was a famous Japanese modern painter of the Nihonga style of watercolour painting. His original name was YoshizÃ
 (義ä¸Â). The name TogyÃ
« referred to a poem from his father who ran a publishing business.
Okumura is characterized by his works which achieve unusual, exquisite quality of colours through the application of the white gofun pigment 100 or 200 times as foundation.
Biography
- 1959 Becomes a director of the Japanese fine arts institute.
- 1962 Awarded the Japanese Order of Culture.
- 1978 Appointed chief director of the Japanese fine arts institute.
Major works
He painted Mount Fuji, which is in the Tokyo Imperial Palace.
- é³´é (1959, 128.5ÃÂ160.5 cm)
- 鹿 (1968,ãÂÂ114.7ÃÂ145.0 cm)
- éÂÂé (1972,ãÂÂ135.5ÃÂ115.8 cm)
- éÂÂæÂÂ¥ (1974,ãÂÂ73.0ÃÂ100.0 cm)
- Ã¥ÂÂé (1977,ãÂÂ108.6ÃÂ184.4 cm)
- å¯Â士宮ã®å¯Â士 (1982,ãÂÂ76.1ÃÂ115.1 cm)
- è £ (1984,ãÂÂ102.0ÃÂ131.0 cm)
- å¯Â
(1985,ãÂÂ16.2ÃÂ49.5 cm)
Books and collections of work
- ã¹ã±ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã®ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã (collection of sketches, 1917)
- çÂÂã®ãÂÂãÂÂã¿ (autobiography, 1974)
Major collections holding works by Okumura
See also
References