1. TOTO Gallery Ma
    Photo: Nacása & Partners Inc.
  2. TOTO Gallery Ma
    画像提供:TOTOギャラリー・間

Toto Gallery Ma

  • Art
  • Nogizaka
  • Recommended
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Time Out says

Architecture aficionados rejoice: Toto Gallery Ma, while bearing the name of its associated company – which is well known for its high-tech toilets – is dedicated to the art and design of buildings and physical structures, and not the household white porcelain thrones. Located in the Toto Building, the gallery features changing exhibitions with models, diagrams and sketches that focus on a particular architect’s or firm’s prototypes and projects. The exhibitions spill out to the outdoor space, where you climb stairs to get a bird’s-eye view of the showpiece. Foreign architects featured here in the past include Angelo Mangiarotti (from Italy), Seung H-Sang (Korea) and Yung Ho Chang (China).

Details

Address
Toto Nogizaka Bldg 3F, 1-24-3 Minami-Aoyama, Minato
Tokyo
Transport:
Nogizaka Station (Chiyoda line), exit 3
Price:
Free
Opening hours:
11am-6pm / closed Mon & hols

What’s on

Suzuko Yamada: Parallel Tunes

Suzuko Yamada is among the most compelling younger voices reshaping contemporary Japanese architecture. Known for spaces in which structures, objects, vegetation and human movement seem to collide and resonate rather than quietly harmonise, Yamada approaches architecture as a living environment charged with tension, rhythm and improvisation. ‘Parallel Tunes’ at Toto Gallery Ma is her first solo exhibition. The show introduces Yamada’s vision of architecture as polyphony – a vibrant field in which multiple forms, textures and functions assert themselves simultaneously. Stairs that zigzag across voids, curtains that descend like theatrical gestures, bookshelves that stretch across floors and unexpected bursts of colour all become independent ‘voices’ within a larger spatial composition. This sensibility was already evident in her acclaimed residence daita2019, and has since expanded into increasingly ambitious public works, including a rest facility for Expo 2025 Osaka Kansai. At Gallery Ma, Yamada transforms the exhibition into an environment rather than a retrospective display. Drawings, models, installations and spatial interventions evoke a world where nature, living beings, landscape and manufactured forms echo against one another in restless coexistence. Richly animated and defiantly unbalanced, ‘Parallel Tunes’ suggests that architecture today may be less about imposing order and more about orchestrating the noisy vitality of life itself.
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