Exhibitions
New in Old
The Woodblock Prints of Kawase Hasui
Traditional ukiyo-e prints (ukiyo-e: pictures from the Floating World) were among the most important artistic achievements of the Edo era (1603-1868), which began to decline with the death of the artist Ando Hiroshige in 1858.
Mesh People
The Sculptures of Yuko Hishiyama
The sculptress Yuko Hishiyama studied art at the Tokyo National University of Art and Music, and completed her first degree in 1987.
New Acquisitions
This exhibition presents a selection of the items added to the Museum's collection over the last five years, including prints, drawings, ceramics, calligraphy and sword accessories.
Toshiyuki Kita
Contemporary Japanese Design
One of the significant characteristics of modern industrial design is the absence of national boundaries.
The Year of the Snake
The Signs of the Zodiac in Japanese Art
There is a legend that before Buddha entered nirvana, he summoned every living creature to him. Twelve creatures presented themselves, in the following order: mouse, ox, tiger, hare, dragon, snake, horse, sheep or ram, monkey, cock, dog, and a wild boar.
The Nightless City
The Pleasure Quarter in Japanese Art
In the year 1603, after a long and bloody civil war, the Tokugawa Shognate came to power in Japan, a military rule that lasted more than 250 years.
Shades of the Past
Photographs of Japan 1864-1876 from the collection of John W. Henderson
The photographs in the Henderson Collection cover a period of change in Japan - the end of the isolation of the Tokugawa era
(1603-1868) and the exciting beginnings of a modern industrial society based on western technology in the Meiji era (1868-1912).
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