After the end of the
Pacific War, the exhibition was reopened by the Ministry of Culture in the spring of 1946, divided into the four faculties: Japanese Style Painting, Western Style Painting, Sculpture (woodcarving), and Craft as Art. From autumn of that year it was continued as Nihon Bijutsu Tenrankai (日本 美術展 覧 会), or “Nitten” (日展) for short. In 1948 the Sho (calligraphy) faculty was added. In 1949 the exhibition from the 5th to the 13th Nitten came under the direction of the Japanese Academy of Arts. In 1958, sponsorship of the Academy of the Arts was ended. The non-profit corporation Nitten was established, and the exhibition became a privately managed one. In 2012, after the reform of Public Interest Corporation System, the legal status of the Nitten was changed to a Public Interest Incorporated Association, like other non-profit corporations. In 2013 the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition decided not to award any of the top prizes in any of the five sections, following the revelation of fraudulent judging in the calligraphy section of the fiscal 2009 show. It was the first time since 1958 that none of the prizes were awarded. In 2014 the structure was adjusted again, so that from then on it is referred to as the "New Nitten" (新 日 展, Shinnitten). In 2017, the 110th anniversary of the first exhibition was commemorated. == References ==