Name THE EBARA HATAKEYAMA MEMORIAL FOUNDATION (a public interest incorporated foundation)
Location 11-1, Haneda Asahi-cho, Ohta-ku, Tokyo
Date of establishment June 6, 1960 (became a public interest incorporated foundation on August 1, 2011)
Administrative agency Cabinet Office, the Government of Japan
Purposes The purposes of the Foundation are to promote and support the research of academics, science and technology, to support the dissemination and promotion of academics, science and technology, cultures, arts, Sado (Tea ceremony) and sports, and to support scholarship programs. Through these activities, the Foundation aims to promote industrial prosperity and broad progress in cultures, arts and sports by contributing to the development of education, academics, and science and technology.
Outline of activities (1)Supporting dissemination and promotion of academics, and science and technology and public and private organizations and facilities engaged in those areas.
(2)Supporting public and private organizations, groups and individuals engaging in academic and science and technology research.
(3)Supporting schoolchildren and students through scholarship associations and schools.
(4)Supporting and providing measures for promotion of cultures, arts, Sado and sports.
(5)Collecting fine arts, crafts and relevant material. And related storage, display, publicity, investigation, research and publishing.
(6)Other activities required to achieve the purposes of the Foundation.
Basic assets A total of approximately one million shares of EBARA CORPORATION.
Six thousand and five hundred shares of Mukoyama Corporation.
Land at Minato-ku Shiroganedai, Tokyo: approximately 4.1 and 1.4 thousand square meters.
Building of the Museum.
Collections of fine arts and crafts. Approximately 1.3 thousand sets.
Founder Issei Hatakeyama (1881-1971)
Issei Hatakeyama was born as a descendant of Hatakeyama, the head of Noto province (currently Noto Peninsula, Ishikawa Prefecture). After graduating from faculty of Engineering at Imperial University of Tokyo (currently the University of Tokyo), he engaged in development of pumps as an engineer and established EBARA CORPORATION, which made him a prominent figure in the business world. Besides the business, he established the Foundation in 1960 aiming for research, dissemination and promotion of science and technology and for development of education and academics.
In addition, he called himself "Sokuo" and enjoyed Noh plays and tea ceremony and collected works of art for a long time. Such artworks include "Ringokazu" and "Enjibanshozu", national treasures (paintings), tea ceremony utensils of Fumai Matsudaira, a daimyo (Japanese feudal load) tea ceremony master and hereditary Noh costumes of the Maeda clan of the Kaga domain. Hatakeyama Sokuo had sometimes shown his collection of artworks mainly at tea ceremony parties; however, in the view of their cultural value, he established Hatakeyama Memorial Museum of Fine Art in 1964 to make them available for public viewing and research and to permanently preserve them.
President Natsunosuke Yago
Executive Director Akinori Matsui
Directors Naoko Hatakeyama
Masato Miwa
Yoichiro Matsumoto
Kazuhiro Yanagida
Junichi Takeuchi
Noriyuki Osada
Hiroshi Nakamura
Auditors Tadashi Urabe
Takanobu Murakami
Katsuhiko Hara