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National Museum of Western Art

The National Museum of Western Art (国立西洋美術館, Kokuritsu Seiyō Bijutsukan, lit. "National Western Art Museum", NMWA) is the premier public art gallery in Japan specializing in art from the Western tradition.

National Museum of Western Art
UNESCO World Heritage Site

Its logo and National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo designed by Le Corbusier
Official nameMusée National des Beaux-Arts de l’Occident
Location7-7 Ueno Imperial Grant Park, Taitō, Tokyo, Japan
Part ofThe Architectural Work of Le Corbusier, an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern Movement
CriteriaCultural: (i), (ii), (vi)
Reference1321rev-016
Inscription2016 (40th Session)
Area0.93 ha (0.0036 sq mi)
Buffer zone116.17 ha (0.4485 sq mi)
Websitewww.nmwa.go.jp/en/

The museum is in the museum and zoo complex in Ueno Park in Taitō, central Tokyo. It received 1,162,345 visitors in 2016.[1]

History edit

 
Auguste Rodin's The Thinker near the entrance of the National Museum of Western Art.

The NMWA was established on June 10, 1959. The museum developed around the core art collection of Kōjirō Matsukata (1865–1950), whose thinking is mirrored in the museum he anticipated.

Matsukata's acquisition strategies were designed to create the nucleus of what he hoped would become an evolving national museum specializing in Western art.[2]

The museum exhibits works from the Renaissance to the early 20th century, many having been acquired since the museum's opening. The museum's purpose is to provide the public with opportunities to appreciate Western art.[3]

Since its opening, the museum, as Japan's only national institution devoted to Western art, has been involved in exhibitions, art work and document acquisition, research, restoration and conservation, education and the publication of materials related to Western art.[3]

Exhibitions edit

The museum is involved in the development and organization of a special exhibition every year. These exhibitions feature works on loan from private collections and museums both in and out of Japan.[3] In 1963, NMWA created a splash on the international art scene by bringing together 450 works by Marc Chagall. The exhibition brought together Chagall's work from 15 countries, including 8 paintings lent from the Soviet Union; and it was believed to be the most comprehensive show mounted during the artist's lifetime.[4]

In January 2019, it was announced that the National Gallery, London will loan over 60 paintings for a two-venue tour of the National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo and the National Museum of Art, Osaka in 2020, the year of the Tokyo Olympics.[5] Included within the loaned collection will be Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers, which will travel to Japan for the first time.[6]

Collections edit

 
Claude Monet, Water Lilies, 1916, oil on canvas, 200.5 × 201 cm (78.9 × 79.1 in)

NMWA has purchased art work every year since its establishment in its efforts to build and develop its permanent collection.[3] The museum houses about 4,500 works, including examples of painting and sculpture from the 14th through the beginning of the 20th century. The museum's holdings have expanded in the decades since the museum was first opened to the public:[2]

Paintings; 18th century and earlier
The Main Building displays pre-18th-century paintings, including those by Veronese,[7] Rubens,[8] Brueghel, and Fragonard.[9] Many of these paintings are religious paintings featuring imagery from Christianity.

Paintings: 19th-20th century
The New Wing displays 19th- to early 20th-century French paintings, including works by Delacroix, Courbet, Manet, Renoir, Monet, Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Moreau.[10] The galleries also feature works by the next generation of artists, such as Marquet, Picasso, Soutin, Ernst, Miró, Dubuffet and Pollock.[11]

Drawings
The NMWA drawing collection centers on works by such 18th- to 19th-century French artists as Boucher, Fragonard, Delacroix, Moreau, Rodin, and Cézanne.

