Katayama Tōkuma
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was a Japanese architect who designed the original buildings for the Imperial Nara Museum as well as the Kyoto Imperial Museum and was significant in introducing Western, particularly
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architecture into Japan. Coming from Chōshū, Tōkuma was a protégé of Yamagata Aritomo.Checkland, Olive (2003) ''Japan and Britain after 1859: Creating cultural bridges'' RoutledgeCurzon, London
page 81
In 1879 he graduated from the Imperial College of Engineering. During his late twenties and early thirties he assisted Josiah Conder in designing and building a Western-style residence for Prince Arisugawa Taruhito and then on the new Imperial Palace in Tokyo. During the 1880 he was sent to Europe and America to study interior decoration, including furniture. In 1887 he was appointed as an officer in the construction office of the Imperial Household.


Buildings

* 1894 Nara Imperial Museum, now the Nara National Museum * 1895 Kyoto Imperial Museum, now the Kyoto National Museum * 1905 Museum of Agriculture (神宮農業館), Ise, Mie Prefecture, (constructed (1891–1905) * 1909 Tōgu Palace, now Akasaka Palace (constructed 1899–1909)


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Gallery

File:Nara national museum01s3200.jpg, Nara National Museum in Nara, Built in 1894 File:Kyoto National Museum 01.jpg, Kyoto National Museum in Kyōto, Built in 1895 19th-century Japanese architects People from Saga Prefecture 1854 births 1917 deaths 20th-century Japanese architects {{Japan-architect-stub