1. Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection
    Kawanabe Kyosai, ‘Skeleton Shamisen Player in Top Hat With Dancing Monster’ (1881–1889) | Israel Goldman Collection, London, Photo: Art Research Center, Ritsumeikan University
  2. Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection
    Kawanabe Kyosai, ‘Frog School’ (early 1870s) | Israel Goldman Collection, London, Photo: Ken Adlard
  3. Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection
    Kawanabe Kyosai, ‘A Beauty in Front of King Enma’s Mirror’ (1871–1889) | Israel Goldman Collection, London, Photo: Ken Adlard
  4. Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection
    Kawanabe Kyosai, ‘Hell Courtesan (Jigoku-dayu), dancing Ikkyu and skeletons’ (1871–1889) | Israel Goldman Collection, London, Photo: Ken Adlard

Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection

  • Art
  • Suntory Museum of Art, Roppongi
Sébastien Raineri
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Time Out says

A mercurial figure in Japan’s 19th-century art world, Kawanabe Kyosai remains celebrated for his virtuosic draftsmanship, biting humour and irreverent imagination. Trained first under the ukiyo-e master Utagawa Kuniyoshi before entering the Kano school, whose members served as official artists to the Tokugawa shogunate, Kyosai lived through the political and cultural upheaval of the Meiji Restoration while developing a singular style that bridged tradition and experimentation. His works, ranging from religious imagery to playful caricatures and lively depictions of animals and yokai, capture a society in transition, often with satirical flair.

The Suntory Museum of Art’s ‘Kyosai’s World: The Israel Goldman Collection’ offers an excellent opportunity to encounter this restless creativity through approximately 110 works drawn from a collection widely regarded as the world’s richest and most comprehensive assemblage of Kyosai’s works. Paintings and prints alike, from meticulously finished compositions to impromptu sekiga drawings produced in performative settings, reveal both his technical mastery and his delight in subverting convention.

The exhibition highlights Kyosai’s wide thematic range while situating his work within the dramatic cultural shifts of 19th-century Japan, as Western influence began to reshape visual culture. Particularly striking are his humorous and often subversive responses to ‘modernity’, in which anthropomorphic figures and playful distortions mask sharp social commentary.

Details

Address
Suntory Museum of Art
Tokyo Midtown, 9-7-4 Akasaka, Minato
Tokyo
Transport:
Roppongi Station (Oedo, Hibiya lines); Nogizaka Station (Chiyoda line)
Price:
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Opening hours:
10am-6pm (Fridays, May 2-5, Jun 20 until 8pm) / closed Tue (except May 5)

Dates and times

Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
Suntory Museum of Art 10:00
¥1,800, college students ¥1,200, high school students ¥1,000
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