Gold Screens Festival: Welcome to the World of the Gold

December 17th (Sunday),2023~June 2nd (Sunday),2024

Golden folding screens, their surfaces decorated with glistening gold, are furnishings that brighten up a space. Not only have they been widely used in Japan, but were also presented to the kings of foreign countries from the Muromachi period (15th century) to the end of the Edo period (19th century), as the star of Japanese art. From the Meiji era (late 19th to early 20th century) onward, they were also developed as a form of artwork to be exhibited.
In this exhibition, shifting from 2019's popular theme of Japan: Country of Gold - Screens of the Kanō, Hasegawa, Rinpa and Other Schools, we invite you to the World of Gold, with a new look.
In the first room, the Golden Cloud Room, a variety of golden clouds surround you, such as the powerful golden clouds at which the Kanō school excelled, and the elegant golden clouds in the Yamato-e style. In the Gold and Silver Room that follows, there are gold folding screens combined with silver leaf and powder to create a calming atmosphere. Meanwhile in the Gold Base Room, entirely gold folding screens completely covered with gold leaf emit their brilliance, expanding into the Kōrin Style and Modern Folding Screens corners.
At the end of the exhibition, a live painting by Mr. Kotaro Fukui (1969-), a Japanese painter who is bringing the tradition of golden screens to the present age, will be unveiled.
Please enjoy the Gold Screen Festival, in which about 30 pieces from the museum's collection are on display.
*Some exhibits will be changed during the exhibition.


Feature Exhibition – Wucai: Jingdezhen and Other Porcelain

Wucai, or five-colored porcelain, was the final style to emerge in Chinese ceramics history; painting with red, green, and yellow on white ceramics and glazing it at low temperatures became a major feature in the pottery of the Ming and Qing dynasties. This selection will trace the path of wucai porcelain from the 13th to the 19th centuries, from Jin dynasty sō-akae (Song red ceramic) to late Qing dynasty doucai (cyan tone ceramic), including work from the Wanli era of the Ming dynasty, which was the pinnacle of wucai porcelain art. This exhibition will display around 20 pieces, two of which have never before been shown in public, including some pieces that were admired by Japanese tea ceremony masters, such as shonzui (the highest quality sometsuke coloring) and the red glaze of Swatow Ware. Dive into the world of splendid wucai, with various colorful patterns that symbolize Chinese culture, such as dragons representing emperors, and bats that carry the meaning of happiness.
※Due to popular demand, the exhibition period for Feature Exhibition - Wucai: Jingdezhen and Other Porcelain has been extended.

Introduces some of the artworks currently on display.

岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Kanō School

Birds and Flowers in Spring and Summer

Momoyama period 16th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Horse Race

Momoyama period to beginning of Edo period 17th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Kurama and Itsukushima

Beginning of Edo period 17th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Willow Bridge and Waterwheel

Early Edo period 17th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

The Emperor’s Formal Visit to Nijo Castle

Edo period 17th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Ogata Kōrin

Chrysanthemums

Early Edo period beginning of the 18th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Ogata Kōrin

Ducks and Snow-Covered Pine Trees

Early Edo period beginning of the 18th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Ikeda Koson

Irises

Late Edo period mid-19th century
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Kawai Gyokudō

Mt. Fuji

1918 (Taishō 7)
岡田美術館 OKADA MUSEUM OF ART

Fukui Kōtarō

Raku

2023 (Reiwa 5)

Permanent Collection