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The museum consists of three floors. The entrance and gift shop are on the first floor, while a café is located on the second floor. (The second floor hosts a "Nightlife in Japan" installation.) Exhibitions, interactive spaces, classrooms, and other venues are on the third floor. [1] A building in the global village exhibition
The National Art Center (国立新美術館, Kokuritsu Shin-Bijutsukan) (NACT) is a museum in Roppongi, Minato, Tokyo, Japan.A joint project of the Agency for Cultural Affairs and the National Museums Independent Administrative Institution, it stands on a site formerly occupied by a research facility of the University of Tokyo and is adjacent to the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.
The Tokyo National Museum (東京国立博物館, Tōkyō Kokuritsu Hakubutsukan) or TNM is an art museum in Ueno Park in the Taitō ward of Tokyo, Japan.It is one of the four museums [a] operated by the National Institutes for Cultural Heritage [], is considered the oldest national museum and the largest art museum in Japan.
The Kawamura Memorial Museum contains artwork by a wide selection of American, European and Japanese artists, including special exhibitions of the works of Mark Rothko and Frank Stella. The museum is set in a 30-hectare park with over 200 kinds of trees, 500 kinds of plants and inhabited by many wild birds and insects. [2]
Ad Museum Tokyo: Minato: Advertising: Japanese museum dedicated to the promotion of studies in advertising Amuse Museum: Asakusa: Textile Art: Japanese Textile Culture and Ukiyo-e Art Museum Ancient Orient Museum: Ikebukuro: Art: Artifacts of the ancient Near East and Central Asia Artizon Museum: Chūō: Art
The Hakone Open-Air Museum (箱根 彫刻の森美術館, Hakone Choukoku no Mori Bijutsukan), opened in 1969, is Japan's first open-air museum. It is located in Hakone , Ashigarashimo District, Kanagawa Prefecture.
The building which houses the Yokohama Museum of Art was designed by Kenzo Tange, the Japanese architect who won the 1987 Pritzker Prize for architecture. The structure is described as an "attractive and spacious building " that is "airy and well-lit". [2] The museum's main hall is 18 meters tall and is open to the second and third floors.
The Ohara Museum of Art (大原美術館, Ōhara Bijutsukan) in Kurashiki was the first collection of Western art to be permanently exhibited in Japan. The museum opened in 1930 and originally consisted almost entirely of French paintings and sculptures of the 19th and 20th centuries.