Excellent work. I used to study the ukiyo-e masters when I was in my twenties. Yoshitoshi is my favorite, but everyone from Hiroshige to Utamaro I also paid close attention to. With Hokusai being an obvious super-star with his huge output and classics like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Wave_off_Kanagawa
Perhaps you could make a post talking about your influence of Ukiyo-e? That might allow you to get a nice payday while still getting to show your work?
Wish you well, your style and technique are top-notch.
Good luck.
Art nouveau is also a favorite of mine with Alphonse Mucha being the standard bearer. His influence is so common these days that it has become somewhat annoying. If you look at various young artists they don't bother to even add their own flair and copy his designs nearly verbatim. Some can add enough of their own style to make it unique, but many others are simply taking his poster designs and slipping in anime faces instead of Slavic faces or what have you. I can't say that when I was starting out that I was innocent of lifting his style to some degree as well, but hey. It was a bad idea then and it's a bad idea now. But when you're starting out you got to feed yourself, so steal from the best?
Good luck
Your style also reminds me somewhat of Pushead (Brian Schroeder)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pushead
The line quality and graphic nature are in the same vein to some degree. Anyway, I could talk about this all day.
RE: How to doodle by hand with an advanced twist [extended]