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Featured Events in Tokyo in February, 2025 (May Updated)

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Sony Park Exhibition 2025 | Ginza Sony Park

Jan 26–Jun 22, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
The newly launched "Ginza Sony Park" has officially opened on January 26, 2025 (Sunday), and the first wave of planning activities "Sony Park Exhibition 2025" will be held simultaneously. With the theme of Sony's six major fields of music, semiconductors, finance, games, entertainment technology and movies, six groups of artists including YOASOBI, Sheep Literature, Vaundy, BABYMONSTER, Creepy Nuts, and Kensuke Ushio will be invited to participate in the creation, using art and high technology to create amazing experiences. Exhibiting works, the event will be divided into two stages, with three groups of works on display in each stage.

MACHINE LOVE: Video Game, AI and Contemporary Art | Mori Art Museum

Feb 13–Jun 8, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
With the explosive growth of artificial intelligence (AI) and the integration of virtual and real worlds, the latest cutting-edge technologies have quickly penetrated our daily lives. This tendency has become especially apparent since the COVID-19 pandemic, when many human activities shifted towards virtual space. Looking back, the progress of art and technology has run parallel to each other throughout the course of history, a phenomenon that is especially evident in the field of computer art and video art. While recent innovations in video game engines and AI offer unprecedented possibilities for artists, the advent of generative AI also has raised significant concerns. Such developments are now attracting considerable attention in various fields and industries, including the contemporary art world.

HOKUSAI : ANOTHER STORY in TOKYO | Tokyo

Feb 1–Jun 1, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Experience the floating world of Edo as seen by Hokusai through technology. The works of Katsushika Hokusai, which everyone has seen at least once, are reproduced in high-definition images with a sense of realism using ultra-high definition image data and Sony's Crystal LED LED display. In addition, with effects such as Sony's haptics technology that makes it feel as if the floor has turned into a puddle or a sandy beach, visitors can experience the scenery and walking sensation of Edo as Hokusai saw it with an overwhelming sense of immersion. During the event, collaborative goods with brands that represent Japanese craftsmanship and are inspired by Katsushika Hokusai will also be on sale.

Tokyo Underground 1960s-1970s: A turning point in postwar Japanese culture | Mori Art Museum

Feb 13–Jun 8, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
From the late 1960s to the 1970s, the "underground," commonly known as "angura," took the Japanese art world by storm, mainly in the urban space of Tokyo. The underground, which replaced the "avant-garde" as the gathering point of cutting-edge art, was imported to Japan from the United States through experimental films and spread to fields such as fine art, music, manga, design, theater, and dance, becoming a trend recognized by the general public in just a few years. However, because it was established through its interaction with the anti-establishment movement of the time, it disappeared in the early 1970s as the movement declined. Although it was a short-lived phenomenon, underground culture had a great impact on postwar Japanese society, and it can be said that it remains as a style to this day. In addition, by its very nature, underground culture focused on temporary "events" rather than physical "works," and placed importance on the "places" that welcomed its bearers. For this reason, the underground is seen as the atmosphere of the times, and its actual nature has yet to be clarified. "MAM Research 011: Tokyo Underground 1960s-1970s - A turning point in postwar Japanese culture" will display many materials, mainly ephemera (printed material intended for temporary use), that are suited to conveying the rise and fall of underground culture in Tokyo. Furthermore, by examining these materials, we will attempt to look in detail at the history of "underground," its ideas and those who carried it, as well as its spread and limitations.

| Tokyo

ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Are you ready for a great party? Join Kuromi, My Melody and Hapidanbui for an exciting exhibition! Dive into interactive displays, dance to hit music, and enjoy hands-on fun.

30th Anniversary of the Opening of the Museum Ryudai Takano Kasbaba | Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Feb 27–Jun 8, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Ryudai Takano (1963-) is a photographer and artist who won the 31st Kimura Ihei Photography Award for his photo book "IN MY ROOM" (2005) and continues to work both in Japan and abroad. In addition to his works on the theme of sexuality, such as "IN MY ROOM," Takano also takes snapshots of everyday life, such as "Daily Photos" and "Kasubaba." Since the Great East Japan Earthquake, he has also been working on the theme of exploring the origins of photography, using "shadows" as a subject. The title of this exhibition, "Kasubaba," is a word coined by Takano and is the plural of the word for a place like kas (ba). We live in the midst of rapid change in the times, with large-scale natural disasters, global epidemics of infectious diseases, environmental destruction and urban development due to economic development. Takano accepts reality, which is not just beautiful, and presents the viewer with raw images of weak and ugly things as they are. Through Takano's works, we will be able to see anew the richness and chaos of the everyday life we ​​live in, something that is familiar to us but that we do not look closely at. We hope that this exhibition, which surveys Takano's career, including works shown for the first time, will provide some hints for surviving this everyday life, from which it is becoming increasingly difficult to see an exit.

