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Shigeru Aoki (青木 繁, Aoki Shigeru, July 13, 1882 – March 25, 1911) was a Japanese painter, noted for his work in combining Japanese legends and religious subjects with the yōga (Western-style) art movement in late 19th- and early 20th-century Japanese painting.

Aoki Shigeru
Aoki Shigeru
Born(1882-07-13)July 13, 1882
Kurume Fukuoka, Japan
DiedMarch 25, 1911(1911-03-25) (aged 28)
Fukuoka, Japan
NationalityJapanese
Known forPainter
MovementYoga

Biography


Aoki was born to an ex-samurai class household in Kurume, in northern Kyūshū, Japan, where his father had been a retainer of the Arima clan daimyō of Kurume Domain. Although his family strongly disapproved of his interest in art, he left home in 1899 to pursue his studies in Tokyo, first with Koyama Shōtarō, a pupil of the Italian foreign advisor Antonio Fontanesi, who had been hired by the Meiji government in the late 1870s to introduce western oil painting to Japan. From 1900 he became a pupil of Kuroda Seiki, then an instructor at the Tokyo Bijutsu Gakkō (present-day Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music). In the autumn of 1902, he travelled to Mount Myōgi in Gunma Prefecture and to Nagano Prefecture on a sketching excursion. After his return, he displayed some of his completed works at Kuroda's 8th Hakuba-kai Exhibition, where his use of the techniques of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood combined with themes from the Kojiki resulted in great critical acclaim.

Aoki finished his studies in 1904. In August 1905, he relocated to what is now Chikusei, Ibaraki, where he had a son by his common law wife Tane Fukuda. The son (Rando Fukuda, 1905–1976) would later become a noted shakuhachi musician. However, Fukuda returned home to take care of her ill father in August 1907, the relationship came to an end. From October 1908, he abandoned his house and went on an extended painting trip, creating numerous works, but never settling in any location for an extended period of time. In March 1911, he checked into a hospital in Fukuoka suffering from tuberculosis, where he died at the age of 28.

A number of Aoki's works have been collected by the Ishibashi Museum of Art in his hometown of Kurume, two of which have been recognized by the Japanese government's Agency for Cultural Affairs as Important Cultural Properties.

Paradise Under the Sea
Japanese: わだつみのいろこの宮
ArtistShigeru Aoki
Year1907
TypeOil painting
Dimensions180.0 cm × 68.3 cm (70.9 in × 26.9 in)
LocationIshibashi Museum of Art, Kurume, Fukuoka

Noted works



References




Media related to Shigeru Aoki at Wikimedia Commons



На других языках


[de] Aoki Shigeru

Aoki Shigeru (japanisch 青木 繁; * 1882 in Kurume, Kyushu; † 1911 in Fukuoka, Kyushu) war ein japanischer Maler.
- [en] Shigeru Aoki

[fr] Shigeru Aoki

Shigeru Aoki (青木 繁, Aoki Shigeru?) est un peintre japonais, né le 13 juillet 1882 à Kurume, dans le sud de la préfecture de Fukuoka, et mort le 25 mars 1911. Connu comme auteur de Umi no sachi (海の幸?, Fruit de mer), Aoki est un des plus grands peintres japonais de l'ère Meiji.



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