Information on “Documents from the Meiji and Taisho Art History Compilation Project”

On May 1, information on “Documents from the Meiji and Taisho Art History Compilation Project” was released on the Institute’s website “Material Archives.”
https://www.tobunken.go.jp/
joho/japanese/library/pdf/
archives_TOBUNKEN_MEIJITAISHO02.pdf
The Meiji and Taisho Art History Compilation Project was a prewar compilation project conducted by the Institute of Art Research, the predecessor of the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (TOBUNKEN), which focused on the collection of materials related to art of the Meiji and Taisho periods and the creation of critical biographies of artists. The “Meiji and Taisho Masterpieces Exhibition” held at the Tokyo Prefectural Art Museum (now the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum) in 1927 under the auspices of the Asahi Shimbun was so well received that a committee was set up to compile a history of Meiji and Taisho art. In 1932, the Institute of Art Research began a compilation project funded with the profits from the exhibition donated by the Asahi Shimbun Company. Many of the art books and magazines from the Meiji and Taisho periods in the Institute’s collection were collected through this project.
The materials that have been made available to the public at this time are review biographies of artists and manuscripts of original materials written by researchers who were involved in the project. Some of the materials, such as “Historical Materials of Oil Paintings by TAKAHASHI Yuichi” (owned by Tokyo University of the Arts), have already been published, but others are valuable because they are transcriptions of materials whose existence is unknown. Advance reservations are required to view the collection.
We hope you will make use of these materials, which convey the spirit of research on Japanese modern art during the period of the Institute of Art Research.
https://www.tobunken.go.jp/joho/japanese/library/special_collection/index.html