Printmaker Weaving Words, SEIMIYA Naobumi – The 13th Seminar Held by the Department of Art Research, Archives and Information Systems

The seminar

 SEIMIYA Naobumi (1917-1991) is known as an artist who expressed his tranquil and poetic world of the mind through woodblock prints and glass paintings. Last year, the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (TOBUNKEN) received a donation of materials left by SEIMIYA, including his memoirs, diary, and photographs, from his bereaved family (https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/ekatudo/2065846.html), and on March 6, Mr. SUMITA Tsuneo (Chief Curator, Takasaki Museum of Art), who has studied SEIMIYA for many years and acted as an intermediary in donating the materials, gave a presentation titled “The SEIMIYA Materials” at the seminar held by the Department of Art Research, Archives and Information Systems.

 SEIMIYA left many words deeply related to the creation of his works in his journal titled “Zakkan-roku” or “Zakki-cho.” SUMITA’s presentation showed how pictures and words were inseparably linked for SEIMIYA, who himself wrote that he was “a poet who uses ‘pictures’ as a form of expression” (“Zakki-cho,” 1971-72), and made us realize anew the importance of the materials the Institute received.

 Mr. INO Koichi (Chief of the Art Division, The Museum of Modern Art, Ibaraki), who worked with Mr. SUMITA to organize the SEIMIYA materials, participated as a commentator in the discussion that followed the presentation. Although the Institute received only paper materials such as memoirs, diaries, and photographs, other materials left behind include woodblocks, and Mr. INO reported on the issues involved in their preservation and utilization. During the discussion, staff members of the Institute exchanged opinions on the ideal way to preserve the unique materials of the printmakers, including woodblocks.

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