Prints
The prints collection features works by Dürer, Holbein, Rembrandt, Callot, Piranesi, Goya, and Klinger, ranging from the 15th century through the early 20th century.[12]

Union catalog edit

The "Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan" is a consolidated catalog of material held by the four Japanese national art museums:[13]

The online version of this union catalog is currently under construction, with only selected works available at this time.[13]

Le Corbusier's building edit

 
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo. One of the examples of architecture by Le Corbusier

The Main Building was designed by the Swiss-French architect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (1887–1965), who is more popularly known as Le Corbusier. It is the only representative example of his work in the Far East;[15] and the New York Times review of its opening suggested that the building itself presented an "artistic significance and beauty" which rivaled the paintings inside.[16] The multi-story, reinforced concrete building was completed in March 1959 as a symbol of the resumption of diplomatic ties between Japan and France after World War II.[17]

History of the commission edit

The museum was built to house the collection of works gathered by the industrialist Kōjirō Matsukata between 1920 and 1923. His collection remained in England and France until after World War II, when the Japanese Government asked France for its return to Japan. After France stipulated that a French architect should design the museum that would house the collection, the works were returned to Japan. Le Corbusier was selected for this task.[18]

Le Corbusier designed a masterplan to include the area surrounding the museum. The design itself evolved into a building far exceeding the original brief and the library, a small lecture hall and a room for distinguished guests had to be removed. Nonetheless, the removed elements were retained on the plans to provide guidance for future extension.[19]

Japanese contribution edit

Le Corbusier asked that his three Japanese apprentices: Kunio Maekawa, Junzo Sakakura and Takamasa Yoshizaka be responsible for developing the detailed drawings and supervising the construction.[18]

Building edit

The museum is square in plan, with the main body of the galleries raised on piloti to first floor level. The layout is influenced by Le Corbusier's Sanskar Kendra museum in Ahmedabad which was being designed at the same time.[20]

Entrance for visitors is at ground floor level via the 19th Century Hall. This double height space is lit from above with a north glazed pyramidal skylight intersected with reinforced concrete beams and a column. On the opposite side of the hall from the entrance, the ascent to the paintings gallery is via a promenade ramp, which affords better views of Rodin's sculptures. The paintings gallery wraps around 19th Century Hall, the ceiling is initially low but is raised to two storeys around the perimeter to display the paintings. There are also balconies at this level that push back into the 19th Century Hall to re-orient the visitor. Le Corbusier designed the paintings gallery to be lit by natural daylight via four lighting troughs,[21] but these are no longer used, and the galleries are now artificially lit.[22]

Externally, the building is clad in prefabricated concrete panels which sit on U-shaped frames supported by the inner wall. The building generally is constructed of reinforced concrete and the columns have a smooth concrete finish.[21]

After more than two years of construction, the building opened on 10 June 1959.[19]

Modulor edit

In every element of the building, Le Corbusier's Modulor has been applied:

"The modular, which Le Corbusier developed after many years of research, is like a musical scale which gives order to the infinitude of possible musical pitches. Based on the size and proportions of the human body, it is a means of fitting architecture to the human spirit, of ordering the infinitude of possible proportions in such a way as to make them conform to the human shape. In the new Museum of Western Art, the modulor system has been observed in everything from the structural members to the architectural details and furnishings."

- Tadayoshi, Fujiki, August 1959 "The Modular in the National Museum of Western Art" Japan Architect, p. 48

Additional works to the building edit

The museum has been added to over the years: Sakakura Associates designed a lecture hall and office building in 1964 and a ticket office in 1984. Whilst Maekawa Associates added a new annex in 1979 and in 1998 in conjunction with the Ministry of Construction, Yokoyama Engineering and Shimizu Construction installed earthquake resistant foundations to the museum.[23]

Recognition edit

In 1998, the importance of the structure was underscored when it was included in the former Ministry of Construction's survey—as one of the hundred selected public buildings (the Kokyo Kenchiku 100 Sen) which are outstanding and "well established in the local community."[17]

In 2005 the museum was recognised by the international organisation DOCOMOMO as one of Japan's top one hundred modernist buildings.[24]

World Heritage Site

In 2007, the building was registered by Japan on a provisional UNESCO list for World Heritage cultural site candidates as an Important Cultural Property, at the request of the French government.

