The National Museum Of Western Art In Tokyo, Greeting 60th Anniversary, To Display Monet’s Long Missing “Water Lilies” For 1st Time Since Its Restoration

TOKYO, March 29 (Bernama- AsiaNet) –

The National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo has two major features. First, the museum holds the best collection of Western artworks in Asia, allowing visitors to trace the history of Western art from the late Medieval Period to the early 20th century. The other is that the museum’s Main Building, designed by world-renowned architect Le Corbusier, is registered as a World Cultural Heritage site.

The museum is holding a series of exhibitions themed on its basic philosophy in 2019, which marks the 60th anniversary of its founding. Following the ongoing “Le Corbusier and the Age of Purism” exhibition, the museum will hold an exhibition titled “THE MATSUKATA COLLECTION: A One-Hundred-Year Odyssey” from June, which will exhibit the museum’s collections of works by Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Auguste Rodin and other master pieces, all collected by businessman Kojiro Matsukata. In the exhibition, the museum will display Monet’s long missing “Water-Lilies, Reflections of Weeping Willows,” which was found in France in 2016 and donated to the museum later, for the first time in the world after restoration of the work.

http://mrem.bernama.com/viewsm.php?idm=34182

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