The Burke Collection

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Nakamura Tanio
1966
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1971
Sesson to Kantō suibokuga (Sesson and ink painting of the Kantō region). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 63. Tokyo: Shibundō.
Nakamura Tanio
1972
“Tesshū Tokusai hitsu Rogan zu” (“Geese and Reeds,” by Tesshū Tokusai). Kobijutsu, no. 38 (September): 79–81.
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1986
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1969
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1964a
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Nara National Museum
1964b
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1992
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Nara Prefectural Museum of Art
1989
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1994
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1955
“Uragami Gyokudō hitsu Yakyō Hōkin zu” (“Landscape,” by Uragami Gyokudō). Kokka, no. 756 (March): 84–89.
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1964
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Narazaki Muneshige
1966
“Unchō hitsu Ryūka bijin zu” (“Beautiful Women under a Willow Tree,” by Unchō). Kokka, no. 894 (September): 34.
Narazaki Muneshige
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[Editor]. Zaigai hihō: Ōbei shūzō Nihon kaiga shūsei (Japanese paintings in Western collections). Vol. 3, Nikuhitsu ukiyo-e (Ukiyo-e paintings). Tokyo: Gakushū Kenkyūsha.
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Kiyonaga, Shigemasa (Kiyonaga and Shigemasa: Ukiyo-e paintings). Nikuhitsu ukiyo-e (Ukiyo-e paintings), 5. Tokyo: Shūeisha.
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Naruse Fujio
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Fuji no e: Kamakura jidai kara gendai made, kaikan 20-shūnen kinen tokubetsuten / Paintings of Mt. Fuji: Special Exhibition Celebrating the 20th Anniversary of the Museum Yamato Bunkakan. Exh. cat., Museum Yamato Bunkakan. Nara: Bunkakan.
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1997
Aizen Myōō zō (Images of Aizen Myōō). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 376. Tokyo: Shibundō.
Nezu Institute of Fine Arts
1962
Shōshō hakkei gashū (Paintings of the Eight Views of the Xiao and Xiang Rivers). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Nezu Institute of Fine Arts.
Nezu Institute of Fine Arts
1981
Kobayashi Collection ten: Muromachi suibokuga o chūshin to shite (Exhibition of the Kobayashi Collection: With emphasis on Muromachi-period ink painting). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Nezu Institute of Fine Arts.
Nezu Institute of Fine Arts and Tokugawa Art Museum
1977
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1976
Ko Imari. Nihon tōji zenshū (Survey of Japanese ceramics), 23. Tokyo: Chūōkōronsha.
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Nishikawa Kyōtarō
1983
Ichiboku zukuri to yosegi zukuri (Techniques of one-block and assembly-block carving). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 202. Tokyo: Shibundō.
Ogino Museum of Art
1991
Ogino bijutsukan meihin sen (Collected masterworks from the Ogino Museum). Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture: Ogino Bijutsukan.
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1982
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“Matsumura-ke ryakkei to Gekkei (Goshun) den” (The history of the Matsumura family and biography of Goshun). Nihon bijutsu kōgei, no. 266: 2–8.
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Okayama Art Museum
1970
Uragami Gyokudō to sono jidai (Uragami Gyokudō and his time). Okayama: Okayama Art Museum.
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Takashimaya Department Store
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Byōbu-e meisaku ten (Exhibition of masterpieces of folding-screen painting). Exh. cat., Takashimaya Department Store. Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Shinbunsha Kikakubu.
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1966
Rakuchū-rakugai zu (Scenes in and around the capital). Exh. cat., Kyoto National Museum. Tokyo: Kadokawa Shoten.
Takeda Tsuneo
1967
Kinsei shoki fūzokuga (Genre painting of the early modern period). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 20. Tokyo: Shibundō.
Takeda Tsuneo
1974
Kano Eitoku. Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 94. Tokyo: Shibundō.
Takeda Tsuneo
1976
“Tosa Mitsuyoshi to saiga: Kyoto Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan Genji monogatari zujō o megutte” (Tosa Mitsuyoshi and miniature painting: The album of scenes from the Genji monogatari in the collection of the Kyoto National Museum). Kokka, no. 996 (December): 11–24.
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[Editor]. Keibutsuga: Shiki keibutsu (Landscape: Scenes of four seasons). Nihon byōbu-e shūsei (Survey of Japanese screen paintings), 9. Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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[Editor]. Fūzokuga: Rakuchū-rakugai (Genre painting: Scenes in and around the capital). Nihon byōbu-e shūsei, 11. Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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Kano Tan’yū. Nihon bijutsu kaiga zenshū (Survey of Japanese painting), 15. Tokyo: Shūeisha.
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Chūsei byōbu-e (Folding-screen paintings of medieval Japan). Exh. cat., Osaka Municipal Museum of Art. Kyoto: Kyoto Shoin.
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Tan’yū, Morikage. Suibokuga no kyoshō (Great masters of ink painting), 5. Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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[Editors]. Fūzokuga: Yūraku, Tagasode (Genre painting: Pleasures and “Whose Sleeves”). Nihon byōbu-e shūsei (Survey of Japanese screen paintings), 14. Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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“Ryūkyō suisha zu byōbu: Shinshutsubon no shōkai o kanete” (On willow-bridge and waterwheel screens: Also introducing a newly discovered example). Kokka, no. 1138 (September): 20–34 (pt. 1); no. 1139 (October): 7–18 (pt. 2).
