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1. Wolfgang Tillmans, windowbox (47-37), 2000, Collection of WAKO WORKS OF ART
2. Ryusei Kishida, Reiko, Five Years Old, 1918, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
3. Ikko Narahara, Garden of Silence [6] from Domains Series, 1958, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo  © IKKO NARAHARA
4. Paul Klee, Abstraction with Reference to a Flowering Tree, 1925, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
5. JODI, My%Desktop OSX 10.4.7, 2006, Collection of the Artist
6. Roman Signer, Window Shutters, 2012, Collection of the Artist, Photo: Michael Bodenmann © Roman Signer, Courtesy Hauser & Wirth
7. Takashi Homma, Camera obscura – thirty six views of mount fuji Waseda, 2019, 2019, private collection © Takashi Homma, Courtesy of TARO NASU

The Window: A Journey of Art and Architecture through Windows The Window: A Journey of Art and Architecture through Windows

Dates: Tue. 13 October 2020 - Mon. 11 January 2021
Closed: Mondays (except 23 November, 11 January 2021), Tue. 24 November, 25 - 31 December 2020
Hours: 10:00 - 18:00 (Admission until 30 minutes before closing time)

Organized by Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art, The MIMOCA Foundation, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Window Research Institute
Subsidized by The Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia
Supported by Embassy of Switzerland in Japan, Polish Cultural Institute in Japan
Academic Adviser: Taro Igarashi (Professor, Tohoku University/ Architecture Historian and Critic/ Supervisor for Windowlogy)

Admission: Adults ¥950, Students (college, university) ¥650, Children (0 year to highschool) free
*Ticket valid for admission to Permanent Collection.

Windows—a common, indispensable part of our lives. Square or rectangular in shape, they frame the world outside for us to see. People have long perceived a close link between windows and paintings, which also frame for us a world existing elsewhere. As the times have progressed, this link has also been extended to photographs, films, and art installations.
In architecture, windows of varied form and character have continually been devised in every age and region, in response to aesthetic trends and the development of new technologies suiting the regional climate.
This exhibition—which is enhanced by insights from the Window Research Institute—presents window-related artworks ranging from paintings by Pierre Bonnard and Paul Klee to works by contemporary artists. Also featured are valuable drawings by architects such as Le Corbusier and Louis I. Kahn. We invite you to explore the wide world of windows from multiple perspectives.

1. Wolfgang Tillmans, windowbox (47-37), 2000, Collection of WAKO WORKS OF ART
2. Ryusei Kishida, Reiko, Five Years Old, 1918, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
3. Ikko Narahara, Garden of Silence [6] from Domains Series, 1958, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo  © IKKO NARAHARA
4. Paul Klee, Abstraction with Reference to a Flowering Tree, 1925, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
5. JODI, My%Desktop OSX 10.4.7, 2006, Collection of the Artist
6. Roman Signer, Window Shutters, 2012, Collection of the Artist, Photo: Michael Bodenmann © Roman Signer, Courtesy Hauser & Wirth
7. Takashi Homma, Camera obscura – thirty six views of mount fuji Waseda, 2019, 2019, private collection © Takashi Homma, Courtesy of TARO NASU

Exhibitions

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MIMOCA Family Day
14 11 2020 - 15 11 2020
* More details (in Japanese)

Deer Revenge Live
Sat October 2020
18:00-19:00
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Takashi Homma Satellite Marugame vol.3
Viewing with Takashi Homma Talk

①Sat 31 October 2020, 14:00−14:30
②Sun 1 November 2020, 11:00−11:30
③Sun 1 November 2020, 14:00−14:30
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Takashi Homma Satellite Marugame vol.3
Every Saturdays, Sundays and holidays during the exhibition (except 26 and 27 December)
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Workshops


* More details (in Japanese)