Kinhide Tokudaiji | |
---|---|
徳大寺 公英 | |
Born |
Tokyo, Japan | 2 November 1919
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Kimihide Tokudaiji |
Occupation | Art critic |
Parent(s) |
Saneatsu Tokudaiji Yoneko Matsudaira [1] |
Kinhide Tokudaiji (徳大寺 公英, Tokudaiji Kinhide [2], born 2 November 1919), also known as Kimihide Tokudaiji, is a Japanese art critic and aristocrat who was the head of the Tokudaiji family.
Kinhide Tokudaiji was born on 2 November 1919 in Tokyo as the eldest son of Prince Saneatsu Tokudaiji and Yoneko Tokudaiji. Yoneko was from the Matsudaira family and was the daughter of Count Naoyuki Matsudaira. [3]
Tokudaiji studied political science at the Tokyo Imperial University, graduating in 1945. [4] [5]
Tokudaiji was one of the founding members of Kōbō Abe's Kiroku Geijutsu no Kai. [6] Besides teaching at Gakushuin University, he was also commissioned by the Bridgestone Museum of Art. [5]
Kinhide Tokudaiji | |
---|---|
徳大寺 公英 | |
Born |
Tokyo, Japan | 2 November 1919
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Kimihide Tokudaiji |
Occupation | Art critic |
Parent(s) |
Saneatsu Tokudaiji Yoneko Matsudaira [1] |
Kinhide Tokudaiji (徳大寺 公英, Tokudaiji Kinhide [2], born 2 November 1919), also known as Kimihide Tokudaiji, is a Japanese art critic and aristocrat who was the head of the Tokudaiji family.
Kinhide Tokudaiji was born on 2 November 1919 in Tokyo as the eldest son of Prince Saneatsu Tokudaiji and Yoneko Tokudaiji. Yoneko was from the Matsudaira family and was the daughter of Count Naoyuki Matsudaira. [3]
Tokudaiji studied political science at the Tokyo Imperial University, graduating in 1945. [4] [5]
Tokudaiji was one of the founding members of Kōbō Abe's Kiroku Geijutsu no Kai. [6] Besides teaching at Gakushuin University, he was also commissioned by the Bridgestone Museum of Art. [5]