National Museum of Art, Osaka
The National Museum of Art (国立国際美術館, Kokuritsu Kokusai Bijutsukan) is a subterranean Japanese art museum located on the island of Nakanoshima, located between the Dōjima River and the Tosabori River, about 5 minutes west of Higobashi Station in central Osaka.
The official Japanese title of the museum translates as the "National Museum of International Art". The museum is also known by the English acronym NMAO (National Museum of Art, Osaka).
NMAO history
Designed by Architect Arata Isozaki. The museum originates from the Expo Art Gallery which was built as part of Expo '70, held in Suita in the outskirts of Osaka. The site was converted into Expo Commemoration Park after the Expo, but the gallery was preserved for possible future use as a permanent art museum. It re-opened in 1977 as the National Museum of Art, as part of the Expo Commemoration Park. Due to the aging of the building as well as growing space limitations, the museum was temporarily closed in January 2004. The old museum was demolished and turned into a car park, while the exhibits were transferred to its more central, current location in Nakanoshima, which opened in November 2004.
NMAO collections
Most of the artwork in the collection is from the post-war era. Pre-war exceptions include work by Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, Max Ernst, Tsuguharu Foujita and Yasuo Kuniyoshi.
Pelli's building
The museum structure is itself an example of the modern architect's art. The present museum was designed by international architect César Pelli. Most of the museum facilities are located underground, next to the Osaka Science Museum. Pelli suggested that the externally visible design structure represents waving reeds in the wind.
The entrance, auditorium, restaurant and the museum shop are located just beneath ground level, with exhibits and storage facilities on the next two floors beneath. Permanent exhibition space and artist-focused temporary exhibits are located in the intermediate level, and various changing exhibitions are mounted in the lowest level.
Union catalog
The Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan, is a consolidated catalog of material held by the four Japanese national art museums—the National Museum of Modern Art in Kyoto (MOMAK), the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo (MOMAT), the National Museum of Art in Osaka (NMAO), and the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo (NMWA):[1]
- National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto (MOMAK).[2]
- National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (MOMAT)
- National Museum of Art, Osaka (NMAO)
- National Museum of Western Art (NMWA)
The online version of this union catalog is currently under construction, with only selected works available at this time.[1]
Selected artists
|
|
Directions
- Keihan Electric Railway Nakanoshima Line: Nakanoshima Station
- Osaka Municipal Subway Yotsubashi Line: Higobashi Station
- Hanshin Electric Railway Main Line: Fukushima Station
- JR West JR Tōzai Line: Shin-Fukushima Station
- JR West Osaka Loop Line: Fukushima Station
- Osaka Municipal Bus: 10-minute ride from Ōsaka Station aboard Routes 53 or 75, alight at Taminobashi.
- Osaka Municipal Bus: 10-minute ride from Ōsaka Station aboard Route 88, alight at Tosabori Itchome.
- Osaka Municipal Bus: 10-minute ride from Temmabashi, 5-minute ride from Yodoyabasfi Station aboard Bus 107, alight at Tosabori Itchome.
- Hokko Kanko Bus: 10-minute ride from Yodoyabashi Station aboard Nakanoshima Loop Bus, alight at Osaka Science Museum / the National Museum of Art, Osaka.
- Hanshin Expressway: Nakanoshima-nishi Exit (Route 3), Tosabori Exit (Route 1) or Fukushima Exit. (Route 11)
Notes
See also
References
External links
- National Museum of Modern Art, Osaka web site
- Independent Administrative Institution National Museum of Art (in Japanese)
34°41′30″N 135°29′31″E / 34.691786°N 135.492024°E