
Angus Lockyer
Lecturer in Japanese history at SOAS, University of London; provides historical context on Edo/Tokyo, Hokusai's life, and cultural background for the episode.
Top 3 podcasts with Angus Lockyer
Ranked by the Snipd community

9 snips
Apr 4, 2025 • 56min
Angus Lockyer, "Exhibitionist Japan: The Spectacle of Modern Development" (Cambridge UP, 2025)
Angus Lockyer, historian of Japan who studies exhibitions and development, discusses Japan's long love of expos. He traces 150 years of shows from Edo markets to Osaka 1970 and Osaka 2025. He highlights regional fairs, private railways, colonial displays, and how expos reshaped industry, infrastructure, and public memory.

4 snips
Mar 30, 2017 • 48min
Hokusai
Guests Angus Lockyer, a Japanese history expert, Rosina Buckland, a senior curator, and Ellis Tinios, an ukiyo-e specialist, explore Hokusai's incredible influence. They discuss the unique techniques Hokusai used in his woodblock prints and the impact of Western styles as he interacted with European art. Hear about his public painting performances and the significance of Mt. Fuji in his work. They also touch on his manga drawing manuals and how they helped democratize art in Japan, leaving a lasting legacy that shaped modern art worldwide.

May 24, 2017 • 51min
Free Thinking - Japan and Korea. Hokusai
Tim Clark, curator at the British Museum, dives into Hokusai's revolutionary woodblock prints that captivated Edo's urban audience. He discusses the spiritual significance of Mount Fuji in Hokusai's work and his quest for immortality through art. Angus Lockyer, an expert in Japanese history, reflects on how Hokusai shapes Japan's national identity and artistic canon. Meanwhile, Charlotte Horlyck explores Korea's search for unique identity in art, highlighting the Dansaekhwa movement and the historical complexities of cultural representation.