In July 2016 UNESCO listed 17 works by Le Corbusier as World Heritage Sites, including the 1959 National Museum of Western Art building.[25]

Access edit

Collection gallery - paintings edit

Collection gallery - sculptures edit

See also edit

References and sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Visitor Figures 2016" (PDF). The Art Newspaper Review. April 2017. p. 14. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  2. ^ a b NMWA collection
  3. ^ a b c d NMWA outline
  4. ^ Chapin, Emerson. "Japan Assembling a Large Chagall Show; 450 Works From 15 Nations to Be Lent For Tokyo Display; Value of Exhibition Estimated at Nearly $14 Million Planned for 7 Years Designed by Le Corbusler," New York Times. September 24, 1963.
  5. ^ "National Gallery in London to send Van Gogh's Sunflowers to Japan". theartnewspaper.com. 9 January 2019. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  6. ^ Pickford, James (10 January 2019). "National Gallery makes its biggest loan of art to Japan". Financial Times. Retrieved 2019-03-06.
  7. ^ NMWA 14th-16th centuries
  8. ^ NMWA 17th century
  9. ^ NMWA 18th century
  10. ^ NMWA pre-WWII artists
  11. ^ NMWA post-WWII artists
  12. ^ NMWA prints study
  13. ^ a b IAI-National Museums of Art union catalog
  14. ^ MOMAK union catalog
  15. ^ Watanabe, Hiroshi. (2001). The Architecture of Tokyo: An Architectural History, pp. 123-124.
  16. ^ Falk, Ray. "French Art in Tokyo," New York Times. June 21, 1959.
  17. ^ a b NMWA building
  18. ^ a b Reynolds, (2001), p177
  19. ^ a b Sakakura, (1959), p36
  20. ^ Reynolds, (2001), p178
  21. ^ a b Sakakura, (1959), p44
  22. ^ "Discover Architecture Map", The National Museum of Western Art
  23. ^ Reynolds, (2001), p179
  24. ^ Spring 2005, "Do_co,mo.mo Japan: the 100 selection", The Japan Architect, No57
  25. ^ BBC.com: "Le Corbusier works named as UN world heritage sites", posted 17 July 2016. accessed 17 July 2016.

Sources edit

  • Watanabe, Hiroshi. (2001). The Architecture of Tokyo: An Architectural History. Tokyo: Edition Axel Menges. ISBN 3-930698-93-5
  • Bijutskan, Kokuritsu Seiyo. (1978). Masterpieces of the National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo. Tokyo: National Museum of Western Art.
  • Sakakura Junzo, August 1959, "On the Opening of the National Museum of Western Art", Japan Architect
  • Reynolds, Jonathan M. (2001). Maekawa Kunio and the Emergence of Japanese Modernist Architecture. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21495-1.

External links edit

  • (in English)—Official National Museum of Western Art−NMWA website
  • See panoramic 360° view of NMWA plaza, including Rodin sculpture
  • Virtual tour of the National Museum of Western Art provided by Google Arts & Culture
  •   Media related to National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo at Wikimedia Commons

