
Obatan omu Obatan parrot 1926 by Hiroshi Yoshida
A single parrot commands the composition — plumage rendered in bold, jewel-like tones that contrast sharply against a quieter background. Yoshida treats the subject with the kind of close, respectful attention that elevates natural illustration into fine art: every feather carries weight, every colour shift is deliberate. The work sits at the crossroads of traditional Japanese nature study and Western pictorial precision, achieving a clarity of form that feels both decorative and deeply observed. The 1926 date places this among Yoshida's earlier, more experimentally colourful period.
On a canvas art print from our Berlin studio, the bird's vivid tones gain a luminous depth that paper simply cannot match. The woven texture enriches each gradient, making the plumage feel almost three-dimensional — a striking focal point with genuine visual presence.
A single parrot commands the composition — plumage rendered in bold, jewel-like tones that contrast sharply against a quieter background. Yoshida treats the subject with the kind of close, respectful attention that elevates natural illustration into fine art: every feather carries weight, every colour shift is deliberate. The work sits at the crossroads of traditional Japanese nature study and Western pictorial precision, achieving a clarity of form that feels both decorative and deeply observed. The 1926 date places this among Yoshida's earlier, more experimentally colourful period.
On a canvas art print from our Berlin studio, the bird's vivid tones gain a luminous depth that paper simply cannot match. The woven texture enriches each gradient, making the plumage feel almost three-dimensional — a striking focal point with genuine visual presence.
Original: $38.84
-65%$38.84
$13.59Description
A single parrot commands the composition — plumage rendered in bold, jewel-like tones that contrast sharply against a quieter background. Yoshida treats the subject with the kind of close, respectful attention that elevates natural illustration into fine art: every feather carries weight, every colour shift is deliberate. The work sits at the crossroads of traditional Japanese nature study and Western pictorial precision, achieving a clarity of form that feels both decorative and deeply observed. The 1926 date places this among Yoshida's earlier, more experimentally colourful period.
On a canvas art print from our Berlin studio, the bird's vivid tones gain a luminous depth that paper simply cannot match. The woven texture enriches each gradient, making the plumage feel almost three-dimensional — a striking focal point with genuine visual presence.























