1. NHK Sunday Art Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition
    Tetsuya Ishida, ‘A man who has lost the ability to fly’, 1996. Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art
  2. NHK Sunday Art Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition
    Taro Okamoto, ‘Encounter’, 1981. Taro Okamoto Museum of Art, Kawasaki
  3. NHK Sunday Art Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition
    Auguste Rodin, ‘The Thinker’, 1880. Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art
  4. NHK Sunday Art Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition
    Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, ‘The Fight on Gojobashi Bridge, Scene from “Gikei ki" (Life of Yoshitsune)’, 1881. Yokohama Museum of Art (donated by Eiichi Kato)
  5. NHK Sunday Art Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition
    Flame Type Pottery. From Iwanohara site, Fukazawa-machi, Nagaoka-shi, Niigata. Middle Jōmon period. Kokugakuin University Museum

NHK Sunday Museum 50th Anniversary Exhibition

  • Art
  • The University Art Museum, Tokyo University of the Arts, Ueno
Sébastien Raineri
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Time Out says

Ueno’s University Art Museum plays host to this landmark celebration of one of Japan’s most enduring art-focused TV programmes. Since its debut in 1976, NHK Sunday Museum (Nichiyo Bijutsukan) has aired more than 2,500 episodes, introducing audiences to masterpieces from across eras and cultures while elevating the voices of cast members, thinkers and performers who reflect on the meaning of beauty. The exhibition, on view from March 28 to June 21, revisits this half-century history through roughly 120 works presented across five thematic chapters.

Visitors will encounter iconic pieces that shaped the programme’s narrative, from prehistoric Jomon pottery and Edo-period (1603–1868) screens to Paul Cézanne’s Bathers, Alberto Giacometti’s Yanaihara I, Taro Okamoto’s Encounter and the haunting visions of Tetsuya Ishida. Archival footage and carefully selected quotes from past broadcasts, including reflections by literary giants, dancers and contemporary creators, illuminate how the show has continued to discover beauty across generations. High-definition projections, including a life-size rendering of Pablo Picasso’s Guernica, further expand the experience.

Touching on themes such as rediscovered Japanese aesthetics, the evolution of craft, the relationship between art and disaster and the intimate space of the artist’s studio, the exhibition offers a sweeping meditation on creativity. This anniversary celebration stands as a vivid tribute to a programme that has long served as a bridge between the public and beauty.

Details

Event website:
nichibiten50.jp/
Transport:
Ueno Station (Yamanote, Keihin-Tohoku, Joban lines), park exit; (Ginza, Hibiya lines), Shinobazu exit.
Price:
¥2,000, college and high school students ¥1,200
Opening hours:
10am-5pm / closed Mon (except May 4)

Dates and times

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