Taste Hokusai

Aesthetic skill for AI agents — Emulates Hokusai’s style with ukiyo-e precision, dynamic natural forces, and human scale against nature's infinity using bold outlines and Prussian blue.

Audits

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Install

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Katsushika Hokusai — Edo Master

The old man mad about drawing who reinvented the relationship between the human and the natural — Hokusai's Great Wave is not a painting of the sea but a painting of the sea's indifference to human scale.

Overview

PropertyValue
TypeArtist Skill
DomainVisual Arts
ArtistKatsushika Hokusai
EraEdo Period
Period1760–1849
OriginJapanese
Works in Collection10

Style Tokens

These aesthetic signatures were distilled from analysis of Hokusai's actual works:

  • ukiyo-e woodblock precision
  • dynamic natural forces
  • Mount Fuji as spiritual axis
  • bold outline defining form
  • Prussian blue as primary register
  • human scale against natural infinity
  • diagonal compositional energy
  • the wave's claw-like fingers
  • flat color planes with linear texture
  • the thirty-six views as serial meditation

Anti-Tokens

Aesthetic patterns this style explicitly rejects:

  • Western atmospheric perspective
  • chiaroscuro modeling
  • portraiture as primary subject
  • indoor domestic scenes
  • static composition

Exemplar Works

The Great Wave off Kanagawa (c.1831), from Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji

The most reproduced Japanese artwork in history: three fishing boats in the trough of an enormous wave, its claw-like fingers reaching toward the viewer, Mount Fuji tiny and snow-capped in the background. The wave is not threatening — it is simply itself, operating at a scale that makes human concerns irrelevant. Hokusai used Prussian blue, a recently imported pigment, to achieve a color that had never appeared in Japanese woodblock prints before. The composition is simultaneously a map of Japanese geography and a philosophical argument about the relationship between the human and the natural.

Fine Wind, Clear Morning (Red Fuji) (c.1831), from Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji

The mountain at dawn, its snow-capped peak turning red in the morning light, the forest at its base a band of deep green. No human figures; no narrative. Just the mountain, the sky, and the specific quality of early morning light in late summer. Hokusai strips the image to its essential elements and makes each one carry maximum weight. The red is not decorative but meteorological — this is what Fuji actually looks like at this hour, in this season.

Ejiri in Suruga Province (c.1831), from Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji

Travelers on a road are caught in a sudden gust of wind — hats flying, papers scattering, a woman clutching her robe. Mount Fuji is visible in the distance, serene and unmoved. The wind is invisible but its effects are everywhere. Hokusai captures a moment of pure kinetic energy with the economy of a master calligrapher.

Color Palette

  • Primary: #1A3A5C, #0A1A2C, #2C4A6E
  • Accent: #E8D5A3, #8B0000, #4A6741
  • Mood: dynamic, elemental, serene

Application Rules

Writing

Prose that renders natural forces with the precision of a scientific observer and the reverence of a spiritual practitioner — the Hokusai method is to describe the wave's behavior so exactly that the reader understands something about the nature of water itself. Human figures as scale references for natural infinity; the diagonal as the compositional principle of dynamic energy.

UI Design

Interfaces with bold, clean outlines and flat color planes — the ukiyo-e principle applied to digital space. Prussian blue as a primary color register; strong diagonal energy in layout. The design that makes natural forces feel present in digital space: the wave, the wind, the mountain.

Branding

Brands that position themselves against the infinite — the human endeavor that acknowledges its own smallness while persisting anyway. Hokusai's palette for brands that deal in natural materials, outdoor experience, or the intersection of human craft and natural force. The brand that has been looking at the mountain for thirty-six years and is still not finished.

Evaluation Criteria

  • Must Include: ukiyo-e woodblock precision, dynamic natural forces, human scale against natural infinity
  • Must Avoid: Western atmospheric perspective, chiaroscuro modeling, static composition
  • Confidence Threshold: 0.75

Distilled by InspiredHub Taste Engine from 10 works in the collection, anchored by The Great Wave off Kanagawa and the Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji series.