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  1. 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 Toyama-han.

  2. This collection of letters consists mainly of letters that Hayashi received during the twenty-seven years between 1884, when he opened his art store at no. 7 Cité d’Hauteville, Paris, and 1905, when he returned to Japan, where he died a year later.

  3. 9 de jul. de 2013 · Illustrated catalogue of the important collection of paintings, water colors, pastels, drawings and prints collected by the Japanese connoisseur the late Tadamasa Hayashi of Tokyo, Japan : American Art Association : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive.

  4. 24 de jul. de 2020 · Aquí podemos ver el catálogo de la subasta que organizó Tadamasa Hayashi en 1902, en la que se subastaron más de 1500 ukiyo-e y libros ilustrados japoneses. El catálogo, en el que aparecen cientos de grabados y heliograbados de ukiyo-e, cuenta con un prólogo de Bing sobre los grabados japoneses.

    • Birth and Social Environment
    • Education
    • Professional Career
    • The Beginnings
    • The Apogee
    • The Final Years
    • Hayashi's Legacy

    The date agreed upon today for the birth of Hayashi Tadamasa is December 11, 1853 (7th day of the 11th month of the year 6 of the Kaei era) (Koyama-Richard, 1997, p. 234, p. 249). His birthplace, Takaoka, in the former stronghold of Echichû, within the powerful province of Kaga, was particularly renowned for the art of metalwork, a field that Hayas...

    According to Edmond de Goncourt (1822-1896), Hayashi confided to him that he was attracted to France because of his interest in Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821), whom he had discovered in the books of a Dutch doctor, a "teacher" of his father (Journal des Goncourt, July 28, 1895). According to Brigitte Koyama-Richard, it was rather through a Japanese...

    Hayashi Tadamasa followed a professional trajectory that led him from the profession of interpreter in the service of the Kiritsu kôshô kaisha to the profession of art dealer, which he would combine with participation alongside Wakai in the organisation of exhibitions devoted to Japanese art (for the company and within the framework of various univ...

    In 1881, he returned to the Kiritsu kôshô kaisha again at the request of Wakai. The latter, having no more news from the parent company, decided to return to Japan. In February 1882, Hayashi and Wakai founded a company together, affiliated with the Mitsui consortium, and organised the sale of unsold stocks from the 1878 exhibition. Hayashi also wor...

    After a stay in the United States, Hayashi returned to Paris in May, and then returned to Japan with works by Kuroda Seiki (1866-1924), in the company of Yamamoto Hôsui (1850-1906) and Gôda Kiyoshi (1862-1938). He returned to Paris in November (Kigi, 1987, p. 373). Hayashi constantly defended Japanese painters in the Western style (yôga). He was in...

    After 1897, Hayashi found himself faced with financial difficulties and sought to expand his business to other types of trade. He went to Russia to study potential oil deals (Koyama-Richard, 2002, p. 138-139). After the Exposition universelle of 1900, Hayashi was decorated as a Commandeur in the Légion d’honneur of France (decree of November 10, 19...

    Hayashi has long enjoyed greater notoriety in France than in Japan. The French decorations he received bestowed greater honours than those he received in Japan. In his country of origin, his action as a dealer remained controversial and his efforts to make Western art known to his fellow citizens were not crowned with success. He sincerely defended...

  5. 19 de feb. de 2019 · Hayashi Tadamasa (1853–1906) was the first Japanese individual to trade in Japanese art in the West. Having learned French in his native country, he attended the 1878 Paris Exposition Universelle, or World’s Fair, as an interpreter.

  6. 20 de feb. de 2019 · It is widely known that famed art dealer Hayashi Tadamasa (1853-1906) was the one responsible for introducing Japanese art to the West. Hayashi travelled to the 1878 World’s Fair in Paris as an...