Japanese painter Ikuo Hirayama, a campaigner for the preservation of the world's cultural heritage known for his works on the Silk Road and Buddhism, died Wednesday, a spokeswoman said. He was 79. Hirayama died of a stroke at a Tokyo hospital, the spokeswoman for his art museum in western Hiroshima said.
He is known for his efforts to preserve cultural treasures such as the Angkor Wat temples in Cambodia, China's Mogao Caves and Afghanistan's Bamiyan Buddhist monuments, which were dynamited in 2001 by the Taliban. Having experienced the 1945 atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima at the age of 15, Hirayama suffered after-effects of radiation exposure later in life.
He was first recognised widely for his 1959 work "Bukkyo Denrai," depicting an ancient Buddhist monk who introduced the religion from India to China. Hirayama created a series of Buddhist-themed paintings of landscapes and ancient ruins through his frequent trips to sites along the ancient Silk Road.