Symposium “KURODA Seiki, the Current Status of Research and Evaluation: On the Occasion of the 100th Anniversary of His Death”


The Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (TOBUNKEN) was founded in 1930 as a result of the legacy of KURODA Seiki (1866-1924), a painter known as the “father of modern Western-style painting in Japan.” The Kuroda Memorial Hall, where KURODA’s works are now displayed and exhibited as a facility of the Tokyo National Museum, was originally built as the Art Research Institute, the predecessor of TOBUNKEN. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of KURODA’s death in 2024, TOBUNKEN hosted a symposium, “KURODA Seiki, His Research and Evaluation Today: On the Occasion of the 100th Anniversary of His Death,” on January 10 in the seminar room of the Kuroda Memorial Hall where the Art Research Institute was founded.
The symposium presentation titles and respective presenters were as follows:
Keynote Speech: On the Painting Works of KURODA Seiki: From the Perspective of a Kozu Kojin (Mr. SHIOYA Jun, Special Researcher Chair, TOBUNKEN)
Presentation 1: KURODA Seiki and Raphael Collin: Some Perspectives (Ms. MITANI Rika, Joshibi University of Art and Design)
Presentation 2: After KURODA Seiki: Aspects of “Government Exhibition Academism” in the Showa Period (Ms. TAKAYAMA Yuri, Fukuoka Prefectural Museum of Art)
Presentation 3: Learning from KURODA Seiki and his Influence to Local areas: The Case of a Native of Tottori Prefecture (Ms. TOMOOKA Maho, Tottori Prefectural Museum)
The symposium was held simultaneously in-person and online and attended by 63 people. Ms. TOMOOKA was unable to come to the symposium due to heavy snowfall in the San’in region, so she had to give her presentation online at short notice, but the symposium went without a hitch, including the discussion that followed his presentation. We hope that this symposium, which reassessed KURODA Seiki’s artwork from the viewpoints of his relationship with French modern art, his influence on the Japanese modern Western-style painting scene, and the spread of his style to the provinces, based on the latest research results, will serve as a catalyst for rethinking the study of Japanese modern art. The contents of this symposium will be published in our research journal “Bijutsu Kenkyu” No. 447 (scheduled for publication in November 2025).