Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery
Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery (聖徳記念絵画館, Seitoku Kinen Kaigakan) is a gallery commemorating the "imperial virtues" of Japan's Meiji Emperor, installed on his funeral site in the Gaien or outer precinct of Meiji Shrine in Tōkyō. The gallery is one of the earliest museum buildings in Japan and itself an Important Cultural Property. On display in the gallery are eighty large paintings, forty in "Japanese style" (Nihonga) and forty in "Western style" (Yōga), that depict, in chronological order, scenes from the Emperor's life and times. The gallery opened to the public in 1926, with the final paintings completed and installed ten years later. The selection and investigation of suitable topics for the paintings was overseen by Kaneko Kentarō, who also served as head of the editorial boards of Dai-Nihon Ishin Shiryō and Meiji Tennōki, major contemporary historiographic undertakings respectively to document the Meiji Restoration (in 4,215 volumes) and the Meiji Emperor and his era (in 260 volumes); as such, the gallery and its paintings may be viewed as a highly-visible historiographic project in its own right.
Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery
Yotsuya-Tsunohazu Line, Shinjuku
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)
Latitude | Longitude |
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N 35.678778 ° | E 139.717639 ° |
Address
明治神宮聖徳記念絵画館
Yotsuya-Tsunohazu Line 新宿区霞ヶ丘1-1
160-0015 Shinjuku
Japan
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