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Nobuhiro Ōkōchi

Nobuhiro Ōkōchi
Native name 大河内 信敬
Born (1903-08-21)August 21, 1903
Tokyo, Japan
Died December 1, 1967(1967-12-01) (aged 64)
Tokyo, Japan
Nationality Japanese
Education Hongō Painting Institute
Alma mater Meiji University
Known for Painting
Spouse(s) Chieko Ōkōchi
Elected Kōfūkai

Nobuhiro Ōkōchi (大河内 信敬, Ōkōchi Nobuhiro, 21 August 1903 – 1 December 1967) was a Japanese painter.

In 1918, Ōkōchi studied watercolor under Sanchi Itakura and printmaking under Kishio Koizumi as well as other methods under Okada Saburōsuke. He contributed to the magazine You and I (きみ と ぼく, Kimi to boku) in 1922. He graduated from the Meiji University Department of Economics in 1928 and studied at Hongō Painting Institute under Manjirō Terauchi in 1930. Ōkōchi participated in the 1931 Nihon Hanga Kyōkai exhibition.

In 1933, Ōkōchi's painting, A corner of the room (画室の一隅, Gashitsu no ichigū), won the fourteenth Emperor Exhibition prize from the Imperial Art Academy. By 1937, he was researching art from Europe. Ōkōchi became a member of Kōfūkai in 1940. He and Kanemon Asai as well as others formed Shinjukai in 1947.

Ōkōchi was the second son of Viscount Masatoshi Ōkōchi, the director of Riken, and the daughter of Ōkōchi Nobuhisa. Chieko was his wife. His daughter with her was actress Momoko Kōchi.

Nobuhiro Okochi on IMDb



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