- Collection of
- Edo-Tokyo Museum
- Collection ID
- 01001571
- Category
- Painting&Print
- Creation Date
- 20世紀
- Size
- 17.9cm x 26cm
- Materials/Collection
- Materials Related to Kawamura Kiyo'o
- Edo-Tokyo Museum Digital Archives
- https://www.edohakuarchives.jp/detail-12885.html
About the creator
川村清雄 / KAWAMURA Kiyoo
from Art Platform Japan: https://artplatform.go.jp/resources/collections/artists/A1284
- Date of birth
- 1852-06-13
- Birth place
- Edo (current Tokyo)
- Date of death
- 1934-05-16
- Death place
- Nara Prefecture
- Medium
- Painting
- Gender
- male
- Update date
- 2025-07-24
Identifiers
- APJ ID
- A1284
- VIAF ID
- 26957184
- NDL ID
- 00390160
- ULAN ID
- 500340674
- AOW ID
- _40147369
- Benezit ID
- B00097540
- Wikidata ID
- Q11478804
Other items of Edo-Tokyo Museum (159766)
Chiba Infantry School, Main Gate
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Public Document
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Pamphlet of Performance in March 1954 at Meijiza Theater: Shinkokugeki, Sawada Festival in Commemoration of the 25th Anniversary of the Rebirth: Ōshō (Sennichite no Maki), Sakekkojiki, Ōshō (Kansai Meijin no Maki), and Shirano Benjūrō
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Wrapping Paper for Fūki, a Sake Brand
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Famous Views of Tokyo: True View of Yasukuni Shrine Festival
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Courtesan and Two Young Attendants
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Private Document
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Commemoration of the Opening of the Hijiribashi Bridge
Edo-Tokyo Museum
EAGLE MILK Sign
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Document of Rural Area
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Daimyo's Procession at the Welcome Reception for His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught and Strathearn
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Issenmannin no Wadai (Ten Million People's Topics), No. 359
Edo-Tokyo Museum
The First Thing That Caught the Attention (Illustration from "Wagahai wa Neko de Aru" by Natsume Sōseki)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Newspaper Clipping, June 1936: Vegetable Tsukudani
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Rubbing of the Yanagishimabashi Bridge Name Plate
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Great Kantō Earthquake: Destroyed Bridge and People Crossing the Suidōbashi Bridge
Edo-Tokyo Museum