March 13th ’20, from the Diary series
Gift of Peter J. Cohen, in memory of those who died from the COVID-19 virus, 2022
Catalogue
- Year
- 2020
- Dimensions
- Image: 20 3/8 × 31 3/8 in. (51.8 × 79.7 cm) Sheet: 26 × 36 in. (66 × 91.4 cm) Framed: 30 3/4 × 41 3/4 in. (78.1 × 106 cm)
- Collection
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Artist
- Tetsuya Noda
Artist

Tetsuya Noda is a contemporary artist, printmaker and educator. He is widely considered to be Japan’s most important living print-artist, and one of the most successful contemporary print artists in the world. He is a professor emeritus of the Tokyo University of the Arts. Noda is most well-known for his visual autobiographical works done as a series of woodblock, print, and silkscreened diary entries that capture moments in daily life. His innovative method of printmaking involves photographs scanned through a mimeograph machine and then printed the images over the area previously printed by traditional woodblock print techniques onto the Japanese paper. Although this mixed-media technique is quite prosaic today, Noda was the first artist to initiate this breakthrough. Noda is the nephew of Hideo Noda an oil painter and muralist.
Full artist profile →Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Tetsuya Noda
- Year
- 2020
- Dimensions
- Image: 20 3/8 × 31 3/8 in. (51.8 × 79.7 cm) Sheet: 26 × 36 in. (66 × 91.4 cm) Framed: 30 3/4 × 41 3/4 in. (78.1 × 106 cm)
- Watts ID
- WW-2020-334796
Source
- Collection
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Source
- met
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified