Your gateway to Japan’s finest art and multifaceted culture

Tue, Oct 11, 2022

Aesthetics of Chanoyu – Japanese art of tea – to be explored at Kyoto National Museum

Replicated tea rooms are also showcased in "Chanoyu: Tea in the Cultural Life of Kyoto," the special exhibition now running at the Kyoto National Museum. (Photo by Kazuki Matsuura)

Kyoto National Museum is now running a special exhibition to appreciate the culture and aesthetics of chanoyu (Japanese tea ceremony or art of tea). Entitled, “Chanoyu: Tea in the Cultural Life of Kyoto,” the exhibition will run through Dec. 4.

National treasure
Tea bowl, O-ido type, known as “Kizaemon”
Koho-an, Kyoto

The exhibition will not only feature masterpiece tea bowls, teapots and other utensils associated with Kyoto, where chanoyu flourished, but also paintings and calligraphy that tell of its culture (245 works in total, including 101 items registered as either a national treasure or an important cultural property).

Chanoyu: Tea in the Cultural Life of Kyoto

Oct 8 (Sat) – Dec 4 (Sun), 2022

Kyoto National Museum
(Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto)

*See outline below for more info

The items on display include “Yohen tenmoku” (Southern Song Dynasty, 12th-13th century) of Daitoku-ji temple’s Ryoko-in subtemple in Kyoto — a government-designated national treasure and one of only a few Yohen tenmoku tea bowls remaining in the world (only three remain in Japan) — and an O-ido type tea bowl known as “Kizaemon,” a designated national treasure from Daitoku-ji’s Koho-an subtemple.

Tea utensils are put on display together with paintings, calligraphy and other artwork to trace the long history of Japanese chanoyu. (Photo by Kazuki Matsuura)

The ido type tea bowls, introduced to Japan from the Korean Peninsula, were utensils prized by those who practiced the simple wabi-cha style ceremonies associated with tea master Senno no Rikyu (1522-91).

The special exhibition, organized by Japan’s national daily newspaper The Yomiuri Shimbun and others, is held to mark the 70th anniversary of the first publication of the Osaka edition of the paper. The exhibition is also supported by the Tsumugu Project, a joint effort by the Cultural Affairs Agency, the Imperial Household Agency and The Yomiuri Shimbun to promote and help preserve Japan’s artistic treasures.

Exhibition website:

Outline of the event

Schedule

Sat, Oct 8, 2022〜Sun, Dec 4, 2022

Chanoyu: Tea in the Cultural Life of Kyoto

Part I: Oct 8 (Sat) - Nov 6 (Sun)
Part II: Nov 8 (Tue) - Dec 4 (Sun)

Tue-Thu, Sun: 9:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
(Last admission 5:00 p.m.)
Fri-Sat: 9:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
(Last admission 7:30 p.m.)

Exhibition website

Venue

Kyoto National Museum
Heisei Chishinkan Wing

527 Chaya-cho
Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto

Admission

Adult: 1,800 yen (1,600 yen*)
University student: 1,200 yen (1,000 yen*)
High school student: 700 yen (500 yen*)
Junior high school student/age 15 or younger/visitor with disabilities (certificate required) and one caregiver: Free

*Advance tickets (On sale Aug 26-Oct 7)

Closing day

Mondays (except Oct 10) & Oct 11 (Tue)

Contact

Tel. 075-525-2473

Share

0%

Related articles

Cookies on the TSUMUGU web portal

We use cookies to personalize content and ads, analyze access and for other reasons in order to improve user convenience.