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Tadashi Nakayama (artist)

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Tadashi Nakayama(Trung sơn chính,Nakayama Tadashi,born 1927Niigata, Niigata,died 2014)was a Japanesewoodblock printartist, working in a style that combines influences from traditional Japaneseukiyo-eprints andWestern painting.

He studied oil painting at Tama Art College but left in 1947.[1][2][3]

From 1962 to 1965 he lived inMilan, Italyand thenEngland.[1][4]He taught at Bath Academy of Arts.[1]

Motifs in his work includebutterflies,horses,cranes,and girls with long flowing hair.[1][5][6][7][8]Some of his later pieces were inspired byPersian,ByzantineandRenaissancestyles.[3]

Hiscatalogue raisonnéisTadashi Nakayama: His Life and Work,by Kappy Hendricks and Marshall Hendricks.[5][9]

His work is held in several museums, including theAsian Art Museumin San Francisco,[10][failed verification]theMinneapolis Institute of Art,[11]theLos Angeles County Museum of Art,[12]theSanta Barbara Museum of Art,[13]theNational Museum of Asian Art,[14]theCarnegie Museum of Art,[15]theSeattle Art Museum,[16][failed verification]theUniversity of Michigan Museum of Art,[7]theBrooklyn Museum,[17]thePortland Art Museum,[6]theIndianapolis Museum of Art,[8]theFine Arts Museum of San Francisco,[18]theHarvard Art Museums,[19]and theHonolulu Museum of Art.[20][failed verification]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^abcdTolman, Norman; Tolman, Mary (2012-10-16).Collecting Modern Japanese Prints: Then & Now.Tuttle Publishing.ISBN978-1-4629-0374-0.
  2. ^Merritt, Helen; Yamada, Nanako (1995-01-01).Guide to Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: 1900-1975.University of Hawaii Press. p. 106.ISBN978-0-8248-1732-9.
  3. ^ab"Nakayama, Tadashi | Artist | Ronin Gallery".roningallery.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  4. ^SeeIllustrated biography
  5. ^abTolman, Norman; Tolman, Mary (2012-10-16).Collecting Modern Japanese Prints: Then & Now.Tuttle Publishing.ISBN978-1-4629-0374-0.
  6. ^ab"Two Butterflies".portlandartmuseum.us.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  7. ^ab"Exchange: Road of the Butterflies - Spring".University of Michigan Museum of Art.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  8. ^ab"Wind Swept Horse (Kaz haramu uma)".Indianapolis Museum of Art Online Collection.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  9. ^Hendricks, Kappy; Hendricks, Marshall (1982).Tadashi Nakayama, his life and work.Bethesda, Md.: Irongate Editions Limited.ISBN978-0-9609798-0-6.OCLC428436126.
  10. ^"Asian Art Museum Online Collection".Asian Art Museum.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  11. ^"Nakayama Tadashi at the Minneapolis Institute of Art".Minneapolis Institute of Art Collections.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  12. ^"LACMA Collections: Tadashi Nakayama".Los Angeles County Museum of Art.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  13. ^"Cyclone".collections.sbma.net.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  14. ^"Clown".Freer Gallery of Art & Arthur M. Sackler Gallery.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  15. ^"CMOA Collection".Carnegie Museum of Art.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  16. ^"Two Dashing Horses".Seattle Museum of Art.Retrieved2021-02-04.
  17. ^"Brooklyn Museum archive for Nakayama Tadashi – Japanese artist, 1927-2014".Brooklyn Museum.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  18. ^"Cheerful Afternoon - Tadashi Nakayama".FAMSF Search the Collections.2015-05-08. Archived fromthe originalon 2019-05-26.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  19. ^Harvard."From the Harvard Art Museums' collections Horses in the Pasture (Hōba)".harvardartmuseums.org.Retrieved2021-01-08.
  20. ^"Crane".art.honolulumuseum.org.Retrieved2021-01-08.