The Japan Foundation Award / Special Prizes (2004) - Profile
The Japan Foundation Award / Special Prizes (2004) - Profile
The Japan Foundation Award
Ms. Toshiko Akiyoshi (Jazz Pianist, Jazz Music Composer [Japan])
Background
Born in Manchuria, Ms. Akiyoshi moved back to Japan with her family
after World War II and began to play jazz piano in an army clubhouse
in Kyushu. In 1951 she moved to Tokyo, where she formed the Cozy Quartet
featuring Watanabe Sadao. The band was spotted by Oscar Peterson, who
was touring Japan, as a result of which a recording was made by Norman
Granz and the band was introduced to the American Jazz scene. She moved
to the United States in 1956 with a scholarship from the Berklee College
of Music, from where she graduated in 1959. In 1973 she formed the Toshiko
Akiyoshi–Lew Tabackin Big Band with her husband Lew Tabackin in
Los Angeles, and in 1977 the band’s album Insights, including the
track “Minamata” (about Minamata disease), was voted number
one in Down Beat magazine’s Best Album poll. The Toshiko Akiyoshi
Jazz Orchestra featuring Lew Tabackin debuted in New York in 1983. Supported
by the Japan Foundation, Ms. Akiyoshi toured Chile and Brazil in 1999.
In 2001 she premiered “Hiroshima: Rising from the Abyss” in
Hiroshima. Her big band performed a concert to mark its 30th anniversary
at the Lincoln Center in 2003, and her orchestra performed its final
concert at Carnegie Hall the same year. In autumn 2004 the Toshiko Akiyoshi
Sextet featuring Lew Tabackin will tour Japan.
Awards
| 1974 |
Swing Journal Jazz Disc Awards, Silver Prize for album
Kogun |
| 1975 |
Nanri Fumio Award |
| 1982 |
Down Beat Best Jazz Band, Composer, and Arranger |
| 1996 |
New York City Mayor’s Liberty Award |
| 1997 |
Medal with Purple Ribbon (Shijuhohsho) awarded by the Emperor of
Japan; Japan Music Pen Award; Avon Women’s Cultural Center Artistic
Award |
| 1999 |
Jazz Hall of Fame; Yokoyama City Cultural Award |
| 2000 |
The Mayor of Tokyo’s Cultural Award |
| 2002 |
Lifetime Achievement Award from the Chamber of Commerce and Industries
of Japan in New York |
| 2004 |
Kennedy Center Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Award |
15 Grammy Award nominations
Major publications and recordings
Autobiography Life with Jazz (1996, Iwanami Shinsho)
Compositions include “Long Yellow Road,” “Sumie,” “Kogun,” “Minamata,” “Oirantan,” and
many others
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The Japan Foundation Special Prizes
The Japan Foundation Special Prize for Arts and Culture
Mr. James Quandt (Senior Programmer, Cinematheque
Ontario [Canada])
Background
Mr. Quandt is the senior programmer at Cinematheque Ontario,
the year-round venue of the Toronto International Film Festival. He was
a film curator at the Harbourfront Cultural Centre from 1985 to 1990,
and since 1990 he has been organizing retrospectives at Cinematheque
Ontario. Mr. Quandt is also active as a film critic, historian, writer,
and lecturer.
