New Eight Views in the Environs of Tokyo : No. 8, Tamanoi in the Snow 東京新近郊八景 8 玉乃井の雪景
Oda Kazuma 織田一磨/画
- Collection of
- Edo-Tokyo Museum
- Title
- New Eight Views in the Environs of Tokyo : No. 8, Tamanoi in the Snow
- Collection ID
- 93200301
- Sub Category
- Block prints
- Creator
- Oda Kazuma
- Creation Date
- 1932 20世紀
- Size
- 24cm x 33cm
- Edo-Tokyo Museum Digital Archives
- https://www.edohakuarchives.jp/detail-9084.html
About the creator
織田一磨 / ODA Kazuma
from Art Platform Japan: https://artplatform.go.jp/resources/collections/artists/A2131
- Date of birth
- 1882-11-11
- Birth place
- Shiba-ku, Tokyo Prefecture
- Date of death
- 1956-03-08
- Death place
- Musashino City, Tokyo
- Medium
- Printmaking
- Gender
- male
- Update date
- 2023-02-14
Identifiers
- APJ ID
- A2131
- VIAF ID
- 3836030
- NDL ID
- 00057337
- ULAN ID
- 500373082
- AOW ID
- _8872d669-f254-432f-b0f1-4a4b1db44b57
- Wikidata ID
- Q11608247
Other items of Edo-Tokyo Museum (159766)
CINEMA-PALACE
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Letter Signed by Inukai Tsuyoshi
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Willow and People Stand Chatting
Edo-Tokyo Museum
The Famous Slope of San Francisco and Housewives Pushing Baby Carriages, San Francisco
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Hand Towel Pattern: "Shumpūtei Senshi" in Japanese Characters
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Kimono
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Shinjuku Daiichi Gekijō Theater Program for May 1935, Seinen Kabukigeki Performances in May
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Private Document
Edo-Tokyo Museum
India, Meeting with Tomorrow (the Japan World Exposition, Osaka, 1970)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Four-panel Comic Strip: Tōsei Young Madam, Itsumo Himako Fujin, Vol. 25
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Deposit Passbook
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Yukahon (Libretto): Act "Kumagaijinya no Dan" (Kumagai's Battle Camp) from "Ichinotani Futaba Gunki" (A Chronicle of the Battle of Ichinotani)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Hand-copied Book of History
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Talisman: Protection from Illness by the Nihon Sōja Tsushima Gozutennō Deity
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Vol. 24 No. 6 of Shōnen Club Magazine, Supplement, “Handicraft Book for Boys”
Edo-Tokyo Museum