Bijutsu Bunka Kyokai (, lit. Art and Culture Association) was a Japanese avant-garde art association active from the late 1930s through the wartime Shà Âwa period and into the postwar era, noted for modernist tendencies that placed particular emphasis on Surrealism. Founded in Tokyo in May 1939 by the painter Ichirà  Fukuzawa and others, it organized juried exhibitions and published the association bulletin Bijutsu Bunka (). Its first public exhibition opened in April 1940 at the Tokyo Prefectural Art Museum (now the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum).
In April 1941, amid wartime suppression of Surrealism and other avant-garde activity, Fukuzawa and the poetâÂÂcritic Shà «zà  Takiguchi were arrested (on suspicion of violating the Peace Preservation Law) and detained for several months, an episode often treated as a key turning point in the association's wartime history. After the war, the association continued its activities across media; in 1949 a photography section was newly established, and the photographer-poet Kansuke Yamamoto joined that year.
Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai () was formed in Tokyo in May 1939 as a new platform for artists associated with Surrealism and other avant-garde tendencies. Contemporary records in the Bijutsu Kai Nenshi (art-world chronicle) note that the painter Ichiro FukuzawaâÂÂwho had recently left the Dokuritsu Bijutsu Kyà Âkai (Independent Art Association)âÂÂorganized the group with thirty-nine colleagues, and that an inaugural meeting was held on 17 May 1939.
According to artscape's overview, the founding membership consolidated artists from multiple pre-existing circles and groups, including members of Sà Âki Bijutsu Kyà Âkai () and other small avant-garde collectives active in the late 1930s (e.g., , the âÂÂJANâ group, , , , and ). Sà Âki Bijutsu Kyà Âkai itself was short-lived (founded 1938) and, after staging a limited number of activities, dissolved in May 1939 and merged into the newly established Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai. artscape further characterizes Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai, alongside the Jiyà « Bijutsu Kyà Âkai (Free Artists Association), as one of the principal prewar hubs for Japan's avant-garde painters.
From the outset, Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai's activities centered on two linked public platforms: regular group exhibitionsâÂÂoften referred to as the Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai Exhibition (Bijutsu Bunka-ten; / )âÂÂand its official journal, Bijutsu Bunka ().
The journal was launched in August 1939 as the association's organ; bibliographic records indicate that it ran at least from the inaugural issue (1939.8) through issue 6 (1941.6).
In parallel, the exhibitions provided the group's main public forum. The first juried public exhibition was held at the Tokyo Prefectural Art Museum (Tokyo-fu Bijutsukan) in April 1940, and the early shows established an annual rhythm in the early wartime years, including:
Catalogues and related printed ephemera for these early exhibitions also survive and are used by later scholarship to reconstruct specific works and participation; for example, a museum bulletin notes that a work shown in the third exhibition is known today through a monochrome picture postcard made for the show.
In the early 1940s, the association operated under intensifying wartime surveillance and cultural control. On 5 April 1941, the painter Ichiro FukuzawaâÂÂa central figure in the associationâÂÂand the poet and art critic Shà «zà  Takiguchi were arrested and detained for roughly seven months under suspicion of violating the Peace Preservation Law. In accounts of wartime repression of Surrealism in Japan, the incident is described as an instance in which the authorities treated Surrealism as ideologically suspect and potentially linked to communism, even though the case did not rest on concrete evidence of communist activity by the two figures.
The arrests had a chilling effect on the association's activities. artscape notes that, after the 1941 crackdown, wartime themes increasingly appeared in works exhibited by members and in assigned productions, reflecting the pressures of the period; the association also undertook more overtly wartime-aligned initiatives, including organizing an aviation-themed art exhibition in 1944.
After the end of the war, the association resumed activities in 1946, and later became a postwar platform that expanded to include photographers; Kansuke Yamamoto joined in 1949 as a member of its photography section.
