Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum

  • Art
  • Ueno
  1. Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum - PR shot
    Photo: Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum
  2. Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum - PR shot
    Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum
  3. Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum - PR shot
    Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum
  4. Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum - PR shot
    Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum
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Time Out says

Founded back in 1926, this museum is Japan’s very first public art museum. It features a variety of special exhibitions, thematic showcases and art masterpieces from around the world. Not only worth the visit for the art, visitors are welcome to drop by to enjoy the museum's restaurant, café and museum shop where you can pick up great souvenirs. The building is designed by renowed Japanese architect Kunio Maekawa, and is an absolute highlight for those who appreciate design. 

Details

Address:
8-36 Ueno Koen, Taito-ku
Tokyo
Transport:
Ueno Station (Yamanote line), park exit; (Ginza, Hibiya lines), Shinobazu exit
Price:
Admission varies by exhibition. Free admission on May 18 and Oct 1.
Opening hours:
9.30am-5.30pm (until 8pm on Fridays during Special Exhibitions) / closed every 1st and 3rd Mon (Tue if Mon is a holiday), Jul 11-16, Dec 26-28, Dec 29-Jan 3, Jan 11-18 (2020)

What’s on

Giorgio de Chirico: Metaphysical Journey

Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978; Greek-born and of Italian parentage) astounded the art world of the 1910s with paintings of town squares and interior scenes that combined sharp clarity with distorted perspectives, disparate motifs, and a fantastical atmosphere in order to convey the strangeness that he felt was concealed just beyond the everyday. The artist later dubbed this style ‘metaphysical painting’. This major retrospective is the first large-scale showing of de Chirico’s work in Japan in a decade. The artist’s almost seven-decade-long career is explored comprehensively through a series of themed sections including ‘Metaphysical Interior’, ‘Mannequin’ and ‘Piazza d'Italia (Italian Piazza)’. As these exhibits trace, after 1919 the artist pursued a more classical style of painting, yet still drew upon motifs from his earlier, more dreamlike work. Surrealist trailblazers Salvador Dalí and René Magritte, themselves no strangers to the uncanny, were among those blown away by de Chirico’s metaphysical paintings. This show, which also includes the artist’s sculptures and set designs, is a rare opportunity to immerse oneself in de Chirico’s singular vision. The exhibition is closed on Monday (except May 6, Jul 8, Aug 12) as well as May 7 and July 9-16.

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