Takeuchi Shōji
1972
“Kyū Date-ke bon Hakuga dankin zu to Daisen’in Hōjō Ihatsu-kaku shōhekiga” (“Immortal Playing a Harp,” formerly owned by the Date family, and the screen paintings of the main hall of the Daisen’in Temple). Kobijutsu, no. 39 (December): 87–88.
Tale of the Heike
1988
Helen Craig McCullough, translator. The Tale of the Heike. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
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1968
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Tamagami Takuya
1943
“Byōbu-e to uta to monogatari to” (Screen paintings, poetry, and tales). Kokugo kokubun, no. 221 (June): 1–20.
Tamamura Takeji
1983
Gozan zensō denki shūsei (Biographies of Zen priests of Gozan temples). Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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“Muromachi jidai no kingindei-e to Nōami hitsu Shū Hyakku no renga (Gold and silver painting in the Muromachi period and the “Shū Hyakku no renga,” by Nōami). Kokka, no. 1146: 21–41.
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1953
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Tanaka Ichimatsu
1957
“Ike Taiga hitsu Rantei kyokusui, Gako shajitsu zu byōbu” (“Rantei kyokusui” and “Gako shajitsu,” by Taiga Ike). Kokka, no. 780 (March): 89–97.
Tanaka Ichimatsu
1958
“Sesson hitsu Shiki sansui zu byōbu ni tsuite” (The screen painting “Landscapes of Four Seasons,” by Sesson). Bijutsu kenkyū, no. 198 (May): 1–10.
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Tanaka Ichimatsu
1974
Kaō, Mokuan, Minchō. Suiboku bijutsu taikei (Art of ink painting), 5. Tokyo: Kōdansha.
Tanaka Ichimatsu and Nakamura Tanio
1973
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1970
Suibokuga (Ink painting). Genshoku Nihon no bijutsu (Japanese art in color), 11. Tokyo: Shōgakukan.
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Hakubyōga kara suibokuga e no tenkai (The development of ink painting from hakubyō). Suiboku bijutsu taikei (Art of ink painting), 1. 1975: Tokyo: Kōdansha.
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Tanaka Kaidō
1942
Koshakyō sōkan (Collection of hand-copied sutras). Nara: Ikaruga Koshakyō Shuppanbu.
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1933
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Tanaka Kisaku
1936
“Gashi Shūtoku” (Shūtoku, a priest painter of the Ashikaga period). Bijutsu kenkyū, no. 54 (June): 236–42.
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Kokyō (Old mirrors). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 178. Tokyo: Shibundō.
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Nikuhitsu ukiyo-e meihin ten: Saki kaoru Edo no josei bi (Exhibition of masterpieces of ukiyo-e paintings: The beauty of Edo women, fragrant and blossoming). Exh. cat. Nagoya: Asahi Shinbunsha.
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Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum
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Muromachi bijutsu to Sengoku gadan: Ōta Dōkan kinen bijutsu ten (Art of the Muromachi and Sengoku periods: Ōta Dōkan Memorial Art Exhibition). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tōkyō-to Bunka Shinkōkai.
Tokyo National Museum
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Tokyo National Museum
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Tōyō no tōji: Tōyō tōji ten kinen zuroku (Commemorative catalogue of the exhibition of Oriental ceramics). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
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Rinpa: Sōritsu hyakunen kinen tokubetsu ten (Special 100-year anniversary exhibition). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
1978
Nihon no sho (Japanese calligraphy). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
1980
Cha no bijutsu (Art of the tea ceremony). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
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Tokyo National Museum
1985b
Nihon no tōji (Japanese ceramics). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
1988
Tokubetsu tenkan: Edo-jō shōhekiga no shita-e; Ōhiroma, matsu no rōka kara ōoku made (Special exhibition: Preliminary paintings for the screen and mural paintings of Edo Castle; From the great hall and pine corridor to the women’s quarters). Exh. cat. Tokyo: Tokyo National Museum.
Tokyo National Museum
1989a
Edo-jō shōhekiga no shita-e (Preliminary paintings for the screen and mural paintings at Edo Castle). 2 vols. Tokyo: Daiichi Hōki.
Tokyo National Museum
1989b
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Tottori Prefectural Museum
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Zaigai Nihon emaki no kenkyū to shiryō (Japanese illustrated handscrolls abroad: Study and records). Kasama sōsho (Kasama series), 328. Tokyo: Kasama Shoin.
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“Hanabusa Itchō hitsu Ama yadori zu” (“Ama yadori zu,” by Itchō). Kokka, no. 920 (November): 35.
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Tsuji Nobuo
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“Hōkokuki: Miyake, Mikura, Niijima santō ni nokoru Hanabusa Itchō no gaseki, Miyagawa Isshō, Kaigetsudō Ando no shiryō nado mo awasete” (Reports: Pictures by Itchō remaining in Miyake-jima, Mikura-jima, and Nii-jima islands). Kokka, no. 920 (November): 36–46.
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Sō Shiseki to Nanpin ha (Sō Shiseki and the Shen Nanpin School). Nihon no bijutsu (Arts of Japan), 326. Tokyo: Shibundō.
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