national, museum, western, this, article, about, museum, tokyo, japan, other, uses, nmwa, disambiguation, 国立西洋美術館, kokuritsu, seiyō, bijutsukan, national, western, museum, nmwa, premier, public, gallery, japan, specializing, from, western, tradition, unesco, w. This article is about the art museum in Tokyo Japan For other uses see NMWA disambiguation The National Museum of Western Art 国立西洋美術館 Kokuritsu Seiyō Bijutsukan lit National Western Art Museum NMWA is the premier public art gallery in Japan specializing in art from the Western tradition National Museum of Western ArtUNESCO World Heritage SiteIts logo and National Museum of Western Art Tokyo designed by Le CorbusierOfficial nameMusee National des Beaux Arts de l OccidentLocation7 7 Ueno Imperial Grant Park Taitō Tokyo JapanPart ofThe Architectural Work of Le Corbusier an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern MovementCriteriaCultural i ii vi Reference1321rev 016Inscription2016 40th Session Area0 93 ha 0 0036 sq mi Buffer zone116 17 ha 0 4485 sq mi Websitewww wbr nmwa wbr go wbr jp wbr en wbr The museum is in the museum and zoo complex in Ueno Park in Taitō central Tokyo It received 1 162 345 visitors in 2016 1 Contents 1 History 2 Exhibitions 3 Collections 3 1 Union catalog 4 Le Corbusier s building 4 1 History of the commission 4 2 Japanese contribution 4 3 Building 4 4 Modulor 4 5 Additional works to the building 4 6 Recognition 5 Access 6 Collection gallery paintings 7 Collection gallery sculptures 8 See also 9 References and sources 9 1 References 9 2 Sources 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp Auguste Rodin s The Thinker near the entrance of the National Museum of Western Art The NMWA was established on June 10 1959 The museum developed around the core art collection of Kōjirō Matsukata 1865 1950 whose thinking is mirrored in the museum he anticipated Matsukata s acquisition strategies were designed to create the nucleus of what he hoped would become an evolving national museum specializing in Western art 2 The museum exhibits works from the Renaissance to the early 20th century many having been acquired since the museum s opening The museum s purpose is to provide the public with opportunities to appreciate Western art 3 Since its opening the museum as Japan s only national institution devoted to Western art has been involved in exhibitions art work and document acquisition research restoration and conservation education and the publication of materials related to Western art 3 Exhibitions editThe museum is involved in the development and organization of a special exhibition every year These exhibitions feature works on loan from private collections and museums both in and out of Japan 3 In 1963 NMWA created a splash on the international art scene by bringing together 450 works by Marc Chagall The exhibition brought together Chagall s work from 15 countries including 8 paintings lent from the Soviet Union and it was believed to be the most comprehensive show mounted during the artist s lifetime 4 In January 2019 it was announced that the National Gallery London will loan over 60 paintings for a two venue tour of the National Museum of Western Art Tokyo and the National Museum of Art Osaka in 2020 the year of the Tokyo Olympics 5 Included within the loaned collection will be Vincent van Gogh s Sunflowers which will travel to Japan for the first time 6 Collections edit nbsp Claude Monet Water Lilies 1916 oil on canvas 200 5 201 cm 78 9 79 1 in NMWA has purchased art work every year since its establishment in its efforts to build and develop its permanent collection 3 The museum houses about 4 500 works including examples of painting and sculpture from the 14th through the beginning of the 20th century The museum s holdings have expanded in the decades since the museum was first opened to the public 2 Paintings 18th century and earlier The Main Building displays pre 18th century paintings including those by Veronese 7 Rubens 8 Brueghel and Fragonard 9 Many of these paintings are religious paintings featuring imagery from Christianity Paintings 19th 20th century The New Wing displays 19th to early 20th century French paintings including works by Delacroix Courbet Manet Renoir Monet Van Gogh Gauguin and Moreau 10 The galleries also feature works by the next generation of artists such as Marquet Picasso Soutin Ernst Miro Dubuffet and Pollock 11 Drawings The NMWA drawing collection centers on works by such 18th to 19th century French artists as Boucher Fragonard Delacroix Moreau Rodin and Cezanne Prints The prints