Nezu Museum

title: "Nezu Museum" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["art-museums-and-galleries-in-tokyo", "art-museums-and-galleries-established-in-1940", "1940-establishments-in-japan", "buildings-and-structures-in-japan-destroyed-during-world-war-ii", "buildings-and-structures-in-minato,-tokyo", "kengo-kuma-buildings"] topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nezu_Museum" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::data[format=table title="Infobox museum| name = Nezu Museum"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| native_name | 根津美術館 |
| native_name_lang | Japanese |
| image | 2018 Nezu Museum 1.jpg |
| imagesize | 250 |
| caption | Nezu Museum entrance |
| map_type | Japan Tokyo Yamanote loop#Japan Tokyo wards |
| map_size | 250 |
| map_caption | Location of The Nezu Museum in Tokyo, Japan |
| coordinates | |
| established | 1940 |
| location | 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0062, Japan |
| type | Art museum |
| owner | Nezu Museum Foundation |
| website | http://www.nezu-muse.or.jp/en |
| :: |
| native_name = 根津美術館 | native_name_lang = Japanese | image = 2018 Nezu Museum 1.jpg | imagesize = 250 | caption = Nezu Museum entrance | alt = | map_type = Japan Tokyo Yamanote loop#Japan Tokyo wards | map_relief = | map_size = 250 | map_caption = Location of The Nezu Museum in Tokyo, Japan | map_dot_label = | coordinates = | established = 1940 | location = 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo, 107-0062, Japan | type = Art museum | owner = Nezu Museum Foundation | website = http://www.nezu-muse.or.jp/en
The Nezu Museum, formerly known as the Nezu Institute of Fine Arts, is an art museum in the Minato district of Tokyo, Japan.
The museum is home to the private collection of pre-modern Japanese and East Asian art assembled by Nezu Kaichirō (1860–1940). Established upon Nezu's death in 1940, the museum foundation began opening exhibitions to the public in 1941. During World War II, the museum's collection was safeguarded away from central Tokyo, avoiding the destruction suffered by the estate property during the bombing in May 1945. Exhibitions resumed after the war in 1946.
Closed due to large-scale renovation and renewal starting in 2006, the museum reopened in the fall of 2009 with a brand new building designed by the Japanese architect Kengo Kuma. The museum is also famous for its garden.
Drinking yuzu tea in the museum's cafe has been included as one of the best 30 Tokyo experiences in the Soul of Tokyo, a 2019 travel guide book.
Collections
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5f/NEZU_Kaichiro_I.jpg" caption="Nezu Kaichirō (1860–1940)"] ::
The museum houses more than 7,400 cultural objects, seven of which have been designated by the Japanese government as National Treasures, 88 as Important Cultural Properties, and 94 as Important Art Objects (ja). The museum's collection of cultural artifacts covers a variety of disciplines, including painting, calligraphy, sculpture, metalwork, ceramics, lacquerware, wooden and bamboo craft, textiles, armor, and archaeological artifacts.
Of the collection, the museum considers the Irises by Ogata Kōrin, designated as a National Treasure, to be the centerpiece of the collection. This ja is displayed for a limited time each year during a special exhibition from April to May to coincide with the blooming season of the irises planted in the museum's Japanese garden. Kaichirō Nezu acquired this ja in 1914, and even before the museum was founded, he held exhibitions and tea ceremonies to display it for the enjoyment of his many guests.
The museum's collection also includes 1,200 of the 3,000 pieces of Japanese sword fittings collected by Meiji era industrialist Mitsumura Toshimo (1877-1955), making it one of the largest collections of Japanese sword fittings in Japan. The collection also consists of Chinese bronzes of the Shang and Zhou dynasties.
In 2025, it was announced that a bell in the museum's collection had been taken from Korea during the Japanese colonial period. South Korean officials expressed interest in acquiring the bell and restoring it to the original government office in Jeju Province that it had been taken from. The museum declined to comment on the bell.
Gallery
Nezu Museum Interior 201805.jpg|Interior of the museum Nezu Museum M2 Floor 2018.jpg|Interior of the museum Nezu Museum Outside access 201805.jpg|Outside access Nezu Cafe 201805.jpg|Nezu Cafe Nezu Museum Garden view 201805.jpg|Garden pond Nezu Museum Garden view1 201805.jpg|Garden hut KORIN-Irises-L.jpg|Irises by Ogata Kōrin (left panel), National Treasure KORIN-Irises-R.jpg|Irises by Ogata Kōrin (right panel), National Treasure Suzuki Kiitsu - Mountain Stream in Summer and Autumn 2.jpg|Mountain Stream in Summer and Autumn by Suzuki Kiitsu (left panel), Important Cultural Property Suzuki Kiitsu - Mountain Stream in Summer and Autumn.jpg|Mountain Stream in Summer and Autumn by Suzuki Kiitsu (right panel), Important Cultural Property
Publications
The museum has published a number of books about its collection and special exhibitions, including the following:
- Selected Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection (2009)
- Kasuga Landscapes: Elegant Images of a Sacred Sanctuary (2011)
- Irises and Eight Bridges: Masterpieces by Kōrin from the Nezu Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2012)
- Rinpa Collection (2013)
- Ido Tea Bowls: Treasured Possessions of Muromachi Daimyo (2013)
- Transforming Masterpieces: A Collector’s Love Seen In Art (2014)
- The Double-ram Zun: World Renowned Chinese Bronzes from the Nezu Museum and the British Museum (2015)
- Preserving Heritage: The Nezu Collection (2015)
- Irises and Red and White Plum Blossoms: Secret of Kōrin’s Design (2015)
- The Fragrant Sublime: Koryo Buddhist Paintings (2016)
- Maruyama Ōkyo: Opening Up New Terrain in Japanese Painting (2016)
- Ko-imari: A Catalogue of Hizen Porcelain from the Nezu Museum’s Yamamoto Collection (2017)
- Kōrin and Kenzan: Brother Artists, Resonating Aesthetics (2018)
- Momoyama Tea Utensils: A New View (2018)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: National Treasure and Important Cultural Property (2020)
- Fusuma Paintings in the Shoguns’ Residence (2022)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Calligraphy (2022)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: The Art of Tea Utensils (2022)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Lacquerware (2022)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Textiles and Noh Masks (2023)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Early Modern Painting (2023)
- Masterpieces of Northern Song Painting and Calligraphy (2023)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Buddhist painting (2024)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Archeological Artifacts (2024)
- The Way of Tea in Katagiri Sekishu Style: An Authentic Samurai Tradition (2025)
- Masterpieces from the Nezu Collection, New Edition: Chinese Painting and Medieval Painting (2025)
Nezu Museum also publishes Shikun, which is a yearly bulletin for the publication of research papers by the museum’s curators.
References
References
- Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). [https://books.google.com/books?id=p2QnPijAEmEC&pg=PA672&dq= "Museums"] in ''Japan Encyclopedia'', pp. 671-673.
- Péchiodat, Fany. (2019). "Soul of Tokyo". Jonglez.
- "About the Museum". Nezu Museum.
- link. Magazine House, Ltd. (Tokyo). (4 April 2022)
- link. [[The Yomiuri Shimbun]]. (5 April 2023)
- "Pinnacle of Elegance Sword Fittings of the Mitsumura Collection". [[Osaka Museum of History]].
- 조인호. (2025-05-08). "일제에 뺏긴 제주의 종‥일본 미술관 지하 화장실 옆에".
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