Chuo-ku has many cultural and artists, but there are few people born and raised along Ginza Street. Ryusei Kishida, famous for his many Reiko statues, said that according to his recollection "Shinkozaikurenga no Michisuji", on June 23, 1891, Kyobashi-ku Ginza 2-11 (currently around the young people of Melonsa in Ginza 2-7, Kyobashi-ku) and grew up in a railway car there.
My father was Ginka Kishida, one of the pioneers of the Meiji era. His birthplace is Rakuzendo, famous for his eye drop "Seijisui" (Ginka was taught by Dr. Hebon). There was a store, a main building and a factory, and the adjacent factory also had a warehouse across Kishida's house work and Ginza Street. According to Reiko Kishida's "Father Ryusei Kishida", the store is divided into eight frontages, half, and the right is a pharmacy that sells "Seijisui" and "Yaku soap bubbles", and the left is Chinese brush inkstone paper and other stationery and books. It was a bookstore that sold books. (The advertising signboard of the medicine called "Tetsu Candy" of Rakuzendo is left in the local Tenmonkan.) At that time, it was a high-color house, and there was a Western-style balcony on the second floor facing Ginza Street, and Ginka often did gymnastics here. (In "Shinko Hosoku Ginza-dori", it is fun to have illustrations of the birthplace of Liu paintings and illustrations of the adjacent factory.)
When I was a child, Liu was a fairly mischievous shaven, and placed a small finger made of blood-filled woodwork on the Ginza pavement to make a fuss, and made a woman's neck to lift the woman's hips. He also has episodes suitable for future large painters, such as going to the permanent exhibition of Western paintings at the Kan Factory in Takekawa-cho (now Ginza 7-chome) and having them go to Kido.
Liu lives are widely known for portraits, including many Reiko statues, self-portraits, and paintings of Yoyogi's cut-through hills ("Reiko smile" and "cut-through sketches" are important cultural properties of the country). As a picture depicting the inside of Chuo-ku, some oil paintings of the Ginza landscape and Tsukiji settlement landscape are drawn at the beginning.
[On the photo] The present of the birthplace
[In the photo] Monument to the birthplace of Ginza near the site of the birthplace of the birthplace
[Lower photo] Monument of brick Ginza near the site of Kyobashi
(By the way, when rebuilding Kyobashi, Ginka Father and Tengu Liu wrote that he often remembers that the tobacco Matsuhei Iwaya had begun to cross. It would be at the time of the railway bridge in 1901.