In this work we present a large-scale dataset of \textit{Ukiyo-e} woodblock prints. Unlike previous works and datasets in the artistic domain that primarily focus on western art, this paper explores this pre-modern Japanese art form with the aim of broadening the scope for stylistic analysis and to provide a benchmark to evaluate a variety of art focused Computer Vision approaches. Our dataset consists of over $175.000$ prints with corresponding metadata (\eg artist, era, and creation date) from the 17th century to present day. By approaching stylistic analysis as a Multi-Task problem we aim to more efficiently utilize the available metadata, and learn more general representations of style. We show results for well-known baselines and state-of-the-art multi-task learning frameworks to enable future comparison, and to encourage stylistic analysis on this artistic domain.