Japanese architect
Katayama Tōkuma
Katayama Tōkuma (片山 東熊 , 18 January 1854 – 24 October 1917) was a Japanese architect who designed the original buildings for the Imperial Nara Museum as well as the Kyoto Imperial Museum and was significant in introducing Western , particularly French architecture into Japan.
Coming from Chōshū , Tōkuma was a protégé of Yamagata Aritomo .[ 1] In 1879 he graduated from the Imperial College of Engineering . During his late twenties and early thirties he assisted Josiah Conder in designing and building a Western-style residence for Prince Arisugawa Taruhito and then on the new Imperial Palace in Tokyo.[ 1] During the 1880 he was sent to Europe and America to study interior decoration, including furniture.[ 1] In 1887 he was appointed as an officer in the construction office of the Imperial Household .[ 1]
Buildings
Notes
^ a b c d Checkland, Olive (2003) Japan and Britain after 1859: Creating cultural bridges RoutledgeCurzon, London, page 81 , ISBN 0-7007-1747-1
Gallery
Nara National Museum in Nara, Built in 1894
Kyoto National Museum in Kyōto, Built in 1895
International National Artists