Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum

The Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum (愛知県陶磁美術館, Aichi-ken Tōji bijutsukan) is a prefectural art museum located in the city of Seto, north of the metropolis of Nagoya in central Japan. This museum was formally named "Aichi-ken Toji Shiryokan (愛知県陶磁資料館)", but the name in English has been the same as before.

Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum
愛知県陶磁美術館
Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum main building
Location within Aichi Prefecture
Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum (Japan)
Established1 June 1978 (1978-06-01)
LocationSeto, Aichi Japan
Coordinates35°11′09″N 137°05′53″E
Collection size7020 items
OwnerAichi Prefecture
Lobby of the main building

Overview

The museum was established in 1978 to showcase the history of Japanese pottery found in the area of Owari Province, today part of Aichi Prefecture. The collection of over 7000 items ranges from the Jōmon period (circa 10,000 BC - circa 300 BC) to contemporary ceramics produced by some of Japan's most famous potters, detailing Japan's rich ceramic art history. Some of the works in the collection are designated as Important Cultural Properties of Japan.

The museum is located in the city of Seto, Aichi, which is renowned for producing Seto ware ceramics since over 1,000 years. Located in the museum is a library, restaurant, a traditional Japanese tea ceremony room where visitors can drink from tea bowls made by famous artists and a studio for guests where they can try making and decorating their own pottery.

Access by public transport is from Fujigaoka Station on the Higashiyama Line subway and by Meitetsu Bus to Toji Shiryokan (Ceramic Museum) stop or Tōji-shiryōkan-minami Station on the Linimo.

gollark: == has 95% accuracy, === 97.5%, etc.
gollark: Idea: Bloom filters?
gollark: If they don't want people using it, DON'T SHIP IT IN CLIENT CODE.
gollark: It's true*!
gollark: Kubernetes was created by Google to damage competitors.

See also

Media related to Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.