"Pac-Man" TOKYO Night & Light | TMG Building Citizens' Plaza

ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Tokyo Metropolitan Government has created a new tourist resource for nighttime viewing by using the exterior wall of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building No. 1 as a screen to express a variety of art with light and sound, and to perform projection mapping all year round in order to activate and revitalize nighttime tourism. This time, as the 45th anniversary is approaching next year, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government will begin showing works using the world-famous "Pac-Man". The game board appears on the outer wall of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, and Pac-Man, who is making a futuristic scene, eats up everything vividly. The music of the game of Pac-Man, which has a futuristic feel, and the music of the highly friendly soundtrack maker Mr. Haraguchi Sasuke have produced. Please enjoy the collaborative work of Pac-Man and Tokyo that can only be seen in the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building.

Perspectives - Maiko Haruki, Mari Katayama, Tomoko Yoneda | Mori Art Museum

Feb 13–Jun 8, 2025 (UTC+9)
Tokyo
Exhibitions
"MAM Collection 019: Perspective" focuses on the photographic expressions of three female artists from the Mori Art Museum Collection: Maiko Haruki, Mari Katayama, and Tomoko Yoneda. This exhibition introduces photographic works in which the image is completed through the viewer's involvement, rather than as a so-called recording medium. Maiko Haruki's series "either portrait or landscape" attempts to destabilize and liberate the viewer's perspective from the perspective of form, and also by incorporating the relationship between photography and abstract expression as a theme. Mari Katayama reverses the power relationship between image and viewer, challenging conventional traditional notions of diversity, normative values, and agency. Tomoko Yoneda's series "Between the Visible and the Invisible" expresses the interrelationship between the image on the surface and the narrative behind it.

Maroon 5 Asia Tour 2025 | Tokyo Dome

Feb 6–Feb 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

LUNA SEA×GLAY <The Millennium Eve 2025> Concert | Tokyo Dome

Feb 22, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Exhibition in Tokyo | Tokyo

Nov 2, 2024–Mar 2, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
"Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba", which has been loved by generations, is a manga created by Koyoharu Gotouge and animated by ufotable. It has been 5 years since the first episode was aired, and after the final episode of "Hiraru Training Arc" aired in May this year, the "Theatrical Version of "Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba" Infinite Castle Arc" was announced, which has set off a new wave of topics. The focus of this exhibition is on the "Hiraru" swordsmen of the Demon Slayer Corps, who have inherited the love-hate relationship with Muzan Kibutsuji for thousands of years. The exhibition will allow the audience to have a deeper understanding of the personality and background of the nine pillars through exquisite displays and interactive experiences.

Kokufu Bonsai-Ten | Tokyo

Feb 8–Feb 16, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions

Creepy Nuts <LIVE at TOKYO DOME> 2025 Concert Tour | Tokyo Dome

Feb 11, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

XG 1st WORLD TOUR "The first HOWL" | Ariake Arena

Feb 22–Feb 23, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

Kenshi Yonezu 2025 "JUNK" World Tour | Tokyo Dome

Feb 26–Feb 27, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

Care Show Japan 2025 | Tokyo Big Sight - International Exhibition Center

Feb 26–Feb 28, 2025 (UTC-5)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Care Show Japan showcases products like home care services, nursing homes, geriatric health facilities, nursing home, hospital, public health nurses Care Show Japan showcases products like home care services, nursing homes, geriatric health facilities, nursing home, hospital, public health nurses, care workers, registered dietitian, to that of courier meal based products and services associated with this field etc. Information Source: UBM | expotobi

World Orchid Show 2025 | Tokyo

Feb 5–Feb 12, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
"World Orchid Show 2025 - A Festival of Flowers and Greens" will be held at Tokyo Dome City Prism Hall for 8 days from February 5 (Wednesday) to February 12 (Wednesday), 2025. The venue features a gate with 100,000 orchids, an impressive display wrapped in an orchid wall over 4m high, the World Orchid Show Japan Award that determines the best orchids in Japan, and about 70 shops full of unique orchids. You can enjoy attractions such as the "Flower and Green Market".

