• TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM
  • TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM
  • TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM
  • TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM
  • TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM

TOKYO NATIONAL MUSEUM

東京国立博物館

Events

23 result(s)
  • Chinese Buddhist Sculpture
    Limited time

    Chinese Buddhist Sculpture Until 19 April 2026

    View Event Description & Conditions
    • Dates 8 May 2025, 9:30AM - 19 April 2026, 5:00PM
    • Event Details Asian Gallery (Toyokan) Room 1

      Buddhism began to spread in China around the turn of the first millennium, about 500 years after its founding in India. In the 5th and 6th centuries, the number of Chinese Buddhists rapidly increased and numerous temples were established. This gallery presents Buddhist statues created from the 5th to 9th century, a golden age in the history of Chinese sculpture.
  • Buddhist Art of Korea
    Limited time

    Buddhist Art of Korea Until 21 September 2025

    View Event Description & Conditions
    • Dates 8 May 2025, 9:30AM - 21 September 2025, 5:00PM
    • Event Details Asian Gallery (Toyokan) Room 10

      Buddhism began to spread on the Korean Peninsula during the 4th and 5th centuries. This section introduces Buddhist art from the Three Kingdoms period (57 BC–668 AD), the Unified Silla dynasty (669–935), and the Goryeo dynasty (935–1392), including gilt-bronze statues, bricks, roof tiles, and ritual implements.
  • Gilt Bronze Buddhist Statues, Halos and Repoussé Buddhist Images
    Limited time

    Gilt Bronze Buddhist Statues, Halos and Repoussé Buddhist Images Until 19 April 2026

    View Event Description & Conditions
    • Dates 8 May 2025, 9:30AM - 19 April 2026, 5:00PM
    • Event Details The Gallery of Horyuji Treasures Room 2

      All of the 48 works of gilt bronze Buddhist statues in the Hōryūji Treasures are no more then 30–40 cm in height, and many of them are believed to have been used for private worship by local rulers. The halos date from around the same time as these gilt bronze statues, but they are displayed separately.

      Repoussé Buddhist images could be mass-produced by placing a thin sheet of bronze over a relief image of a Buddhist divinity and hammering it into shape. In Japan, repoussé images flourished from the second half of the 7th to the early 8th century and were mostly hung on the walls of temple halls or kept in small shrines for private worship. The repoussé Buddhist images among the Hōryūji Treasures are a very important collection, not only in terms of age and number, but also for the variety of images.
※ The above information was correct at the time of updating, but there may be changes to actual prices. Please confirm the current prices when visiting.