Tōkyō Geijutsu Daigaku
The Tōkyō Geijutsu Daigaku ( Japanese 東京 藝術 大学 , German "University of the Arts Tokyo", English Tokyo University of the Arts ), Tōkyō Geidai for short , is an art college founded in Tokyo in 1887 . It is one of the most renowned training centers for musicians and artists in Japan. The president is Kazuki Sawa.
The university has four campuses :
- Ueno-Campus ( 上 野 キ ャ ン パ ス ) in Taitō -ku, Tōkyō Prefecture; Main campus
- Toride Campus ( 取 手 キ ャ ン パ ス ) in Toride , Ibaraki Prefecture
- Yokohama Campus ( 横 浜 キ ャ ン パ ス ) in Naka-ku , Yokohama
- Senju Campus ( 千 住 キ ャ ン パ ス ) in Adachi -ku, Tōkyō Prefecture
The university has its own art museum on the premises.
history
Today's university was created in 1949 through the merger of the two forerunner institutions, Tōkyō Bijutsu Gakkō ( 東京 美術 学校 , German "Art Academy Tokyo") and Tōkyō Ongaku Gakkō ( 東京 音 楽 学校 , German "Conservatory Tokyo").
In 2008 the university changed its English name from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music to Tokyo University of the Arts .
Well-known professors and students
- Yoshitoshi Abe (* 1971), Japanese artist
- Makoto Aida (* 1965), Japanese artist
- Yuuko Amanuma (* 1955), Japanese conductor and composer
- Shigeru Aoki (1882–1911), Japanese painter
- Kenjirō Azuma (1926-2016), Japanese sculptor
- Johannes Eidt (* 1936), German graphic artist
- Kenji Ekuan (1929–2015), Japanese industrial designer
- Mihoko Fujimura , Japanese opera singer
- Takeji Fujishima (1867–1943), Japanese painter
- Tsuguharu Foujita (1886–1968), Japanese-French painter and graphic artist
- Ingo Günther (* 1957), German media artist
- Taro Hakase
- Meiji Hashimoto (1904-1991), Japanese painter ( Nihonga )
- Masaaki Hayakawa (* 1934), Japanese composer and conductor
- Kaii Higashiyama (1908-1999), Japanese landscape painter ( Nihonga )
- Ikuo Hirayama (1930-2009), Japanese painter ( Nihonga )
- Taku Iwasaki (* 1968), Japanese composer
- Manavu Ikeda (* 1973), Japanese artist
- Gyokushō Kawabata (1842-1913), Japanese painter ( Nihonga )
- Takeshi Kitano (* 1947), Japanese director and actor
- Koide Narushige (1887–1931), Japanese painter
- Tetsurō Komai (1920–1976), Japanese painter and graphic artist
- Takashi Kono (1906–1999), Japanese graphic artist
- Michiko de Kowa-Tanaka (1909–1988), Japanese actress and singer
- Morikazu Kumagai (1880–1977), Japanese painter
- Kiyoshi Kurosawa (* 1955), Japanese director
- Paul Meisen (* 1933), German flautist
- Takashi Murakami (* 1962), Japanese artist
- Esther Nyffenegger (* 1921), Swiss cellist, from 1983 to 1986 professor at the Imperial Music Academy
- Norio Ōga (1930–2011), Japanese, studied music, later businessman (Sony)
- Shikanosuke Oka (1898–1978), Japanese painter
- Kenzo Okada (1902–1982), Japanese painter
- Saburōsuke Okada (1869-1939), Japanese painter
- Tarō Okamoto (1911–1996), Japanese artist
- Teiichi Okano (1878–1941), Japanese composer, music teacher and organist
- Kakuzō Okakura (1862-1913), Japanese art critic and teacher
- Hiroshi Ōnishi (1961–2011), Japanese painter and university professor
- Yūzō Saeki (1898–1928), Japanese painter
- Ryuichi Sakamoto (* 1952), Japanese composer
- Katsuzō Satomi (1895–1981), Japanese painter
- Michael Schneider (* 1967), Austrian artist
- Yasushi Sugiyama (1909-1993), Japanese painter ( Nihonga )
- Masaaki Suzuki (* 1954), Japanese conductor
- Yoshi Takahashi (1943–1998), Japanese painter and graphic artist
- Rentarō Taki (1879–1903), Japanese composer
- Hiroshi Teshigahara (1927-2001), Japanese film director
- Hiroshi Wakasugi (1935–2009), Japanese conductor
- Kazuki Yamada (* 1979), Japanese conductor
- Akira Yamaguchi (* 1969), Japanese artist
- Kanae Yamamoto (1882–1946), Japanese painter
- Sōtarō Yasui (1888–1955), Japanese painter
- Taikan Yokoyama (1868–1958), Japanese painter
- Tetsugorō Yorozu (1885–1927), Japanese painter
- Yun Sim-deok (1897–1926), Korean soprano
literature
Tokyo Geidai hyakunen-shi as a special edition The Geijutsu Shincho Volume 38, Issue 10 (1987)
Web links
- Official website (Japanese, English)
- Art Museum (Japanese, English)
- photos
Individual evidence
- ↑ https://www.geidai.ac.jp/english/about/a-brief-history-of-the-university
- ↑ https://www.geidai.ac.jp/english/about/presidents-foreword
- ↑ Ernst Kern : Seeing - Thinking - Acting of a surgeon in the 20th century. ecomed, Landsberg am Lech 2000. ISBN 3-609-20149-5 , pp. 73 and 332–334.
Coordinates: 35 ° 43 ′ 10 ″ N , 139 ° 46 ′ 20 ″ E