It is a museum made using the Japanese-style rooms and warehouses of the townhouses in the early Showa period, which are rare now. I also enjoyed planning art for people with disabilities.
I heard a lecture about Art Bruit elsewhere and learned about it. Some of them are very good works, some are not. It was fun to be quiet in front of the work completed in a detailed process that ordinary people cannot do. Since the size of the museum is small, the ratio of each work is large as an element that determines the impression of the museum itself. The reason itself is to say that both the choice and the viewer want to abandon the viewpoint of the art of the handicapped ...
Rather than Miyujiam, it's like a Machiya gallery. A place where you can stop by at a low price and meet the works you are interested in every time. There are many art books on the second floor, and you can browse them leisurely in front of Chabudai. The staff were also smiling and politely talked about borderless art writers.
Unreal
Not an art fan at all, but spent 3.5 hours here and could have stayed longer. Wife and 2 sons in their late 20s equally loved it. Incredible!
Always worth a switch
Beautiful, well-renoved, traditional Japanese house with interesting exchange exhibitions and the subject of inclusion.
I felt a new warm old knowledge.
It is a museum made using the Japanese-style rooms and warehouses of the townhouses in the early Showa period, which are rare now. I also enjoyed planning art for people with disabilities.
I want to go again.
I heard a lecture about Art Bruit elsewhere and learned about it. Some of them are very good works, some are not. It was fun to be quiet in front of the work completed in a detailed process that ordinary people cannot do. Since the size of the museum is small, the ratio of each work is large as an element that determines the impression of the museum itself. The reason itself is to say that both the choice and the viewer want to abandon the viewpoint of the art of the handicapped ...
Miyujiam melts into town like a hideaway
Rather than Miyujiam, it's like a Machiya gallery. A place where you can stop by at a low price and meet the works you are interested in every time. There are many art books on the second floor, and you can browse them leisurely in front of Chabudai. The staff were also smiling and politely talked about borderless art writers.