Major retrospective series presented
| 1990 |
Films of Tanaka Kinuyo and of Kurosawa Akira |
| 1993–94 |
Films of Suzuki Seijun |
| 1993–94 |
Silent films of Ozu Yasujiro |
| 1995 |
“Japanese Cinema in the 90s” at the Harbourfront Cultural
Centre |
| 1997–98 |
Films of Imamura Shohei |
| 2001–02 |
Films of Ichikawa Kon |
| 2001–02 |
Films of Fukasaku Kinji |
| 2002 |
Films of Ozu Yasujiro |
| 2003 |
Films of Mizoguchi Kenji |
| 2004–05 |
Ozu Yasujiro centenary |
Awards
| 1995 |
Chevalier des Arts et Lettres from the French government
for contributions to French cinema |
| 1999 |
Special Citation from the American National Society of Film Critics |
| 2001 |
The Clyde Gilmour Life Achievement Award from the Toronto Film Critics
Association |
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| The Japan Foundation Special Prize for Japanese-Language Education |
| Prof. Yi, Dok Bong (Professor of Dongduk Women’s
University [Korea]) |
Background
After graduating from Seoul National University of Education
and the International University, Prof. Yi gained his master’s
and a PhD in linguistics from Tsukuba University. In 1983 he became a
professor
in the Faculty of Foreign Studies at Dongduk Women’s University,
and he was dean of the faculty from 1998 to 2000. Since 2001 he has been
a visiting professor at Meikai University, and he was president of the
Korea Association of Japanology from 1999 to 2003. From 1985 to 1998
he served as chief researcher for the fifth, sixth, and seventh revisions
of the curriculum standards for high-school-level Japanese-language education
commissioned by the South Korean Ministry of Education. He also served
as a member of the advisory committee on language for the Korea Research
Foundation from 1997 to 1998 and as a research editor for the materials
on the “Writing System for Korean National Phonograms” compiled
by the Korean Ministry of Education from 2001 to 2002.
Major publications
(in Japanese)
Psychology of Metaphors (co-author) (1990, Tokyo: Seishin Shobo)
Multimedia-Assisted Language Learning: Theory and Practice (co-author)
(1999)
Japanese-Language Education: Theory and Method (1998, Seoul: Sisa Japanese
Publishing)
Japanese for Interaction (co-author) (Japanese, Korean, and Chinese versions,
2001–02, Seoul: Sisa Japanese Publishing)
Toward a Comprehensive Japanese-Language Education (co-author) (2002,
Tokyo: Kokusho Kanko-kai)
Awards received
| 1976 |
Seoul Education Officer Award at the National Educational
Material Exhibition |
| 2000 |
Honorary Professor of Education and Volunteer Work, Dongduk Women’s
University |
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|
The Japan Foundation Special Prize for Japanese Studies
Prof. Kurayoshi Takara (Professor of the University of
the Ryukyus [Japan])
Background
After graduating from the Aichi University of Education, Prof. Takara
worked in the Okinawa Historiographical Institute and the Okinawa Prefectural
Museum before becoming director of the Urazoe City Library in 1988. Before
he was invited to the University of the Ryukyus in 1994, Prof. Takara
had already spent over a decade researching Okinawan history from the
broad perspective of Asian history. Since 1986 he has served as secretary-general
of the International Conference on Historical Sino-Ryukyu Relations,
an event which brings together historians from Okinawa, Taiwan, Fujian,
and Beijing. He led the project to restore Shuri Castle as a member of
various committees and supervised the historical representations in the
1993 NHK television drama series Winds of the Ryukyus.
Major publications
(in Japanese)
The Era of the Ryukyus: In Search of a Great Historical Figure (1980,
Chikuma Shobo)
Structure of the Ryukyu Kingdom (1987, Yoshikawa Kobunkan)
Issues in the History of the Ryuku Kingdom (1989, Hirugi-sha)
Ryukyus (1993, Iwanami Shoten)
The Ryukyu Kingdom as Part of Asia (1998, Yoshikawa Kobunkan)
History of Japan, vol.14: Medieval Japan Seen from the Periphery (co-author)
(2001, Kodansha
Encyclopedia of Japanese Historical Geography, vol.48: Place Names
of Okinawa (co-author) (2001, Kodansha)
History of Okinawa Prefecture (co-author) (2004, Yamakawa Shuppansha)
Awards
| 1981 |
Okinawa Times Publications Cultural Award for The Era
of the Ryukyus |
| 1987 |
Okinawa Cultural Award for Structure of the Ryukyu Kingdom |
| 1988 |
Japan Junior Chamber TOYP Grand Prize for contributions to regional
vitalization |
| 1990 |
Iha Fuyu Award for Issues in the History of the Ryuku Kingdom |
| 1997 |
Okinawa Studies Awards (Humanities Division) |
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