Take Hwy 14A northeast from Cody, WY past Lovell; cross causeway over Big Horn Lake; take road left directly after causeway; veer right at split; population surrounding cottonwood creek trail., Big Horn, Wyoming, United States, North America
1 mi N on Talc City Cutoff from jct with Hwy 190 and Darwin Rd, then 0.2 mi on Talc City Rd to Talc City Mine, Inyo, California, United States, North America
Plumas County. T27N, R12E, northeast 1/4 Section 24. On the north side of Antelope Lake, about 1/2 mile west of Antelope Creek, about 16 miles (air) northeast of Taylorsville., California, United States, North America
Plumas County. T27N, R12E, northeast 1/4 Section 24. On the north side of Antelope Lake, about 1/2 mile west of Antelope Creek, about 16 miles (air) northeast of Taylorsville. Yellow Pine Forest., California, United States, North America
Cushman, J. A. & Renz, H. H. 1946. The foraminiferal fauna of the Lizard Springs Formation of Trinidad, British West Indies. Cushman Lab.Foram.Research Spec.Pub. (n.18): 1-48.
Rumpf, Friedrich Karl Georg, 1888-1949 Search this
Extent:
3 Notebooks (3 notebooks and loose notes. Notebooks are very worn and many pages are likely not in their original order. Notebook 3 is without covers)
Type:
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Notebooks
Place:
Japan
Berlin (Germany)
Date:
circa 1914-1930s
Scope and Contents:
Three undated notebooks by artist and educator Friedrich Karl Georg (Fritz) Rumpf (1888-1949). With multiple notes in German and Japanese, and drawings in pencil, ink and wash made during his travels and research in Japan. The notebooks also contain many loose paper scraps and letters, including a draft letter addressed to Felix Tikotin.
Arrangement:
in a box
Biographical / Historical:
Friedrich (Fritz) Karl Georg Rumpf the Younger was the son of the Potsdam painter Fritz Rumpf (1856-1927). He grew up in Potsdam and at 15 studied Japanese from a Japanese officer who attended the military school in Potsdam. After graduating from middle school, he studied at the Royal School of Arts in Berlin. He moved to Japan in 1908, where he studied woodblock printing under Igami Bonkotsu (1875-1933) and was active in the literary society "Pan no Kai." From 1910 he continued his studies in Berlin under the artist Emil Orlik. At the beginning of World War I he was sent to China as a military officer and was taken prisoner following the surrender of Qingdao to the Japanese in 1914. He was a prisoner of war in Oita and Narashino until 1920. In 1931 under Asian art historian Otto Kümmel, he produced a dissertation on the Ise monogatari woodblock print edition of 1608. Rumpf traveled extensively in Japan throughout his career. In 1927-1928 he accompanied the art collector Felix Tikotin (1893-1986) in Japan.
Local Numbers:
FSA A2015.22
Restrictions:
Collection is open for research.
Rights:
Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be secured from the repository.
Genre/Form:
Notebooks
Citation:
Fritz Rumpf Notebooks, FSA A2015.22. National Museum of Asian Art Archives. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Identifier:
FSA.A2015.22
Archival Repository:
Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives