Exhibition Posters 1952 - 2015
A selection of posters from earlier Bridgestone Museum of Art exhibitions, illustrating how their design reflects the times.
1950s

Opening Exhibition of the Bridgestone Gallery
(1952.1.11 - 3.30)© 2021- Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
Opening Exhibition. Following the opening ceremony on May 8, the museum opened to the public on May 11. The exhibition included 55 paintings by Monet, Cézanne, and other Western artists, 55 modern Japanese Western-style paintings, and 9 sculptures.

Some Newly Discovered Ukiyo-e Prints: The Impressionists and Ukiyo-e
(1952.10.14 - 10.19)This exhibition featured 58 works by 20 artists, including Sharaku, Hokusai, and Hiroshige. Almost all were from a private collection in Tokyo and had never been exhibited.
The exhibition was also presented in a way to highlight the relationship between French Impressionism and Ukiyo-e.

Paintings Formerly in the Matsukata Collection
(1953.3.24 - 5.10)Exhibition held to commemorate the third anniversary of the death of the great Western art collector Matsukata Kojiro. It included 58 oils and pastels (60 or more, according to the catalogue). It attracted great interest for displaying many Impressionist masterworks for the first time in 30 years.

Paintings from the Fujiyama Collection
(1954.9.7 - 10.3)53 works by Western and modern Japanese Western-style painters from the collection of entrepreneur, later politician, Fujiyama Aiichiro. Widely acclaimed, this exhibition included works by Renoir, Matisse, and Picasso alongside works by Koide Narashige and Yasui Sotaro.

Aoki Shigeru Retrospective Exhibition
(1954.10.5 - 10.31)78 works from our collection, showcasing in particular A Gift of the Sea and Paradise Under the Sea. The first postwar retrospective of Aoki's art, it traced connections among his surviving works. The exhibition also included two Saturday lectures. The instructors for the first were Aoki's orphaned son, the musician Fukuda Rando, and Aoki's friend the artist Masamune Tokusaburo; the instructor for the second was Kawakita Michiaki, who had continued to conduct research on Aoki since before World War II.

Paintings Formerly in the Fukushima Collection
(1955.4.5 - 5.1)This exhibition reconstituted the collection of Fukushima Shigetaro, a Japanese collector of French modern art. There were a total of 63 works in the exhibition. At the Saturday Lecture, a discussion was organized among Mr. and Mrs. Fukushima Shigetaro and Umehara Ryuzaburo.

Hiraga Kamesuke: A Japanese Painter in France
(1955.4.20 - 4.28)In 1906 Hiraga immigrated to America. Then in 1925 he moved to France, where he lived for most of his life. For this solo exhibition organized by our museum, he returned to Japan for the first time in fifty years. Among the works on display was The Streets of Old Paris, with which he became the first Japanese awarded a gold medal at the Salon in France. Ishibashi Shojiro added it to his collection because of the artist's wish that it finds a home in Japan.

Contemporary Italian Art
(1955.9.15 - 10.9)© SIAE, Rome & JASPAR, Tokyo, 2021 C3728
75 works (oils, tempera) by 10 Italian artists including Mario Sironi, Giorgio de Chirico, Massimo Campigli, and Renato Guttuso. The Troubadour by de Chirico, acquired by the museum in 1962, was shown for the first time in Japan at this exhibition.

2nd Exhibition of Paintings Formerly in the Matsukata Collection
(1955.11.8 - 12.4)This exhibition, held 5 years after the death of Matsukata Kojiro, also celebrated the visit to Japan by the French architect Le Corbusier, who designed the National Museum of Western Art, which had acquired the Matsukata Collection.

1st Exhibition of the Groupe Franco-Japonais de l'Art Concret
(1956.7.3 - 8.4)Organized with support from the French Embassy, it included paintings in oils, pastels, and gouaches as well as sketches, dry lacquer carvings, lithographs, copperplate engravings, and other works by Paul Augustin Aizpiri, Hayashi Takeshi, Hasegawa Kiyoshi, and others.

Recent Works in France and Italy by Umehara Ryuzaburo
(1957.1.22 - 2.24)In 1952, Umehara, who had been invited to become an international judge for the first postwar Venice Biennale, moved to Europe, where he frequently pursued his art during trips to various European countries.This exhibition included 38 new landscapes painted between June of the previous year and the spring of the year in which the exhibition was held during visits to Naples, Venice, Antibes and Cannes.

Previously Unexhibited Works from Private Collections
(1957.2.26 - 3.24)This exhibition included 29 paintings (oils, watercolors, sketches), 19 prints (all lithographs), and 7 sculptures (bronze, marble, wood), 55 works in all, from private collections around Japan. Also included were a dozen or so works, including Degas pastels and bronze, and Greek sculptures purchased by Ishibashi Shojiro at the end of the previous year and shown for the first time in Japan.

Koide Narashige Memorial Exhibition
(1957.3.26 - 4.21)This exhibit included Koide Narashige’s Tokyo School of the Arts graduation work, Silver Fan (collection of the preparatory office for the Osaka City Museum of Fine Arts), The Family Portrait of N (Ohara Art Museum), and other masterworks as well as his last work Landscape with Withered Tree, for a total of 59 oil paintings, 4 watercolors, 8 sketches, 11 paintings on glass, and 7 works in India ink, 89 in all. This exhibition inspired the acquisition of Self-Portrait with a Hat for our collection.

Morris Graves
(1957.6.4 - 7.20)Morris Graves, a painter active on the US West Coast, was inspired during his visits to Japan and other parts of East Asia to produce works deeply influenced by his interest in Asia. This exhibition featured 40 of his favorites, with special attention paid to 10 from the collection of the Seattle Art Museum.

Folding Screens by Munakata Shiko
(1957.6.18 - 6.30)Venue: Lecture Hall
This exhibition featured the prints that suddenly brought Munakata into the limelight when shown at the Sao Paulo Biennale (1955) and Venice Biennale (1956). The complete series of 10 panels for folding screens were displayed unfolded.

[2nd Exhibition of]Works by Yamamoto Toyoichi
(1957.7.2 - 7.12)Venue: Lecture Hall
This second exhibition followed the first in 1955. Only one sculpture, Face of a Girl, was in bronze. The other 16 were all made using dry lacquer techniques. Included were works from the Bath, Bathing Woman, and Etude series.

Prints by Picasso
(1957.9.10 - 10.9)© 2021- Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
This exhibition consisted of 46 copperplate engravings from the Vollard Suite, created in the 1930s, and 99 lithographs from 1945 on. It toured 10 museums, but its exhibition at our museum alone also included 4 works from the collection and 2 oil paintings on deposit with us.

Thomas George
(1957.10.1 - 10.10)Venue: Lecture Hall
This solo exhibition showcased the work of Thomas George, an American painter living in Kyoto, who had moved to Japan in the autumn of 1956. The artist was introduced by art critic Kubo Sadajiro. The exhibition included 20 oils painted while the artist was living in Japan (1956, 1957), together with several gouaches and sketches. Night Image, one of these works, was donated to the museum.

Exhibition of Paul Klee's Paintings and Prints
(1958.10.1 - 11.2)This exhibition brought together 17 works by Klee in collections in Japan. To introduce his highly varied creative output more fully, the exhibition also include 26 reproductions as well. While small in scale, the exhibition achieved a major media response.

Exhibition Celebrating the Re-opening of the Renovated Museum
(1959.5.10 - )The total renovation of the museum, the first since it opened, was completed. The total floor space of the museum was expanded from 1,320㎡ to 2,413㎡. A museum-only entrance was located on the Yaesu Avenue side of the Bridgestone Building, its presence signaled by Victoria, a marble sculpture by Christian Daniel Rauch, installed outside the entrance.
1960s

5th Exhibition of Yasui Award Candidates / Yasui Sotaro Memorial Exhibition
(1961.12.5 - 12.24)This exhibition was held at the Bridgestone Museum of Art, since the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo was closed for renovation. 70 of 100 representational oil paintings submitted by 56 artists were displayed, and Takahashi Shu’s Moon and Path was awarded the Yasui Prize. Since this was the 5th annual Yasui Prize, 21 works by Yasui Sotaro were also exhibited.

Masterpieces from the Collection: Works Selected for Exhibition in Paris
(1962.2.27 - 3.25)This exhibition presented 50 works (of which 8 were on deposit from the Matsukata and other collections) shown at the La Peinture française de Corot à Braque dans la Collection Ishibashi de Tokyo (the so-called Return to Paris exhibition at the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris in 1962.

La Peinture Française de Corot à Braque dans la Collection Ishibashi de Tôkyô
(1962.5.4 - 6.24)Venue: Musée National d'Art Moderne
The first overseas exhibition of the Ishibashi Collection was held in 1962 at the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris. Called “the homecoming exhibition,” it elicited a huge response in France.

Paintings Formerly in the Fukushima Collection
(1966.4.19 - 5.29)This exhibition held in connection with the 7th anniversary of the death of art critic Fukushima Shigetaro included 49 works, with a primary focus on Rouault. Matisse, and Derain, together with the French and English-language art magazine Formes published by Fukushima. It showcased the many-sided talents of this eminent art critic and stimulated reassessment of the sharpness of his critical gaze in numerous publications.

Fujishima Takeji Retrospective Exhibition
(1967.4.27 - 5.28)Featuring 170 paintings, as well as illustrated books and photographs, the biggest Fujishima exhibition held up to that time, it featured works which have not been exhibited since, including Sweet Fragrance, Rising Sun Illuminating the Six Steps and Memorial Sketchbook for Butterflies.

Asai Chu Retrospective Exhibition
(1969.11.1 - 12.7)This exhibition of around 180 of the works of Asai Chu—the largest exhibition to be held in Tokyo since the painter’s death—presented an opportunity to gather together the entire body of his work and, in particular, to reappraise his bright and colorful watercolors.
1970s

The Museum's Twentieth Anniversary Exhibition: Aoki Shigeru
(1972.4.22 - 6.4)This was the biggest Aoki exhibition ever held at the time with a total of 215 works, including 69 oil paintings, 23 watercolors, 100 sketches, and 22 additional works such as Karuta. This exhibition, which lasted 38 days, attracted 50,000 visitors.

The Museum's Twentieth Anniversary Exhibition: Aoki Shigeru
(1972.4.22 - 6.4)This was the biggest Aoki exhibition ever held at the time with a total of 215 works, including 69 oil paintings, 23 watercolors, 100 sketches, and 22 additional works such as Karuta. This exhibition, which lasted 38 days, attracted 50,000 visitors.

Kuniyoshi Yasuo Retrospective Exhibition
(1975.9.6 - 10.26)This retrospective was a traveling exhibition that was held in 3 different countries: the United States, Japan (Tokyo, Nagoya and Kobe), and Canada. The 160 works on show, which included oil paintings, caseins, sketches and prints, covered every aspect of Kuniyoshi's art.

Kuniyoshi Yasuo Retrospective Exhibition
(1975.9.6 - 10.26)This retrospective was a traveling exhibition that was held in 3 different countries: the United States, Japan (Tokyo, Nagoya and Kobe), and Canada. The 160 works on show, which included oil paintings, caseins, sketches and prints, covered every aspect of Kuniyoshi's art.

The museum's Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Exhibition: Aoki Shigeru, Sakamoto Hanjiro, and Their Circle
(1977.10.8 - 11.13)The Ishibashi Museum of Art’s closure for expansion and renovation was the occasion for a special exhibition to commemorate the 25th anniversary with works by Aoki Shigeru, Sakamoto Hanjiro, and other modern Japanese Western-style artists.
A group of works from the Ishibashi Museum of Art was supplemented by 10 or more from our collection.

Yasui Sotaro Retrospective Exhibition
(1978.4.29 - 6.11)Yasui Sotaro established his own unique and modern style of realism in the world of Japanese Western-style painting. This was the first large-scale retrospective of Yasui’s works with the exception of an exhibition held soon after his death some 20 years earlier.
1980s

Masterpieces from the Hiroshima Museum of Art
(1981.1.31 - 3.8)For this exhibition, the Bridgestone Museum of Art and the Hiroshima Museum of Art lent each other works from their Western modern art collections (including some works held on deposit at the Bridgestone Museum of Art) to hold simultaneous exhibitions on a similar scale featuring 81 oils, watercolors and pastels ranging from Delacroix and the Barbizon School, to the Impressionists, Matisse, Picasso, and Buffet.

Bridgestone Museum of Art Thirtieth Anniversary Exhibition: Italian Drawings from the Galleria degli Uffizi
(1982.3.13 - 4.11)Including works by Renaissance masters such as Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael, the exhibition provided a comprehensive overview of Italian drawing from the 15th to the 17th century.

Bridgestone Museum of Art Thirtieth Anniversary Exhibition: Revolution in Figurative Painting from Cézanne to Present Day
(1982.4.18 - 5.16)The theme of the exhibition was landscape. It featured some 60 works by painters who were active in France from the early years of the 20th century until the 1980s, including non-French artists such as Picasso and Fujita Tsuguharu.

Shigeru Aoki and the Late Victorian Art
(1983.4.29 - 5.29)English art from the latter half of the 19th century had considerable influence on Japanese Western-style painting around the turn of the century. This exhibition was the first attempt to demonstrate the relationship by hanging their works side-by-side with the Pre-Raphaelites. It included a total of 86 works: 50 by Aoki.

Masters of Modern Japanese Western-style Painting and French Painters
(1983.9.15 - 10.23)This exhibition focused on 3 specific master-pupil relationships, displaying their works side-by-side: Collin and Kuroda Seiki, Kume Keiichiro; Laurens and Kanokogi Takeshiro, Nakamura Fusetsu; and Cormon, Carolus-Duran and Fujishima Takeji.

Harue Koga: The Development of a Japanese Avant-Garde Painter
(1986.5.24 - 6.29)This exhibition featuring watercolors and 47 oil paintings, 103 works in all, examined how Koga Harue evolved as his art changed in response to the cumulative influences of Cézanne, Cubism, Expressionism, Constructivism, Klee and Surrealism.

Gustave Courbet
(1989.6.3 - 8.6)Thanks to the cooperation of the Musée d'Orsay, as well as other museums in Japan and overseas, this was the first Japanese exhibition to provide a comprehensive introduction to Courbet.The 56 day exhibition was seen by more than 170,000 visitors, setting a new attendance record.
1990s

Masterpieces from the Collection of the Menard Art Museum
(1990.5.26 - 7.8)This exhibition featured 111 works by 59 artists (17 modern Western paintings, 7 modern Western sculptures, 63 modern Japanese Western-style paintings, 19 Japanese paintings and 5 modern Japanese sculptures) selected from the more than 1,000 works collected by the Menard Art Museum during its twenty-year history. The selected works were from areas in which the Menard and Bridgestone collections overlap.

Masterworks: Paintings from the Bridgestone Museum of Art
(1990.10.14 - 1.20)Venue: Tennessee State Museum
Because the headquarters of Bridgestone Americas, Inc., is located in Tennessee, the Tennessee State Museum organized an exhibition of art from the Bridgestone Museum of Art collection. The exhibition included 58 oils by modern Western artists, to which 2 works by Kuniyoshi Yasuo were added, for a total of 60 works.

Aoki Shigeru
(1995.6.30 - 9.24)This exhibition, which included 20 works from the Ishibashi Museum of Art collection and 2 works from the Bridgestone Museum of Art collection, presented works including Self-Portrait, Seascape (Mera), Onamuchi-no-mikoto, and Paradise Under the Sea. It provided a rare opportunity to see almost the whole of the Ishibashi Foundation collection Aoki’s work in Tokyo.

Monticelli:
From the Collection of Mr.Tanimoto Hiroaki
(1995.9.27 - 12.21)
This special exhibition was devoted to the work of Adolphe Monticelli, inviting reconsideration of this artist, whose work spanned 19th century Romanticism, Symbolism, and 20th century Expressionism. 48 exemplary works from the 100 collected by Monticelli collector Tanimoto Hiroaki were included in this exhibition.

Starting Anew in the Meiji Period : A Retrospective Exhibition of Paintings from the Hakubakai Group 1896-1911
(1996.10.19 - 11.28)Held to mark the 100th anniversary of the Hakubakai's founding, this exhibition examined what the significance of this group of artists was.
The exhibition featured a total of 136 works: 100 oil paintings, 4 watercolors, 1 pastel, 1 mosaic, 18 works in charcoal, and 12 woodcut prints.

Self-Portraits of Koide Narashige
(1998.1.14 - 3.29)This exhibition brought together all 8 existing oil self-portraits of Koide Narashige, based around Self-Portrait with a Hat (Bridgestone Museum of Art) and The Family Portrait of N. (Ohara Museum of Art), and sought to examine what the portraits meant for the painter himself.

Subjects and Images : Iconography of Classical Myths and Christian Legends
(1999.1.13 - 4.25)This exhibition featured a total of 74 works, some on loan and some from the Bridgestone Museum of Art's permanent collection, but all dealing with mythological and classical themes.The aim of the exhibition was to help the audience understand the iconography of the art.
2000s

L’Estampe originale
(2000.3.7 - 6.4)L’Estampe originale was a portfolio of prints that was published between 1893 and 1895 in Paris. Of the 95 prints L’Estampe originale published, the exhibition featured 88 prints by 74 different artists, sculptors and print-makers. The exhibition also featured a further 10 prints from an earlier portfolio of the same name published in 1888, making for a total of 98 works.

Koga Harue: Exploring the Origins of his Art through His Works and Materials
(2001.4.28 - 7.1)This exhibition was built around a core of paintings
belonging to the Ishibashi Museum of Art. Consisting of 81 works, including drawings, sketchbooks and notebooks,
it showed the creative process of this avant-garde artist.

Bridgestone Museum of Art Fiftieth Anniversary Exhibition: Ishibashi Shojiro, Art Collector: From Aoki Shigeru and Sakamoto Hanjiro to Western Art
(2002.1.8 - 3.21)The Bridgestone Museum of Art and the Ishibashi Museum of Art conducted special research, both documentary and interview-based, on the formation of Ishibashi Shojiro’s art collection. This Exhibition featured the 34 Japanese Western-style paintings most of which belong to the Ishibashi Museum of Art. In the permanent collection space, 144 major works of the Bridgestone Museum of Art (excluding works on paper) were exhibited.

Léon Spilliaert
(2003.4.9 - 6.6)The first major exhibition in Japan devoted to the work of Léon Spilliaert, this exhibition focused on work from his most creative period (1900-1913). It displayed nearly 90 of his works on paper borrowed from the collections of Belgian museums and private collectors.

Yamashita Shintaro Exhibition
(2004.4.9 - 6.6)This exhibition brought together approximately 80 superb works by Yamashita Shintaro, including paintings regarded as his masterpieces. It offered a comprehensive view of his work in the field of painting, including his collecting and repairing picture frames.

Masterly Visions From Manet, Monet and Renoir to Twentieth-Century Art
(2004.6.11 - 10.3)This exhibition included 130 oils, prints, watercolors, and 7 drawings, and 4 sculptures, 141 works in all. Rarely shown works were combined with masterpieces to demonstrate the appeal and distinctive character of our museum’s collection.

ZAO Wou-Ki
(2004.10.16 - 2005.1.16)This exhibition aims to provide a retrospective of Zo Wou-ki’s work, tracing its increase in expressive strength from the early years right up to the present day. On show are some 70 works in different media - oil, watercolor, India ink drawings and prints - with a nucleus of 15 pieces from the Bridgestone Museum collection, as well as works from museums and private collections in France, Asia and the United States.

The Impressionists and 20th-Century Masters:
From Monet and Renoir to Picasso
(2005.1.25 - 7.10)© 2021 - Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
This exhibition introduced the unique qualities and appeal of masters of Impressionism, 20th century art and Japanese Western-style painting, mainly through works in the Bridgestone Museum of Art.

Two by Two Paris, Couples, and Lovers in Art
(2005.7.16 - 9.11)© ADAGP, Paris & JASPAR, Tokyo, 2021 Chagall® C3728
People in pairs have been a popular motif throughout the history of art. Two by Two comprised a total of 80 works in oil, watercolor, sculpture and print, the majority from the collection, with loans from other Japanese museums.

Aoki Shigeru: A Good Catch
(2005.9.17 - 10.10)Aoki's masterpiece, A Gift of the Sea, has achieved widespread popularity in Japan due to the richness of its mythological subject matter, and its approachable monumentality. This exhibition also provided an opportunity to see some 20 of Aoki Shigeru's masterpieces together.

