1. Opening Documents, Weaving Memories: A Special Exhibition Featuring Works from the Museum Collection
    Photo: Kioku Keizo
  2. Opening Documents, Weaving Memories: A Special Exhibition Featuring Works from the Museum Collection
    Photo: Kioku Keizo
  3. Opening Documents, Weaving Memories: A Special Exhibition Featuring Works from the Museum Collection
    Photo: Kioku Keizo
  4. Opening Documents, Weaving Memories: A Special Exhibition Featuring Works from the Museum Collection
    Photo: Kioku Keizo

Opening Documents, Weaving Memories: A Special Exhibition Featuring Works from the Museum Collection

  • Art
  • The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Takebashi
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Time Out says

Marking 100 years since the dawn of the Showa era and 80 years since the end of World War II, the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo looks back with ‘Opening Documents, Weaving Memories’, an exhibition that reflects on Japan’s turbulent mid-20th century. With 280 works on view, the display explores how art has served both as a record of history and as a medium for reconstructing memory across generations.

Spanning the 1930s to the 1970s, the exhibition unfolds across eight sections that probe the role of painting, photography and film during wartime and its aftermath. Visitors encounter powerful ‘War Record Paintings’, commissioned by the Imperial Japanese army and navy to document battles, alongside intimate portrayals of life on the home front. Works such as Ai-Mitsu’s Self-Portrait (1944) and Ken’Ichi Nakamura’s Kota Bharu (1942) highlight the complex intersections of personal expression and state narrative. Later sections trace the shifting visual language of memory, from depictions of wounded bodies in the 1950s to dialogues prompted by Vietnam War imagery in the 1970s.

By juxtaposing propaganda, personal visions and post-war reinterpretations, the exhibition invites audiences to consider how museums can act as repositories of collective memory. In doing so, it opens documents of the past while weaving them into living dialogues with the present and future.

Details

Address
The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
3-1 Kitanomaru Koen, Chiyoda
Tokyo
Transport:
Takebashi Station (Tozai line), exit 1b
Price:
¥1,500, college students ¥800, high school students and younger free
Opening hours:
10am-5pm (Fri, Sat until 8pm) / closed Mon (except Jul 21, Aug 11, Sep 15 & Oct 13), Jul 22, Aug 12, Sep 16 & Oct 14

Dates and times

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