of Japanese woodblock prints to interpret hyperspectral images using in-situ point-by-point diffuse reflectance spectroscopy Link
Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, David Rupérez, David Almazán, and Nerea Díez-de-Pinos, 2018.
  • Probing some organic ukiyo-e Japanese pigments and mixtures using noninvasive and mobile infrared spectroscopies Link
Carole Biron, Gwénaëlle le Bourdon, Josefina Pérez-Arantegui, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2018.
  • Red and blue colours on 18th–19th century Japanese woodblock prints: In situ analyses by spectrofluorimetry and complementary non-invasive spectroscopic methods Link
A. Mounier, G. Le Bourdon, C. Aupetit, S. Lazare, C. Biron, J. Pérez-Arantegui, D. Almazán, J. Aramendia, N. Prieto-Taboada, S. Fdez-Ortiz de Vallejuelo, and F. Daniel, 2018.
  • s.a.m.@ PAM: Suzuki Harunobu and Color in Japanese Prints Video
Portland Art Museum, 2018.
  • 青花紙製作技術に関する共同調査報告書 (translation: A joint research report on the production technology of aobanagami) Worldcat
Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, 2018. In Japanese.
  • Characterisation of organic colourants in ukiyo-e prints by Fourier transform near infrared fibre optics reflectance spectroscopy PDF
C. Biron, F. Daniel, G. Le Bourdon, R. Chapoulie and L. Servant, 2019.
  • Developing a systematic approach to determine the sequence of impressions of Japanese woodblock prints: the case of Hokusai's 'Red Fuji Research article
Capucine F. Korenberg, Lucia Pereira-Pardo, Peter J. McElhinney, and Joanne Dyer, 2019.
  • Examining the Utility of Three-Dimensional Excitation Emission Fluorescence Spectroscopy in the Identification of Organic Colorants Used in Woodblock Prints from the Late Edo to Meiji Period (江戸後期から明治期の錦絵に用いられた有機色材の同定に関する三次元励起蛍光スペクトル分析法および可視分光反射スペクトル分析法の有用性の検討) Worldcat
Asuka Yamato, 2019. In Japanese.
  • Evidence of early amorphous arsenic sulfide production and use in Edo period Japanese woodblock prints by Hokusai and Kunisada Research article
Marc Vermeulen and Marco Leona, 2019.
  • Colours of the « images of the floating world ». Non-invasive analyses of Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints (18th and 19th centuries) and new contributions to the insight of oriental materials Link
Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Josefina Pérez Arantegui, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, Clodoaldo Roldán, David Almazán, Nerea Díez-de-Pinos, and Floréal Daniel, 2019.
  • Creation and reference characterization of Edo period Japanese woodblock printing ink colorant samples using multimodal imaging and reflectance spectroscopy Research article
Tana Villafana and Gwenanne Edwards, 2019.
  • A blue can conceal another! Noninvasive multispectroscopic analyses of mixtures of indigo and Prussian blue Link
Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2019.
  • Non-Invasive Identification of Dyes and Pigments in Japanese Woodblock Prints by Katsushika Hokusai Link
Radka Sĕfců, 2019.
  • Japanese Woodblock Prints and Collectors in the Czech Lands Link
Markéta Hánová, 2019.
  • Beyond the connoisseurship approach: creating a chronology in Hokusai prints using non-invasive techniques and multivariate data analysis Research article
Marc Vermeulen, Lucia Burgio, Nathalie Vandeperre, Elyse Driscoll, Madeleine Viljoen, Janie Woo and Marco Leona, 2020.
  • Revealing the colours of ukiyo-e prints by short wave infrared range hyperspectral imaging (SWIR) Link
Carole Biron, Aurélie Mounier, Gwénaëlle Le Bourdon, Laurent Servant, Rémy Chapoulie, and Floréal Daniel, 2020.
  • Non-invasive identification of pigments in Japanese coloured photographs Link
Laura Rampazzi, Valentina Brunello, Francesco Paolo Campione, Cristina Corti, Ludovico Geminiani, Sandro Recchia, and Moira Luraschi
  • Multi-analytic characterization of colorants in two impressions of an Utagawa Toyoharu perspective print Link
Gwenanne Edwards and Tana Villafana, 2020.
  • Integrating liquid chromatography mass spectrometry into an analytical protocol for the identification of organic colorants in Japanese woodblock prints Research article
Marc Vermeulen, Diego Tamburini, Emily M. K. Müller, Silvia A. Centeno, Elena Basso, and Marco Leona, 2020.
  • Establishing the production chronology of the iconic Japanese woodblock print ‘Red Fuji’ PDF
Capucine Korenberg, Michele Derrick, Lucía Pereira Pardo, and Ryoko Matsuba, 2021.
  • The Change in the Blue Colorants Used in the Making of Green and Purple Colors in Nishiki-e (錦絵の緑・紫の混色表現における青色色材の変遷について) PDF
Asuka Yamato, 2021. In Japanese.
  • From Materials to Technique: A Complete Non-Invasive Investigation of a Group of Six Ukiyo-E Japanese Woodblock Prints of the Oriental Art Museum E. Chiossone (Genoa, Italy) Research article
Marco Gargano, Margherita Longoni, Valeria Pesce, Maria Chiara Palandri, Aurora Canepari, Nicola Ludwig, and Silvia Bruni, 2022.
Gwenanne Edwards and Chloe Joyner