Exhibition/event has ended.

Japanese Art at World’s Fairs from the Late Edo Period Onwards Expo: Nihonga in Profusion Hokusai • Taikan • Suiseki

Saga Arashiyama Museum of Arts and Culture
Finished
Held every five years and frequently attracting tens of millions of visitors, world expositions are the largest global events. Known also as world’s fairs and, these days, as expos, participating countries showcase their current science, technology, and culture. Decorative arts used to be thought highly indicative of cultural achievement. Consequently, by showing the works of Hokusai and other earlier artists, as well as ambitious works by contemporary painters, feudal and modern governments of Japan actively used expos as an opportunity to gain international recognition for the nation’s art and culture.

For the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle, Ōhashi Suiseki, Hashimoto Gahō, Yokoyama Taikan, Takeuchi Seihō, and Uemura Shōen eagerly rose to the challenge of creating paintings to show what Japan could do. Among the awards they won, Ōhashi Suiseki became the first-ever nihonga artist to win an expo gold medal.

To obtain valuable foreign currency, most Japanese paintings exhibited at expos were sold in the host country. Consequently, these works cannot easily be exhibited in Japan today. The passion and skill of the expo artists, however, is amply evident in works they created around the same time.
To commemorate the 2025 Expo being held here in Kansai, the museum is showing superlative works by painters who dared exhibit their art to the world.

The exhibition is cohosted by the nearby Saga Arashiyama Museum of Arts & Culture.
In the hope that families will visit us during the summer holidays, admission for elementary school students will be free throughout August. In addition, due to popular demand, our ‘Lively Tuesday’ event will now be applied to Sundays from July 19. As you plan your summer break, we warmly invite you to stop by our museum—not just the Osaka-Kansai Expo!

1st period: July 19 (Sat.) – August 25 (Mon.)
2nd period: August 27 (Wed.) – September 28 (Sun.)

Schedule

Jul 19 (Sat) 2025-Sep 28 (Sun) 2025 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
10:00-17:00
Closed
Closed on August 5, 26, September 9, 18.
FeeAdults and University Student ¥1000, High School Students ¥600, Junior High and Elementary School Students ¥400, Persons with Disability Certificates + 1 Companion ¥600.
Websitehttps://www.samac.jp/en/exhibition/detail.php?id=64
VenueSaga Arashiyama Museum of Arts and Culture
https://www.samac.jp/en/
Location11 Susukino Baba-cho, Sagatenryuji, Ukyo-ku, Kyoto-shi, Kyoto 616-8385
Access 5 minute walk from Arashiyama Station on the Randen Arashiyama line, 13 minute walk from Arashiyama Station on the Hankyu line, 14 minute walk from Saga-Arashiyama Station on the JR Sanin Main line (Sagano line).
Phone075-882-1111
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