"Three Youths of the Taiwan Salon"
As a self-taught artist, Guo Xuehu felt enormous pressure to prove himself the following year.
add image from Taiwan Kyoiku 1933 11 with people crowded outside looking at the list of names
At the opening ceremony of the first Taiwan Fine Arts Exhibition, Gotō Fumio (1884-1980), the Vice-Governor General, spoke to the crowd of invited guests and expressed his hopes that the exhibition would flourish and contribute to the “imperial art world” (teikoku bijutsukai) (“Nankoku bijutsu no dendō o kizuku hatsu no Taiwan Bijutsu Tenrankai."). The organizers also read congratulatory telegrams from Japan’s Minister of Education and the former organizer of the Korea Fine Arts Exhibition (Chōsen bijutsu tenrankai) Mizuno Rentarō (1868-1949), the director of the Imperial Fine Arts Academy Fukuhara Ryōjirō (1868-1932), and the director of the Tokyo School of Fine Arts Masaki Naohiko (1862-1940) (Nihon bijutsu nenkan Shōwa 3nen, 41.). Thus, the organizers mobilized their contacts to major bureaucrats in the metropole to position their efforts within the imperial framework of art patronage.
The Taiwan Fine Arts Exhibition was run with the help of four Japanese artists residing on the island: Gōhara Kotō (1887-1965), Kinoshita Seigai (1887-1988), Ishikawa Kin’ichirō (1871-1945), and Shiotsuki Tōho (1886-1954). The majority of participating artists were also Japanese settlers. Why would Taiwanese-Chinese be interested in participating in this exhibition?
By the first Taiwan Fine Arts Exhibition opened in Taipei, residents of the island were familiar with the bustle and hustle of the "artistic fall" (bijutsu no aki) in the metropole. Taiwan nichinichi shinpō had for years been regularly reporting on the salon in Tokyo and other art-related events. The power of the press helped shape the popular image of an artist as a successful exhibition participant and a public figure. Also, exhibition participation promised an opportunity for sales and elevating an artist's standing in the art market. Nearly two months in advance of the salon's first opening in Taipei, the newspaper began extensive reporting on the topic, with the hopes of attracting potential participants and garnering wide interest (ADD photo tns 1927.10.28 of the entry?). In result, the phenomenon of the "exhibition fever" surrounding major exhibitions in Tokyo began to afflict aspiring artists in Taiwan, especially those of Guo Xuehu's generation. Even some anti-colonialists supported Taiwanese-Chinese artists in participating in the official exhibitions (Jason Kuo 2000 add page number).
IS IT POSSIBLE TO CONNECT IT TO NORIKOS MITSUKOSHI MODULE?