Ikuo Hirayama
Ikuo Hirayama (平山 郁夫, 15 June 1930 – 2 December 2009) was a Japanese
.Biography
In 1952, he graduated from the
He produced a series of paintings depicting the introduction of
He was sometimes criticized for his profit making activities at the time when he held a position of President of a national university. Some (would-be) connoisseurs even cast doubts upon the authenticity of his highly profitable artworks, claiming that his wife and others made them under his name. He was a patron of historical institutions and gave £500,000 to the British Museum for the creation of The Hirayama Studio, a conservation studio specializing in Eastern pictorial art,[2] which was opened in 1994 and named after him. [1] He had a studio in
The
Collecting
Ikuo Hirayama actively collected material relating to the historical silk road. The Hirayama Ikuo Silk Road Museum includes Chinese and Gandhara sculpture, Sasanian and Central Asian silver ware, toilet trays and coins, in total at least 222 pieces. His collection is particularly notable for its collection of Gandharan art from Pakistan and Afghanistan.[3] His collection of Central Asian coins was small, containing only 101 items, though these included one of the best preserved of Kanishka I's Buddha coins as well as other important examples. [4]
References
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-08. Retrieved 2019-04-30.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Silk Road Art and Archaeology Special Volume: Studies in Silk Road Coins and Culture, Kamakura 1997
- ^ Tanabe, K (2000) Gandharan and Silk Road Arts: The Hiryama Ikuo Collection, Catalogue of an Exhibition at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts
- ^ Tanabe, K (1993) Silk Road Coins: the Hirayama Collection
External links
- "Ikuo Hirayama sought solace on the road". C.B.Liddell. 2007-09-27.
- Obituary, in The Independent, 12 Dec 2009.https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/ikuo-hirayama-5512206.html