Donation of Books Formerly Owned by KIRA Fumio

Some of the donated books

 Our library has recently received a donation of books formerly owned by the late KIRA Fumio (1941–2022), a distinguished researcher in the field of ceramic history.
 
 KIRA began his career as an editor after joining Zayuho Kankōkai, a publishing house specializing in art publications, where he worked under Saitō Kikutaro. While participating in the editing of major series such as The Complete Works of World Ceramics (1975–, 22 vols.) and The Complete Works of World Art: Oriental Art (1997–, 18 vols.), he conducted extensive field research around the world, advancing both editorial production and ceramic-historical research in parallel.

 Among his wide-ranging achievements, he left particularly notable contributions to research on Southeast Asian and Korean ceramics. In 1984, he was among the first to report to Japan on the ceramic wares excavated in Mae Sot, Tak Province, in northwestern Thailand—finds that would later be recognized as highly significant in the study of Southeast Asian ceramic history. He served for many years as an executive committee member of the Oriental Ceramics Society of Japan and received the 20th Koyama Fujio Memorial Prize in 1999.

 With the cooperation of his bereaved family, and as part of the project “Bibliographical Research on Japanese Oriental Art History [シ02], in January 2025, researcher TASHIRO Yuichiro conducted a survey of the books remaining in KIRA’s home in Kagawa. The institute has received a selected portion of these materials, consisting primarily of foreign-language publications concerning Southeast Asian and Korean ceramics. Some of these volumes are not held by any other library in Japan, making this institute the sole holding institution.

 Taken together, these resources are expected not only to support research in ceramic history, but also—when viewed in a broader perspective—to serve as Japan’s only available scholarly sources for deepening the understanding of this aspect of Asian culture. As a core institution for cultural heritage research in Japan, it is our hope that, rather than pursuing short-term results alone, we may preserve and pass down the scholarly legacy accumulated by our predecessors from a long-term viewpoint, thereby contributing meaningfully to Japan’s foundation of knowledge.

 We would like to take this opportunity to express our heartfelt gratitude to the KIRA family for donating these academically invaluable materials.

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