CRAVITY JAPAN LIVE TOUR 2025 “Bitter & Sweet” | LINE CUBE SHIBUYA

Feb 14–Feb 15, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

Hayato Sumino 2025 “Human Universe” Tour | Suntory Hall

Feb 21–Feb 28, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Arts

DEPAPEPE Concert | Yamaha Hall

Feb 22, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Concerts

Monet: The Late Waterscapes | The National Museum of Western Art

Oct 5, 2024–Feb 11, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Claude Monet (1840-1926), one of the leading painters of the Impressionists, captured the vicissitudes of nature on his canvas with a keen eye that caught a moment of light. In later years, however, his art was transformed into more abstract and internal images. Monet's later years were also a time when he faced many challenges, such as the death of a beloved family member, his own eye disease, and the First World War. In such a situation, the source of his greatest creativity was the water lily pond built in the garden of his residence in Giverny, where the surrounding trees, sky, and light are reflected as one. And the idea of a "large decorative painting" that covers the walls of the room with a huge canvas depicting this subject would occupy Monet's mind until his very end. At the center of this exhibition is a number of large-scale "water lilies" created through this process of trial and error. This time, about 50 works from the Musée Marmottan Monet in Paris will be exhibited for the first time in Japan, including many important works. In addition, works from various collections in Japan will be added to introduce the pinnacle of Monet's late art. It will be a valuable opportunity for the largest "water lilies" ever to gather in Japan.

Augustus John and His Times: Modern British Art from the Matsukata Collection | The National Museum of Western Art

Oct 5, 2024–Feb 11, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
British art from the turn of the century is often introduced in terms of its lineage with the Pre-Raphaelites or its relationship with Aestheticism and Symbolism, but inspired by the development of modern French painting, various movements arose in which young artists sought to create new environments for their work. The New English Art Club was founded in 1886 in opposition to the Royal Academy of Arts, which dominated the art world, the Camden Town Group was formed in 1911 in response to the Academy's conservatism, and the Newlyn School, which formed an artists' colony in a fishing village in Cornwall. In these movements, we can see responses to Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, as well as a backlash against London's rapid urbanization and industrialization.

Yayoi Kusama: I WOULD OVERCOME DEATH AND GO ON LIVING | Yayoi Kusama Museum

Oct 17, 2024–Mar 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Yayoi Kusama has constantly faced the critical realities of life and death as pressing issues. Her experience of the Pacific War in a complex family environment, along with her overcoming of suicidal impulses triggered by trauma and neurosis through her creative practices, has influenced her perception of these issues. This exhibition unveils Kusama’s evolving outlook on life and death, alongside the corresponding shifts in her artistic presentation, through a series of diverse works—from her 1940s and 1950s paintings, which bear the imprint of war, to her very latest pieces. After relocating to the United States in 1957, Kusama gained a reputation for her net paintings and sculptures that embody ‘self-obliteration’: the feeling of losing the boundary between the self and the other through the obsessive repetition of motifs originating from her hallucinations. In her anti-war happenings in the late 1960s, she painted dots onto the human body using the same concept of ‘self-obliteration’ while also highlighting the beauty of life and the human body. During the 1970s and 80s, following the loss of her father and her lover, as well as her return to Japan due to health issues, Kusama produced numerous dark-toned collages and three-dimensional works centered on the theme of death, as well as poetry and novels imbued with a sense of mortality. As she continued creating fantastical works exploring death and the afterlife, her works from the late 1980s began to explore themes of transmigration and cyclical returns to eternity through ‘self-obliteration’. Kusama’s works, which increasingly incorporated more colors, reveal how her creative process evolved from a means of coping with death to becoming synonymous with her very existence. In her painting series from 2000 onwards, Kusama has been relentlessly depicting the beauty of life and the joy of living on canvases overflowing with vibrant colors, driven by the ever-looming presence of her own death.

Jewellumination at Yomiuri Land | Inagi

Oct 24, 2024–Apr 6, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Inagi
Celebration
This spectacular light show is the brainchild of renowned Japanese lighting designer Motoko Ishii. The term Jewellumination stands for jewels and lights, and it is brought to life by seven jewel colors: diamond, ruby, amber, topaz, emerald, sapphire and amethyst. The park is lit up by four million LED lights and divided into five colorful and themed areas: "Amusement Park", "Water Park", "Beautiful Stream", "Kawaii Park" and "Forest", with dance performances synchronized with lights and music. If you purchase an unlimited ride pass, you can also see these lights and the amazing night view of Tokyo from the top of the roller coaster or Ferris wheel.