collection features works by Durer Holbein Rembrandt Callot Piranesi Goya and Klinger ranging from the 15th century through the early 20th century 12 Union catalog edit The Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums Japan is a consolidated catalog of material held by the four Japanese national art museums 13 The National Museum of Modern Art Kyoto MOMAK 14 The National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo MOMAT The National Museum of Art Osaka NMAO The National Museum of Western Art NMWA The online version of this union catalog is currently under construction with only selected works available at this time 13 Le Corbusier s building edit nbsp National Museum of Western Art Tokyo One of the examples of architecture by Le Corbusier The Main Building was designed by the Swiss French architect Charles Edouard Jeanneret 1887 1965 who is more popularly known as Le Corbusier It is the only representative example of his work in the Far East 15 and the New York Times review of its opening suggested that the building itself presented an artistic significance and beauty which rivaled the paintings inside 16 The multi story reinforced concrete building was completed in March 1959 as a symbol of the resumption of diplomatic ties between Japan and France after World War II 17 History of the commission edit The museum was built to house the collection of works gathered by the industrialist Kōjirō Matsukata between 1920 and 1923 His collection remained in England and France until after World War II when the Japanese Government asked France for its return to Japan After France stipulated that a French architect should design the museum that would house the collection the works were returned to Japan Le Corbusier was selected for this task 18 Le Corbusier designed a masterplan to include the area surrounding the museum The design itself evolved into a building far exceeding the original brief and the library a small lecture hall and a room for distinguished guests had to be removed Nonetheless the removed elements were retained on the plans to provide guidance for future extension 19 Japanese contribution edit Le Corbusier asked that his three Japanese apprentices Kunio Maekawa Junzo Sakakura and Takamasa Yoshizaka be responsible for developing the detailed drawings and supervising the construction 18 Building edit The museum is square in plan with the main body of the galleries raised on piloti to first floor level The layout is influenced by Le Corbusier s Sanskar Kendra museum in Ahmedabad which was being designed at the same time 20 Entrance for visitors is at ground floor level via the 19th Century Hall This double height space is lit from above with a north glazed pyramidal skylight intersected with reinforced concrete beams and a column On the opposite side of the hall from the entrance the ascent to the paintings gallery is via a promenade ramp which affords better views of Rodin s sculptures The paintings gallery wraps around 19th Century Hall the ceiling is initially low but is raised to two storeys around the perimeter to display the paintings There are also balconies at this level that push back into the 19th Century Hall to re orient the visitor Le Corbusier designed the paintings gallery to be lit by natural daylight via four lighting troughs 21 but these are no longer used and the galleries are now artificially lit 22 Externally the building is clad in prefabricated concrete panels which sit on U shaped frames supported by the inner wall The building generally is constructed of reinforced concrete and the columns have a smooth concrete finish 21 After more than two years of construction the building opened on 10 June 1959 19 Modulor edit In every element of the building Le Corbusier s Modulor has been applied The modular which Le Corbusier developed after many years of research is like a musical scale which gives order to the infinitude of possible musical pitches Based on the size and proportions of the human body it is a means of fitting architecture to the human spirit of ordering the infinitude of possible proportions in such a way as to make them conform to the human shape In the new Museum of Western Art the modulor system has been observed in everything from the structural members to the architectural details and furnishings Tadayoshi Fujiki August 1959 The Modular in the National Museum of Western Art Japan Architect p 48 Additional works to the building edit The museum has been added to over the years Sakakura Associates designed a lecture hall and office building