Born in what is now the city of Tarumizu, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan, in 1874, little Eisaku moved to Azabu in Tokyo with his family at the age of four or five when his father Wada Shūhō [ja], a pastor, was appointed as an instructor in English at the Naval Academy.[4][5] In 1887 the young Wada entered the Protestant Meiji Gakuin [ja]; among his classmates was fellow yōga painter Miyake Kokki [ja], while author Tōson Shimazaki was in one of the years above.[4][5] After learning the rudiments of Western-style painting from Uesugi Kumatsu, with his introduction, dropping out of Meiji Gakuin in 1891, he studied alongside Miyake and Nakazawa Hiromitsu [ja] under Soyama Sachihiko at his Daikōkan (大幸館) painting school.[4][5] After his death in 1892, Wada studied alongside Miyake at Harada Naojirō's Shōbikan (鍾美館); the same year his work featured at the 4th Meiji Bijutsu-kai [ja] Exhibition, and again at the 5th in 1893.[4][5] In 1893 he also studied Nihonga, under Kubota Beisen.[3] After Harada's painting school closed in 1894, Wada studied under Kuroda Seiki and Kume Keiichirō, on their return from Paris, at their newly established Tenshin Dōjō (天真道場), where he became versed in pleinairism.[4][5] Kuroda was not alone in being struck by his student's precocious abilities: at the following year's Fourth National Industrial Exhibition, his Early Summer Beside the Sea was awarded a "Virtuosity Prize" (similarly honoured were Kuroda (for his scandalizing Morning Toilette), Kume, and Asai Chū).[4]
In 1896 Wada was involved, along with Kuroda and Kume, in the establishment of the Hakuba-kai or "White Horse Society", submitting nineteen pieces for the 1st Exhibition that year;[3] he would continue to submit paintings for their exhibitions until the 12th in 1909, even during the time he was in Europe.[4][5] Also in 1896, when Kuroda became Professor in the newly formed Department of Western-Style Painting (yōga) at the Tokyo Academy of Fine Arts [ja], Wada, Fujishima Takeji, and Okada Saburōsuke were appointed Assistant Professors; however, in 1897 he resigned from his post, enrolling as a student in the same department, with special dispensation to enter as a fourth-year student, whence he then became the first to graduate, his graduation piece being his 1897 Evening at the Ferry Crossing.[4][5] He spent half of 1898 guiding Adolf Fischer (de), future founder of the Museum of East Asian Art (Cologne), around various locales, including the Kinai and Hokuriku regions and Kyūshū.[3][7] In 1899 Wada took up Fischer's invitation to assist with the cataloguing of his burgeoning collection of Japanese art, and travelled to Berlin; this was the time of the Berlin Secession.[3][4] In March 1900 he moved to Paris, where he saw his Evening at the Ferry Crossing at the Grand Palais during the Exposition Universelle (where it received an Honourable Mention).[3][5] There he studied, like Kuroda, Kume, and Okada, under Raphaël Collin at the Académie Colarossi, sponsored by the Monbusho.[3][4] From Autumn 1901 to Spring the following year, Wada stayed in Grez-sur-Loing with Asai Chū, where they painted and penned their Grez Diaries (愚劣日記).[4][5] In 1902 he learned decorative arts from Eugène Grasset who is a pioneer of Art Nouveau.[8] His Thoughts of Home (Portrait of a Japanese Lady) appeared at the 1902 Salon organized by the Société des Artistes Français, while he sent Kodama back home for the Fifth National Industrial Exhibition, in 1903, where again he was awarded a runners-up prize.[3][4] When he stayed in Paris, he held a gathering of haiku poets with Beisai Kubota.[9]
Representative works include his early Evening at the Ferry Crossing (1897), Thoughts of Home (1902), and Kodama (1902); his mid-life series of portraits; and his late Ue-no-Midō (1945) and Summer Clouds (1950).[3] He painted many still lifes with flowers, especially roses, and a number of views of Mount Fuji.[11] His Evening at the Ferry Crossing depicts a family of farmers at the Yaguchi crossing (ja) of the Tama River, strikingly illuminated, according to art historian Harada Minoru (ja), through his "skillful manipulation of evening light".[2]Kodama, inspired by the classical sculptures in the Louvre, and translated alternatively by Harada as Echo, is said to combine French Academism with German Expressionism as a "complete restatement and settlement" (総決算)[4] of Wada's period of study abroad;[4][12] in Harada's words, it "evokes a Romantic sensuousness through gentle shading of the figure and barely visible handling of the brush";[2] the painting has also been likened in effect to Munch'sThe Scream.[12]
^和田英作 [Wada Eisaku] (in Japanese). Galerie Nichido 日動画廊. Retrieved July 18, 2020.; 日本近代洋画の巨匠 和田英作展 [Japanese Modern Yōga Master: Wada Eisaku Exhibition] (in Japanese). Kariya City Art Museum. Retrieved July 18, 2020.