Resources for COVID-19

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The World of Hiroe Swen's ceramic art

Source: The Hiroe Swen Archive Project



Beginner's Guide to Magic Mirrors

Source: OnMark Productions



110th International ARC Seminar Webinar with Dr. Ellis Tinios

Source: Ritsumeikan University Art Research Center



Aftershocks: Japanese Earthquake Prints

Source: Royal Ontario Museum



Woodblock Print Studio

Source: Birmingham Museum of Art



Kamishibai Propaganda Plays

Source: UBC Library Open Collections



Behind the Camera

Source: University of British Columbia



10 things to know about the earliest photographs of Japan

Source: Rijksmuseum



Protection

Source: Rijksmuseum



Digital Exhibition: True Image: Celebrating the Legacy of Yinyuan Longqi (Ingen Ryuki) and the Art of Ōbaku

Source: Center for Buddhist Studies, University of Arizona College of Humanities



Online Exhibition: Artistic Exchange between Korea and Japan

Source: Ewha Women's University & Kyushu University



Age of enlightenment: an introduction to early Japanese Buddhist art

Source: Christie's Auctions



Stories of Clay: Discovering Chosŏn Korean Potters in Tokugawa Japan

Source: Aftermath of the East Asian War of 1592-1598 Project, Autonomous University of Barcelona



Online exhibition catalogue: "Komatsu Hiroko: Creative Destruction"

Source: Davis Museum of Art at Wellesley College



Online Exhibition: "From Our Rare Book Collection"

Source: Japan Foundation



93rd International ARC Seminar 'Introducing an album of preliminary drawings by Katsushika Isai (葛飾為斎)' with Ellis Tinios

Source: Art Research Center, Ritsumeikan University



Japan Crazed: Cross-Cultural Expression in the Work of Sam Francis and other Postwar Artists at LACMA

Source: Los Angeles County Museum of Art



Virtual tour, "Lyrical Journey: Toko Shinoda"

Source: Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College



Virtual tour, "Mystic Peak: Selections from the Bernstein Collection of Japanese Art"

Source: Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College



Virtual exhibition, "Fanning the Flames: Propaganda in Modern Japan"

Source: Hoover Institution Library & Archives at Stanford University