Miho Museum
Miho Museum | |
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General information | |
Name | Miho Museum |
Original name | Miho Museum |
Location | Shigaraki, Japan |
Director | Hiroo Inoue |
Founded | 1997 |
Founder | Mihoko Koyama |
Architect | I.M.Pei |
Website | http://www.miho.or.jp/ |
Miho Museum, founded in 1997, by Mihoko Koyama, in southeast of Kyoto, Japan, near the town of Shigaraki, in Shiga Prefecture. The museum collections includes oriental carpets and a wide range of Japanese art, along with ancient art from areas such as Egypt, Western Asia, Greece, Rome, Southern Asia and China.
History
The approach to the museum was designed by architect I.M. Pei, who is renowned for works such as the glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris. Visitors travel down a walkway enveloped by cherry trees and pass through a tunnel and over a bridge before arriving at the museum. The design was inspired by the ethereal utopia described in the Taohua Yuan Ji (The Peach Blossom Spring), an ancient Chinese work written by Tao Yuanming. The work tells the tale of a fisherman who roams into a grotto after being drawn in by the fragrant scent of a forest of blossoming peach trees. Emerging from the other side, he finds an idyllic village of inhabitants who all live joyfully, and welcome the fisherman into their homes.
The Miho Museum has been conceived as a real-world version of this village. We hope you will enjoy the harmonious blend of natural beauty, architecture, art and food it provides amid a vibrant backdrop of seasonal colors.[1]
Gallery
Sanguszko Carpet (16th-17th century), Miho Museum
See also
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Search for Miho Museum on Wikipedia. |