in 1964 and a ticket office in 1984 Whilst Maekawa Associates added a new annex in 1979 and in 1998 in conjunction with the Ministry of Construction Yokoyama Engineering and Shimizu Construction installed earthquake resistant foundations to the museum 23 Recognition edit In 1998 the importance of the structure was underscored when it was included in the former Ministry of Construction s survey as one of the hundred selected public buildings the Kokyo Kenchiku 100 Sen which are outstanding and well established in the local community 17 In 2005 the museum was recognised by the international organisation DOCOMOMO as one of Japan s top one hundred modernist buildings 24 World Heritage Site In 2007 the building was registered by Japan on a provisional UNESCO list for World Heritage cultural site candidates as an Important Cultural Property at the request of the French government In July 2016 UNESCO listed 17 works by Le Corbusier as World Heritage Sites including the 1959 National Museum of Western Art building 25 Access edit nbsp JU JK JY JJ G H Ueno Station with JR East and Tokyo Metro JK JY Uguisudani Station with JR East KS Keisei Ueno Station with Keisei Electric Railway Collection gallery paintings edit nbsp Eugene Boudin nbsp Paul Cezanne nbsp Gustave Courbet nbsp Henry Fuseli nbsp Paul Gauguin nbsp Claude Lorrain nbsp Edouard Manet nbsp Camille Pissarro nbsp Pierre Auguste Renoir nbsp Paul Signac nbsp Alfred Sisley nbsp David Teniers the Younger nbsp Giovanni Battista Tiepolo nbsp Vincent van Gogh nbsp Jacob Isaakszoon van Ruisdael nbsp Jacob Jordaens nbsp Paolo Veronese nbsp Albert Gleizes nbsp Jean Baptiste Camille Corot nbsp Lucas Cranach the Elder nbsp Philippe de Champaigne nbsp Pierre Puvis de Chavannes nbsp Jusepe de Ribera nbsp Eugene Delacroix nbsp Carlo Dolci nbsp Gerard Dou nbsp El Greco nbsp Henri Fantin Latour nbsp Guercino nbsp Jean Francois Millet nbsp Gustave Moreau nbsp Bartolome Esteban Murillo nbsp Dante Gabriel Rossetti nbsp Peter Paul Rubens nbsp Tintoretto nbsp Anthony van Dyck nbsp Giorgio VasariCollection gallery sculptures editSee also editList of artists represented in the National Museum of Western Art Tokyo List of Independent Administrative Institutions Japan References and sources editReferences edit Visitor Figures 2016 PDF The Art Newspaper Review April 2017 p 14 Retrieved 23 March 2018 a b NMWA collection a b c d NMWA outline Chapin Emerson Japan Assembling a Large Chagall Show 450 Works From 15 Nations to Be Lent For Tokyo Display Value of Exhibition Estimated at Nearly 14 Million Planned for 7 Years Designed by Le Corbusler New York Times September 24 1963 National Gallery in London to send Van Gogh s Sunflowers to Japan theartnewspaper com 9 January 2019 Retrieved 2019 03 06 Pickford James 10 January 2019 National Gallery makes its biggest loan of art to Japan Financial Times Retrieved 2019 03 06 NMWA 14th 16th centuries NMWA 17th century NMWA 18th century NMWA pre WWII artists NMWA post WWII artists NMWA prints study a b IAI National Museums of Art union catalog MOMAK union catalog Watanabe Hiroshi 2001 The Architecture of Tokyo An Architectural History pp 123 124 Falk Ray French Art in Tokyo New York Times June 21 1959 a b NMWA building a b Reynolds 2001 p177 a b Sakakura 1959 p36 Reynolds 2001 p178 a b Sakakura 1959 p44 Discover Architecture Map The National Museum of Western Art Reynolds 2001 p179 Spring 2005 Do co mo mo Japan the 100 selection The Japan Architect No57 BBC com Le Corbusier works named as UN world heritage sites posted 17 July 2016 accessed 17 July 2016 Sources edit Watanabe Hiroshi 2001 The Architecture of Tokyo An Architectural History Tokyo Edition Axel Menges ISBN 3 930698 93 5 Bijutskan Kokuritsu Seiyo 1978 Masterpieces of the National Museum of Western Art Tokyo Tokyo National Museum of Western Art Sakakura Junzo August 1959 On the Opening of the National Museum of Western Art Japan Architect Reynolds Jonathan M 2001 Maekawa Kunio and the Emergence of Japanese Modernist Architecture University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21495 1 External links edit in English Official National Museum of Western Art NMWA website See panoramic 360 view of NMWA plaza including Rodin sculpture Virtual tour of the National Museum of Western Art provided by Google Arts amp Culture nbsp Media related to National Museum of Western Art Tokyo at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Museum of Western Art amp oldid 1199943343, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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