香港六合彩即时开奖

Ukiyo-e 艑ta Memorial Museum of Art

Harajuku & Aoyama


This small museum (where you swap your shoes for slippers) is the best place in Tokyo to see ukiyo-e. Each month it presents a seasonal, thematic exhibition (with English curation notes), drawing from the truly impressive collection of 艑ta Seizo, the former head of the Toho Life Insurance Company. Most exhibitions include a few works by masters such as Hokusai and Hiroshige. The museum closes the last few days of the month (between exhibitions).

The shop in the basement sells beautifully printed tenugui (traditional hand-dyed, thin cotton towels).


香港六合彩即时开奖's must-see attractions

Nearby Harajuku & Aoyama attractions

1. Tokyu Plaza Omotesando Harajuku

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The entrance to this castle-like structure by Nakamura Hiroshi is a dizzying hall of mirrors (which makes for a great photo); there鈥檚 a roof garden on top.

2. Kawaii Monster Cafe

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Artist and stylist Sebastian Masuda is behind the lurid colours, surrealist installations and other-worldly outfits of this darkly cute cafe. In the鈥

4. Dior Omote-sand艒

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This five-storey glass building (2003) uses clever lighting and acrylic screens to pull off the effortlessly chic look of a breezy tiered skirt. Pritzker鈥

5. Design Festa

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Design Festa has long been a champion of Tokyo鈥檚 DIY art scene and its maze-like building is a Harajuku landmark. Inside there are dozens of small鈥

6. Cat Street

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Had enough of the Harajuku crowds? Exit, stage right, for Cat Street, a meandering car-free road with a mishmash of boutiques and a little more breathing鈥

7. Omotesand艒 Hills

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This deceptively deep concrete mall (2003), designed by Tadao Ando, spirals around a sunken atrium. And艒鈥檚 architecture utilises materials such as鈥

8. Yoyogi National Stadium

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This early masterpiece by architect Tange Kenz艒 was built for the 1964 Olympics (and will be used again in the 2020 games for the handball event). The鈥