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・ Toshiyuki Horie
・ Toshiyuki Hosokawa
・ Toshiyuki Igarashi
・ Toshiyuki Kamioka
・ Toshiyuki Kato
・ Toshiyuki Kita
・ Toshiyuki Kobayashi
・ Toshiyuki Kosugi
・ Toshinori Kondo
・ Toshinori Muto
・ Toshinori Omi
・ Toshinori Sogabe
・ Toshinori Yonekura
・ Toshinosuke Takegahara
・ Toshio
Toshio Aoki
・ Toshio Arima
・ Toshio Fujiwara
・ Toshio Fukada
・ Toshio Fukui
・ Toshio Fukumoto
・ Toshio Furukawa
・ Toshio Gotō
・ Toshio Haru
・ Toshio Hirabayashi
・ Toshio Hirano
・ Toshio Hosokawa
・ Toshio Ikeda
・ Toshio Irie
・ Toshio Irie (bureaucrat)


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Toshio Aoki : ウィキペディア英語版
Toshio Aoki
Toshio Aoki or Tershui Aoki (1854, in Yokohama, Japan – 1912, in San Diego, California) was a Japanese American artist and painter who lived and worked in California at the turn of the 20th century.
Aoki found significant success among the American upper class and was known for hosting social events. Guests of his are alleged to have included John D. Rockefeller and J. P. Morgan.
He was born in Yokohama, Japan in 1954. He emigrated to the United States around 1880.〔 He relocated to Pasadena, California, in 1901, to the Hotel Green, where he also had a studio. He was active until 1910 and died in San Diego on April 26, 1912.〔(Edan Hughes, ''Artists in California, 1786-1940,'' as cited in AskArt.com )〕
Aoki "painted portraits and murals in the homes of prominent people and became very successful." His works were handled by George T. Marsh &
Company. He exhibited at the World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago in 1893, and the Art Institute of Chicago gave him a showing in 1924.〔
The Fine Arts Gallery of San Francisco State University said of him: "Much of Aoki's early life in Japan is speculation, ranging from artistic pursuits (student of acting, or street artist) to the grand and spectacular (a Samurai opposed to the new Japanese government). . . . (painted ) 'spontaneous ''seki'e'' ('on the spot' or 'before the viewers' eyes'). He built a reputation as a storyteller, sketching comical figures and eventually landing an illustrating job with the ''San Francisco Call.''"〔(Fine Arts Gallery, Department of Art, San Francisco State University )〕
After moving to Pasadena, Aoki "worked hard to shed his reputation as an amusing character and storyteller and to be taken seriously as an artist. He began to work on 'Oriental receptions,' creating an atmosphere of a Japanese masquerade ball."〔
He died in San Diego in on June 26, 1912.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Toshio Aoki」の詳細全文を読む



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