Fuku Akino


Fuku Akino was a Japanese painter. She was born in Futamata, Iwata-gun, Shizuoka Prefecture. She became known by her paintings of Indian themes, landscapes and peoples.

Life and career

Akino got a degree in teaching from Shizuoka's Normal School in 1926. She taught classes at an elementary school, but quitted after a year. Akino then went to Kyoto to learn Japanese-style painting, under the guidance of Suisho Nishiyama.
In 1948, Akino left the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition and joined the Sozo Bijutsu group, together with Uemura Shoko and Fukuda Toyoshiro, seeking a renewal of Japanese art. The following year, she became an assistant professor at Kyoto City University of Arts.
When she was 53 years old, Akino was invited by India's Visva-Bharati University to be a visiting professor. Charmed by the country, she started to work on Indian themes. Akino visited India several times, painting the country's landscapes, buildings and peoples. Akino also visited Bangladesh, Nepal, Cambodia and Africa.
Akino died in 11 October 2001, in Kyoto, of a heart attack.

Honors

Akino was named a Person of Cultural Merit in 1991 and was awarded the Order of Culture in 1999.. A museum housing her artworks was built in her hometown of Hamamatsu in 1998. The museum was designed by Japanese architect Terunobu Fujimori.