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Museum of the Imperial Collections

Art museum in Tokyo, Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Museum of the Imperial Collections
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The Museum of the Imperial Collections Sannomaru-Shōzōkan (三の丸尚蔵館) is located on the grounds of the East Garden of Tokyo Imperial Palace.[1] It showcases a changing exhibition of a part of the imperial household treasures.

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The old building that was in operation until the 2019 fiscal year.

The museum is currently temporarily closed for renovations and will reopen in Fall 2026.[2]

The Museum of the Imperial Collections was conceived during the change from the Shōwa period (1926 1989) to the Heisei period (1989 2019) . The Imperial family donated 6,000 pieces of art to the Japanese government in 1989. Many pieces were created by Imperial Household Artists. The museum was opened in 1993 for the study and preservation of the art collection. The collection was further enlarged by the donation of the art collection of Prince Chichibu (1902 1953) in 1996, the collection of Kikuko, Princess Takamatsu (1911 2004) in 2005, and the collection of Prince Mikasa family in 2014.[1]

There are 9,800 items in the collection, but the exhibition room was only 160 square meters, and the storage room was also small. Therefore, it was decided that the museum would be rebuilt.[3] Operations in the old building ended in 2019, and in 2023, operations resumed with the completion of the first phase of the new building constructed next to the old one. The second phase is scheduled to be completed in 2026, expanding the exhibition space to eight times its original size and the storage capacity to four times that of the old building.[4][5]

In 2023, the museum was transferred from the Imperial Household Agency to the National Institutes for Cultural Heritage, and the system for managing the collection was revised, with the Agency for Cultural Affairs taking responsibility for the holdings.[4]

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Selected artists

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Karajishi-zu Byōbu (Byōbu depicting the Chinese lions) by Kanō Eitoku (16th century), National Treasure

Although the museum houses many masterpieces, none of them were designated as National Treasure or Important Cultural Property until 2021 because cultural properties owned by the Imperial Family or the Imperial Household Agency (i.e., cultural properties donated to the nation by the Imperial Family) are not subject to the Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties of Japan.[6]

In 2018, in order to show the importance of cultural properties to many people in a way that is easy to understand, the Imperial Household Agency proposed that cultural properties under its management should also be designated as National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties.[6] In July 2021, in response to a proposal made by the Imperial Household Agency, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology decided to designate five cultural properties as National Treasures in the first stage of designation, including Mōko Shūrai Ekotoba, an emakimono depicting the Mongol invasion of Japan; Karajishi-zu Byōbu, a byōbu by Kano Eitoku; and Dōshoku sai-e, a painting by Itō Jakuchū.[7]

Paintings

Calligraphy

Nihonga

Sculptures and crafts

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References

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