Artists by Artists in Western Prints
Image: The National Museum of Western Art

Artists by Artists in Western Prints

  • Art
  • The National Museum of Western Art, Ueno
Sébastien Raineri
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Time Out says

The National Museum of Western Art’s ‘Artists by Artists in Western Prints’ explores how artists have portrayed themselves (and one another) through the medium of printmaking from the Renaissance to the modern era.

Featuring nearly 50 works drawn primarily from the museum’s collection, the exhibition traces the historical evolution of the artist’s image in Western art. During the Middle Ages, creators were largely regarded as anonymous craftsmen, and their likenesses rarely appeared in the works they produced. From the 16th century onward, however, artists began to assert a new identity, aligning artistic creation with intellectual inquiry and positioning themselves as practitioners of the liberal arts. As their social status rose, so too did interest in the individual artist, giving rise to the flourishing tradition of the self-portrait.

The exhibition includes prints by major figures such as Albrecht Dürer, Rembrandt van Rijn, Francisco Goya and Pablo Picasso. Alongside self-portraits, you’ll encounter images of artists at work and idealised representations of the creative figure.

Together, these diverse images offer a compelling reflection on how the notion of the artist has evolved, from skilled artisan to solitary, introspective creator, while inviting viewers to reconsider the enduring relationship between identity, creativity and self-expression.

Details

Address
The National Museum of Western Art
7-7 Ueno Koen, Taito
Tokyo
Transport:
Ueno Station (JR lines), Park exit; (Ginza, Hibiya lines), exit 7 or 9
Price:
¥500, college students ¥250
Opening hours:
9.30am-5.30pm (Fri, Sat until 8pm) / closed Mon (except Mar 30 & May 4), May 7

Dates and times

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