Research Presentation on HASEGAWA Tōtetsu – The 7th Seminar Held by the Department of Art Research, Archives and Information Systems

The Department of Art Research, Archives and Information Systems organizes research seminars to be conducted not only by staff from the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, but also external researchers for presentations and research exchange. At the seminar in November, Mr. EGAITSU Michihiko, Deputy Director of the Yamaguchi Prefectural Museum of Art, gave a presentation titled “Study of HASEGAWA Tōtetsu.”
Regarding HASEGAWA Tōtetsu, records of the IWASA Family Genealogy show that the younger brother of IWASA Matabei’s eldest son, Katsushige, was adopted by HASEGAWA Tōhaku, called himself HASEGAWA Tōtetsu Setsuō, and painted sliding doors in the azalea room of Edo Castle. It had previously been thought that he was the same person as “Tōtetsu Sakyō Setsuzan” in the HASEGAWA Family Genealogy and that “HASEGAWA Tōtetsu,” who was described in Ryūjō Hikan as the painter of the azalea room of Edo Castle.
Although Tōtetsu’s work “White Plum Blossoms Screen” (owned by the Minneapolis Institute of Art) is well known, there are few other existing examples and documents, and he was a painter whose work is largely unknown. In this presentation, Mr. EGAITSU presented many works that are considered to be by Tōetsu, such as “Willow and Camellia Screen” which bears the signature “by HASEGAWA Totetsu,” or based on the latest research findings, and presented new documentary information, such as the fact that HASEGAWA Tōtetsu’s name appears as one of the “accompanying members” of Shōjūraikōji temple in the temple historical document “Raikōji Yōsho,” and that his name is also recorded as a poetic immortal artist in the “On miya Zōei-ki” (Record of the Construction of the Shrine) of Usa Hachiman Shrine in Bizen Province, and discussed HASEGAWA Tōtetsu’s artistic career. In the question and answer session following the presentations, many researchers participated, including commentators Mr. TODA Hiroyuki (Imperial Palace Museum of the Imperial Collections) and Mr. HIROMI Nobuhiko (Idemitsu Museum of Arts), as well as Mr. MIYAJIMA Shinichi, who has made numerous contributions related to our understanding of HASEGAWA Tōhaku, and a lively research discussion was held.