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Japanese artist (1927–2014)
Tadashi Nakayama (中山 正 , Nakayama Tadashi , born 1927
Niigata, Niigata , died 2014) was a Japanese
woodblock print artist, working in a style that combines influences from traditional Japanese
ukiyo-e prints and
Western painting .
He studied oil painting at Tama Art College but left in 1947.
[1]
[2]
[3]
From 1962 to 1965 he lived in
Milan, Italy and then
England .
[1]
[4] He taught at Bath Academy of Arts.
[1]
Motifs in his work include
butterflies ,
horses ,
cranes , and girls with long flowing hair.
[1]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8] Some of his later pieces were inspired by
Persian ,
Byzantine and
Renaissance styles.
[3]
His
catalogue raisonné is Tadashi Nakayama: His Life and Work , by Kappy Hendricks and Marshall Hendricks.
[5]
[9]
His work is held in several museums, including the
Asian Art Museum in San Francisco,
[10] [
failed verification ] the
Minneapolis Institute of Art ,
[11] the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art ,
[12] the
Santa Barbara Museum of Art ,
[13] the
National Museum of Asian Art ,
[14] the
Carnegie Museum of Art ,
[15] the
Seattle Art Museum ,
[16] [
failed verification ] the
University of Michigan Museum of Art ,
[7] the
Brooklyn Museum ,
[17] the
Portland Art Museum ,
[6] the
Indianapolis Museum of Art ,
[8] the
Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco ,
[18] the
Harvard Art Museums ,
[19] and the
Honolulu Museum of Art .
[20] [
failed verification ]
Notes
^
a
b
c
d Tolman, Norman; Tolman, Mary (2012-10-16).
Collecting Modern Japanese Prints: Then & Now . Tuttle Publishing.
ISBN
978-1-4629-0374-0 .
^ Merritt, Helen; Yamada, Nanako (1995-01-01).
Guide to Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: 1900-1975 . University of Hawaii Press. p. 106.
ISBN
978-0-8248-1732-9 .
^
a
b
"Nakayama, Tadashi | Artist | Ronin Gallery" . www.roningallery.com . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^ See
Illustrated biography
^
a
b Tolman, Norman; Tolman, Mary (2012-10-16).
Collecting Modern Japanese Prints: Then & Now . Tuttle Publishing.
ISBN
978-1-4629-0374-0 .
^
a
b
"Two Butterflies" . portlandartmuseum.us . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^
a
b
"Exchange: Road of the Butterflies - Spring" . University of Michigan Museum of Art . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^
a
b
"Wind Swept Horse (Kaz haramu uma)" . Indianapolis Museum of Art Online Collection . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^ Hendricks, Kappy; Hendricks, Marshall (1982).
Tadashi Nakayama, his life and work . Bethesda, Md.: Irongate Editions Limited.
ISBN
978-0-9609798-0-6 .
OCLC
428436126 .
^
"Asian Art Museum Online Collection" . Asian Art Museum . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^
"Nakayama Tadashi at the Minneapolis Institute of Art" . Minneapolis Institute of Art Collections . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"LACMA Collections: Tadashi Nakayama" . Los Angeles County Museum of Art . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"Cyclone" . collections.sbma.net . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"Clown" . Freer Gallery of Art & Arthur M. Sackler Gallery . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"CMOA Collection" . Carnegie Museum of Art . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"Two Dashing Horses" .
Seattle Museum of Art . Retrieved 2021-02-04 .
^
"Brooklyn Museum archive for Nakayama Tadashi – Japanese artist, 1927-2014" . Brooklyn Museum . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^
"Cheerful Afternoon - Tadashi Nakayama" . FAMSF Search the Collections . 2015-05-08. Archived from
the original on 2019-05-26. Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^ Harvard.
"From the Harvard Art Museums' collections Horses in the Pasture (Hōba)" . harvardartmuseums.org . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
^
"Crane" . art.honolulumuseum.org . Retrieved 2021-01-08 .
Ukiyo-e schools and artists
General
Schools and artists of 17–19th centuries
Asayama school
Eishi school
Furuyama school
Harukawa Eizan school
Harunobu school
Hasegawa school
Hishikawa school
Hokusai school
Ippitsusai Bunchō school
Ishikawa Toyonobu school
Kaigetsudō school
Katsukawa school
Kawamata school
Keisai Eisen school
Kitagawa school
Kitao school
Miyagawa school
Nishikawa school
Nishimura school
Okumura school
Ōoka school
Osaka school
Ryūkōsai school
Shigenobu school
Shunkōsai Fukushū school
Torii school
Toyohara school
Utagawa school
Not associated with any school
By region 20th century artists and movements Related
Ukiyo-e influenced non-Japanese art
International National Artists