Public Access to a List of Photographic Films from the YANAGISAWA Taka Collection

Examples of the films in the YANAGISAWA collection
A database screen

 Ms. YANAGISAWA Taka (1926–2003), who served for many years at the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (TOBUNKEN), remained active until the end of her life as a leading scholar in the history of Japanese Buddhist painting, and through her meticulous and keen observational skills, authored numerous papers that form the foundation of the field’s scholarly history. After Ms. YANAGISAWA’s passing, most of the large collection of photographic film stored at her home was donated to the Aesthetics and Science of Arts Laboratory at Keio University, where she had taught; however, a portion of the film—believed to have been taken in connection with her work at TOBUNKEN—was accepted by the Department of Art Research, Archives and Information Systems.

 Now, more than 20 years after Ms. YANAGISAWA’s passing, we have completed a digitization of the entire collection of 1,297 items—comprising positive film shot during surveys conducted both domestically and abroad, as well as collected prints—and published a list of them on the TOBUNKEN website: https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/yanagisawa_film.

 The positive film contains footage shot with infrared video cameras, which were still rare at the time, making it an invaluable resource for understanding the history of TOBUNKEN, which incorporated scientific methods into cultural property surveys from the early postwar period. The digitized images are available for viewing in the TOBUNKEN Library. Please visit our website for details on how to access them.
https://www.tobunken.go.jp/joho/english/library/application/application_image.html

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