Tomonari Nakayashiki × Takayuki Mitsushima: The Ones Who See
June 4 – June 29, 2025
BUG, Tokyo
Planning: Yoko Takauchi

Tomonari Nakayashiki × Takayuki Mitsushima: The Ones Who See @ BUG
June 4 – June 29, 2025
June 4 – June 29, 2025
Tomonari Nakayashiki × Takayuki Mitsushima: The Ones Who See
June 4 – June 29, 2025
BUG, Tokyo
Planning: Yoko Takauchi
April 29 – June 29, 2025
MOT Plus Collaboration with Han Nefkens Foundation: Shahana Rajani
April 29 – June 29, 2025
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Tokyo
Curator: Mio Harada (Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo)
The first collection exhibition of fiscal 2025 is made up of two parts: a special show called “Circles and Rings in Postwar Art,” and “Collection Highlights,” which runs for the entire year. In “Circles and Rings in Postwar Art,” weView More >
We are now living in a continuous state of emergency. Unpredictable attacks, sudden coups, earthquakes, floods, wildfires and other natural disasters have displaced countless people and forced them to emigrate. The memory of an unknown virus suddenly threatening our livesView More >
This exhibition will focus on two artists. The first artist, Takayuki Mitsushima, is fully blind, while the second, Tomonari Nakayashiki, is he has color blindness. Both artists perceive the world in their own unique ways, offering an opportunity for visitorsView More >
We dream not only when we sleep, but also when we are awake or even while taking a walk. Our perception of things—colors, sounds, weight, temperature—can vary greatly despite the general consensus on their existence. For someone to whom somethingView More >
BUG, operated by Recruit Holdings Co., Ltd. is pleased to present an exhibition and event by four artists, Ayaka Ura, Yuya Koyama, Shiori Futatsugi, and Asuka Miyata. The exhibition space will include an area for workshops, a small farm, andView More >
Is Hara Museum ARC not a work of temporal art? In spring, flower petals dance and birds chirp. In early summer, plants sprout, rainbows arc across the eastern sky after a sudden shower and rays of sunlight burst through cloudView More >
Gallery A at Hara Museum ARC, designed by Arata Isozaki, is a space illuminated by natural light pouring in through a 12-meter-high skylight supported by four cedar pillars, the intensity modulated by the passing clouds. Although the gallery embodies theView More >
Exhibition of Hikari Mukai, winner of the 1st BUG Art Award Grand Prize selected from a total of 415 entries, will be held! We are pleased to present the 1st BUG Art Award Grand Prize Winner, Hikari Mukai’s solo exhibitionView More >
The Hiroshima Appeals Posters project was launched in 1983 as a new campaign aspiring for peace and conveying the spirit of Hiroshima to people all over the world through graphic design. The first poster, Burning Butterflies, by Kamekura Yusaku, then-presidentView More >
This exhibition aims to familiarize visitors with the qualities of the museum’s collection and introduce them to related themes. Rooms 1 through 3 are “Highlights,” where visitors can view works from the collection through the keywords attached to each room.View More >