Japanese art is collected by museums, galleries and private collectors in many countries around the world.
| Country | City | Institution | Collection size | Notes | Official web site | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sydney | Art Gallery of New South Wales | 1,561 | ||||
| Ontario | Royal Ontario Museum | 10,000 | Most items are from Edo period | |||
| Neuss | Langen Foundation | 350 | ||||
| Haifa | Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art | 8,500 | 17th to 19th century | |||
| Kitakyushu | Kitakyushu Municipal Museum of Art | 7,500 | [1] | |||
| Kyoto | Kyoto National Museum | 8,000+ | Art, archaeology, Buddhist art, and history | [1], [2] | ||
| Nagoya | Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art | 1,000 | [1] | |||
| Nagoya | Nagoya City Museum | [1] | ||||
| Nara | Nara National Museum | 1,200 | Art, archaeology, Buddhist art, and history | [1] | ||
| Osaka | Museum of Oriental Ceramics, Osaka | Ceramics and pottery | [1] | |||
| Tokyo | National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo | [1] | ||||
| Tokyo | Suntory Museum of Art | [1] | ||||
| Tokyo | Tokyo National Museum | Art, archaeology and history | [1] | |||
| Tokyo | Yamatane Museum | 1,800 | ||||
| Osaka | National Museum of Art, Osaka | 8,200 (As of February 2022) | Modern art | [3] | ||
| Tokyo | Sumida Hokusai Museum | Ukiyoe prints; P. Morse collection, M. Narashige collection[4] | [5] | [6] | ||
| Kraków | Manggha Museum of Japanese Art and Technology | |||||
| London | British Museum | |||||
| London | Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Japanese Art | 1,600 | Decorative arts of the Meiji era | |||
| London | Victoria and Albert Museum | 30,000+ | Mostly from Edo and Meiji periods | |||
| Maidstone | Maidstone Museum | 4,000 | Edo and Meiji-period decorative arts | [7] | ||
| Oxford | Ashmolean Museum | |||||
| Feinberg Collection | 300 | |||||
| Manyo'an Collection of Japanese Art | Hosted by the Gitter-Yelen Art Study Center | |||||
| Bartlesville, Oklahoma | Price Collection | Arts of the Edo period | ||||
| Boston | Museum of Fine Arts | includes the Leonard A. Lauder collection of more than 20,000 postcards | ||||
| Cleveland | Cleveland Museum of Art | 1,950 | [8] | |||
| Eugene, Oregon | Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art | 3,000+ | Mainly Edo period prints | |||
| Los Angeles | Pavilion for Japanese Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art | |||||
| Newark, New Jersey | The Newark Museum of Art | 7,000 | Concentrated in Edo, Meiji and Showa periods | |||
| New York | Ronin Gallery | 17th – 21st century woodblock prints | ||||
| New York | Metropolitan Museum of Art | 17,000 | ||||
| Washington, D.C. | Library of Congress | 2,500 | Woodblock prints and drawings, 17th to 20th centuries | |||
| Washington, D.C. | National Museum of Asian Art (Freer/Sackler) |
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Buckland, Rosina (January 2001). "Information on Collections of Japanese Art". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
- ↑ "Kyoto National Museum On Line Database". syuweb.kyohaku.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ↑ "Home". The National Museum of Art Osaka.
- ↑ "すみだ北斎美術館を支えるコレクター ピーター・モースと楢崎宗重 二大コレクション 写真特集:時事ドットコム" [Two core collections on display - endorsed by Peter Morse and Muneshige Narashige at the Sumida Hokusai Museum — Photo special]. 時事ドットコム (in Japanese). Jiji Press. 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
- ↑ "top > Sumida Hokusai Museum". hokusai-museum.jp. すみだ北斎美術館. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ↑ "図書室のご案内 [Our Library]". すみだ北斎美術館. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ↑ "Japanese Decorative Art & Prints | Collections". Maidstone Museum. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
- ↑ "Japanese Art". Cleveland Museum of Art. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.