Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Tadamasa Hayashi (林 忠正 1853 - 1906?) foi um marchand japonês e um dos maiores difusores da arte tradicional nipônica, sobretudo o ukiyo-e, na Europa. Quando criança, foi adotado pela família Hayashi, de alta classe samurai do domínio Toyama. Após graduar-se na Universidade de Tóquio, mudou-se para Paris, em 1878, trabalhando como ...

  2. 18 de ago. de 2022 · Originally published in French now in an English translation: "CATALOGUE of the COLLECTION JAPANESE SWORD-GUARDS" Louvre Museum, gift of Mr. Tadamasa Hayashi - 1894. Combined with "A CHRONOLOGICAL COLLECTION OF ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY FOUR SABER GUARDS [TSUBA] FROM THE 10TH TO THE 18TH CENTURY" - Dating from 1902.

    • Tadamasa Hayashi
  3. Tadamasa Hayashi (Takaoka, 1853 - 1906) Artworks from Japan and China: Paintings, Books Collected by T. Hayashi [Objets d'art du Japon et de la China: peintures, livres réunis par T. Hayashi, 1902-1903

  4. jp.linkedin.com › in › tadamasa-hayashi-7386a0117Tadamasa Hayashi | LinkedIn

    Tadamasa Hayashiさんが「いいね! 」しました 【優勝】 先日出店したスペースマーケット様主催の「東京・間借りカレーウィーク」で、数ある競合店を押さえ、提供数ナンバーワン🏆で優勝しました🍛 協賛のマイナビ様からいただく優勝賞金は、カレー屋の発展に使わせていただきます。

    • 21人のフォロワー
  5. Hayashi Tadamasa, «Yoroppa nite seikô sum tada hitori no nihonjin. zen pari bankokuhakurankai jimu kanchô Hayashi Tadamasa no risshodan » (Le seul Japonais qui ait réussi en Europe : entretien avec Hayashi Tadamasa, l'ancien Commissaire de l'Exposition universelle de Paris qui nous parle de sa réussite), Taiheiyô n°15, Tôkyô, 1905.

  6. Tadamasa Hayashi (林 忠正, 1853–1906) was a Japanese art dealer who introduced traditional Japanese art such as ukiyo-e to Europe. Tadamasa was born to the Nagasaki family of physicians. When he was still a child, he was adopted into the Hayashi family, an upper-class samurai family of . He then attended the University of Tokyo. In 1878, he went to Paris as a translator to seek a new life ...

  7. 19 de feb. de 2020 · Hayashi Tadamasa : Les lettres et télégrammes adressés par Hayashi à Edmond de Goncourt sont conservés au Département des manuscrits de la Bibliothèque Nationale de France. Ils sont numérotés de 100 à 128 dans la Correspondance Goncourt : Nouvelles acquisitions françaises.