After Japan's defeat in 1945, the association resumed activities in 1946 and restarted its exhibitions and organizational work. artscape also notes that a breakaway group of younger members split off in 1947 to form the Zen'ei Bijutsukai (), while the Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai itself continued thereafter as an artistsâ association.
In the late 1940s, the association also became a postwar platform that expanded beyond painting to include photography. Photography critic Ryà «ichi Kaneko reports that the Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai established a photography section in January 1949, attracting photographers connected to prewar avant-garde circles (including Nagoya networks), and lists among its members the Nagoya-based photographer-poet Kansuke Yamamoto (alongside figures such as Kiyoji à Âtsuji, Keiichirà  Gotà Â, Minayoshi Takada, and Yoshifumi Hattori).
Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai was conceived as a multi-disciplinary avant-garde artists' association. Contemporary reference works describe the group as bringing together artists working across multiple fieldsâÂÂincluding painting, sculpture, design and photographyâÂÂunder a broadly Surrealist-leaning, experimental orientation. Artscape likewise characterizes the association as a major prewar hub for avant-garde painters and notes that it was formed in May 1939 through the merger of participants from several existing groups and circles around the Independent Art Association (Dokuritsu Bijutsu Kyà Âkai) and related collectives.
Art Platform Japan (Dictionary of Artists in Japan) lists Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai's fields of activity as: painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, crafts, design, and media art, reflecting its cross-medium scope as an association rather than a single-medium group. In practice, the association's activities were anchored by its exhibitions and its organ journal Bijutsu Bunka (), which provided a shared platform across these fields.
At its founding, the association comprised roughly forty artists drawn from multiple circles (including departures from Dokuritsu and other small avant-garde groups). A standard reference account further notes that the group launched its journal in August 1939 and staged its first kà Âbo (open-call) exhibition in April 1940 at the Tokyo Prefectural Art Museum (now the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum), situating the association within Japan's broader ecosystem of juried public exhibitions organized by art groups.
Photo historian Ryà «ichi Kaneko situates the association's photography section within the postwar resurgence of experimental photography, noting that Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai established a dedicated photography section in January 1949. In Kaneko's account, the section drew in photographers connected to prewar avant-garde movementsâÂÂincluding members associated with the Nagoya Photo Avant-Garde () and Osaka-based circlesâÂÂat a moment when postwar photographic groups were rapidly reorganizing across regions.
Kaneko further reports (citing a contemporaneous notice by photographer Yasushi Takabayashi in the June 1950 issue of the magazine ' (Camera)) that the photography section's membership list included multiple regional clusters. The notice named, among others:
Within the association's own exhibition framework, Ã Âtsuji is documented as exhibiting at the 9th Bijutsu Bunka Exhibition in March 1949 at the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum () in Ueno, and as becoming a member of the newly established photography section at that time.
For the association's connection to postwar photography networks, Kaneko's membership list notably includes four co-founders of the Nagoya-based postwar photography collective VIVI. Yamamoto's published biography records that he co-founded VIVI in 1947 with Gotà Â, Hattori, and Takada, and that he joined Bijutsu Bunka Kyà Âkai in 1949 as a member of its photography section (remaining affiliated until 1954). Together, these documented overlaps make the photography section a clear point of contact between the association's postwar avant-garde art milieu and experimental photography activities centered in Nagoya and beyond.
Japanese reference works list around forty (or forty-one) founding members of the association; the following is a selected list of members who are frequently cited in museum and scholarly sources, and who have existing English-language biographies where possible.
The founding dà Âjin (May 1939) included:
artscape notes that later participants in the association's postwar orbit included artists such as:
Photo historian Ryà «ichi Kaneko reports that the association established a photography section in January 1949, and that a contemporaneous magazine notice listed section members including the Nagoya photographer-poet Kansuke Yamamoto and other photographers later associated with postwar Nagoya avant-garde circles (including the founders of VIVI).