Chinese Ceramics Exhibition: 1500 Years of Glazing | Matsuoka Museum

Oct 29, 2024–Feb 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Glaze is a glassy film that covers the surface of ceramics, and is an element unique to ceramics. Since ancient times, people have sought not only practical use in glazes, but also beauty that changes in various ways depending on the nature and method of application. This pursuit, which has continued for many years, has brought about great developments in the world of Chinese ceramics. Crafts with completely different styles were born, such as Sancai, which boldly uses vivid colors, Celadon, which has a refined appearance, and Yatsuo-gure, which has a fantastic purple-red color. This exhibition will display about 50 pieces that are full of the beauty of glazes, such as green glazes, Sancai, Celadon, and Yatsuo-gure, from about 1,500 years from the Later Han to the Ming dynasties. Please enjoy the rich expressions and unique colors that are born from applying glaze and firing.

50th anniversary of Hello Kitty "Hello Kitty Exhibition -When I change, Kitty will change-" | Tokyo National Museum

Nov 1, 2024–Feb 24, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions

Pokémon Crafts Exhibition — The Great Discovery | Azabudai Hills Gallery

Nov 1, 2024–Feb 2, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Pokémon and spaceships – what kind of battle do you think will happen? Azabudai Hills Gallery will host an upgraded Pokémon Craft Exhibition from November 1, 2024 to February 2, 2025. The exhibition features a collaborative cafe, exclusive talk events and workshops, and will feature 20 artists and around 80 crafts inspired by the iconic works. The works are divided into three categories – Appearance, Story and Lifestyle.

Looking Human: The Figure Painting | Artizon Museum

Nov 2, 2024–Feb 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Pliny the Elder’s encyclopedicNaturalis Historia(77 CE) includes the story of the daughter of a ceramic tile maker in Corinth, a city in ancient Greece, wanting a record of the young man she loved, who was setting out on a trip. She drew an outline of his shadow on the wall. In the latter half of the eighteenth and the early nineteenth century, that story was often mentioned as the origin of painting. In fact, if we look at the history of art in Europe, “depicting a person,” figure painting, has long been a significant element in creating works. For example, self-portraits have been both opportunities to display one’s skill and experimental settings for trying new styles. Portrait painting has been a staple source of painters’ livelihoods. In addition to actual human figures, portraits also depict the characters in stories. This exhibition introduces the abundance of paintings of the human figure.

Jam Session Ishibashi Foundation Collection x Yuko Mouri - About Physis | Artizon Museum

Nov 2, 2024–Feb 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
Since its opening in 2020, the Artizon Museum has been holding the annual exhibition "Jam Session," a collaboration between the Ishibashi Foundation Collection and artists. This fifth exhibition will feature Yuko Mohri, an artist garnering attention in the international art scene. Mohri primarily uses installations and sculptures to give form to the flows and changing phenomena that exist latent in a particular space, such as magnetism, electric current, air, dust, water, and temperature, in an attempt to open up new circuits of perception for those who witness her work. The word "physis" in the title of this exhibition is an ancient Greek word that is usually translated as "nature" or "nature." In early Greek philosophy, which gave rise to the question "What is the origin of all things, the principle?" that has continued to this day in philosophy, "physis" was the central subject of consideration. Although only fragments of his writings remain from that time, they were later given the title "Physis = On Nature," and convey the thoughts of philosophers who find the true nature in movements such as creation, change, and disappearance. Their approach to perceiving the world as a constantly changing, vibrant, dynamic world can be seen as overlapping with Mohri's. This exhibition, Mohri's first large-scale exhibition in Japan, will feature new and old works alongside works from the Ishibashi Foundation Collection selected from the artist's perspective, inviting visitors into a tranquil yet organic space filled with subtle sounds and movements that can only be experienced here.

Selections from the Ishibashi Foundation Collection Special Section Matisse’s Studio | Artizon Museum

Nov 2, 2024–Feb 9, 2025 (UTC+9)ENDED
Tokyo
Exhibitions
The Ishibashi Foundation Collection now consists of approximately 3,000 works, including Impressionist paintings from the latter half of the nineteenth century, modern paintings from the twentieth century, modern Japanese paintings from the Meiji period on, postwar Abstract paintings, early modern art from Japan and elsewhere in East Asia, and ancient Greek and Roman art. Here we introduce, throughout the year, a variety of works selected from the collection. Special Section Matisse’s Studio Interiors were consistently important elements in paintings by Henri Matisse (1869-1954). Particularly from the 1940s on, his studio was a vitally important space, where daily life and creating came together. This exhibition, in connection with the acquisition of his Dancer and Rocaille Armchair, Black Background (1942), explores, through works in the Ishibashi Foundation Collection and from multiple viewpoints, the role of the studio in Matisse’s paintings.

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