The Shimada Prize was a biennial award bestowed jointly by the American National Museum of Asian Art and the Japanese Metropolitan Center for Far Eastern Art Studies for academic works in East Asian art history. It was established in honor of Japanese art historian Shūjirō Shimada in 1992, with the first prize bestowed in September 1993, shortly prior to Shimada's death the following year.[1][2][3] The winner of the prize received a $10,000 award from the Metropolitan Center, funded by the Harry G. C. Packard Collections Charitable Trust.[4] The prize has not been awarded since 2010.[2]

Recipients

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Recipients of the Shimada Prize[2]
Year Portrait Author(s) Work
1993   Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art The Century of Tung Ch’i-ch’ang (1555–1636)
1995 Hirata Yutaka The Age of the Buddhist Master Painter
1997   Su Bai 中國石窟寺研究. [Studies on the cave temples of China]
Li Xianting, Liang Ziming, Robert W. Bagley, Jay Xu The Art of the Houma Foundry
1999 Kihara Toshie 幽微の探究 : 狩野探幽論 [The search for profound delicacy: the art of Kano Tan’yu]
2001 Zou Heng 天马-曲村: 1980-1989 [Tianma-Qucun: 1980–89]
2003 Stanley K. Abe Ordinary Images
2006 Andrew M. Watsky Chikubushima: Deploying the Sacred Arts in Momoyama Japan
2008 Patricia Berger Empire of Emptiness: Buddhist Art and Political Authority in Qing China
2010 Patricia Buckley Ebrey Accumulating Culture: The Collections of Emperor Huizong

References

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  1. ^ Shimizu, Yoshiaki (1995). "Shūjirō Shimada (1907-1994)". Archives of Asian Art. 48: 99–100. JSTOR 20111258.
  2. ^ a b c "The Shimada Prize". National Museum of Asian Art. Retrieved 22 July 2024.
  3. ^ "Shimada Prize is Created". Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved July 22, 2024.
  4. ^ Troost, Kristina Kade; Leone Belzer, Berghuis; Chou, Min-chih (1993). "Libraries and Institutions". Journal of East Asian Libraries. 100: 69–70.