Publication results of the joint research with the Museum of the Imperial Collections, Sannomaru Shozokan



The Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties uses cutting-edge science and technology to investigate and record the precious cultural properties that our ancestors have protected and passed down, and makes the results open to the public. We have now published Ito Jakuchu’s “Dōshoku Sai-e” (30 scrolls in total) online as part of the digital content of the optical survey conducted by the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties and the works stored in The Museum of the Imperial Collections, Sannomaru Shozokan. (https://www.tobunken.go.jp/doshokusaie/) This website publishes high-resolution photographs of Ito Jakuchu’s “Dōshoku Sai-e” taken during an optical survey conducted as a joint research project between 2001 and 2008 by the Imperial Household Agency’s Sannomaru Shozokan Museum of the Imperial Palace (as it was then) and the data of coloring material analysis using fluorescent X-rays. In addition, we have been publishing reports on “Kasuga Gongen Genki-e” (20 volumes in total), known as a representative picture scroll work from the Kamakura period, two volumes at a time, since 2017, and this is the 10th report, the final volume in the series. We have also published a comprehensive report on the “Map of the World,” including images of related works such as the “Map of the World and Four Capitals Screen” (Kobe City Museum), the “Battle of Tunis and World Map Screen” (Kōsetsu Museum of Art), “Western Kings and Princes on Horseback Screen” (Suntory Museum of Art, Kobe City Museum), and “Western Kings and Princes” (Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture). We hope that this report will be useful in future research.