Impressionism and 20th-Century Art
(2005.10.15 - 2006.3.26)This exhibition featured an outstanding group of masterpieces from the Bridgestone Museum of Art. It introduced the collection's appealing and distinctive character in an easy-to-understand way. In addition, in celebrating this year as the 50th anniversary after Yasui Sotaro passed away, we exhibited 10 works of the artist from the collection of Ishibashi Foundation.

From Sesshu to Pollock: An Exhibition Marking the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Ishibashi Foundation
(2006.4.8 - 6.4)From classical Chinese and Japanese paintings and calligraphy to the Impressionists, Picasso, Matisse and over 10 newly acquired 20th century works, this exhibition presented the Ishibashi Foundation’s collection in all its diversity and dynamism.

From Sesshu to Pollock: An Exhibition Marking the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Ishibashi Foundation
(2006.4.8 - 6.4)From classical Chinese and Japanese paintings and calligraphy to the Impressionists, Picasso, Matisse and over 10 newly acquired 20th century works, this exhibition presented the Ishibashi Foundation’s collection in all its diversity and dynamism.

Sakamoto Hanjiro: An Exhibition Marking the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Ishibashi Museum of Art
(2006.6.16 - 7.8)Made up of 150 paintings and 20 materials, this exhibitionーthe first major Sakamoto retrospective for 24 yearsーpresented a comprehensive view of the oeuvre of this most dedicated artist.

Masterpieces from the Collection From Impressionism to Twentieth-Century Art
(2007.1.2 - 4.8)© 2021 - Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
This exhibition featured an outstanding group of masterpieces from the Bridgestone Museum of Art. The roughly 150 works included paintings by Impressionists Monet and Renoir, and such modern artists as Matisse, Picasso, Pollock.

Masterpieces from the Collection From Impressionism to Twentieth-Century Art
(2007.4.10 - 7.16)The second exhibition held under the 'Look Closely' theme featured masterpieces from the Bridgestone Museum of Art collection including a wide range of art from the Impressionists to the 20th century, newly adding works by Modigliani, Picasso, and Fujita. 2 newly acquired works were also shown for the first time.

Aoki Shigeru: Sea and Mith and the Masterpieces from the Collection
(2007.7.18 - 9.30)A Gift of the Sea came to Tokyo. A total of 6 works by Aoki Shigeru, also including Paradise Under the Sea were shown together with other Impressionists and 20th-century works from the Bridgestone Museum of Art collection.

New Horizons, the collection of the Ishibashi Foundation
(2008.2.9 - 4.13)An exhibition of the Bridgestone Museum of Art's collection, with art from early 20th century to the present, it showed, for the first time, about 20 works newly added to the collection, by Kandinsky, Leger, Domoto, Shiraga, and others.

Oka Shikanosuke-Variations in Serenity
(2008.4.26 - 7.6)This exhibition spanned the career of the figurative painter Oka Shikanosuke with works from his early years to his very last paintings. To display his oeuvre, the works have been grouped along 9 themes that continued to occupy Oka during his artistic career.

Paris Passages-The changing faces of Paris
(2008.10.25 - 2009.1.18)This exhibition presented 50 works from the Bridgestone Museum of Art collection that show Paris in the latter half of the 19th century. These artists wandered the Paris streets and depicted the city, each from his own distinctive, modernist perspective.

Selections from the Collection: From Impressionism to Abstract Paintings
(2009.1.24 - 4.12)© ADAGP, Paris & JASPAR, Tokyo, 2021 Chagall® C3728
This exhibition presented some 180 works selected from the collection of the Bridgestone Museum of Art. They included examples ranging from the Impressionists to contemporary artists, with paintings and sculptures by Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani, Paul Klee, Jackson Pollock, Fujishima Takeji, Fujita Tsuguharu, and other prominent artists.

Portraits by Yasui Sotaro
(2009.10.31 - 2010.1.17)This exhibition included important portraits by Yasui Sotaro, plus sketches and documentary photographs, in an exploration of his creative processes, his interactions with his models, and the influence of his relationships with those who commissioned his work.
2010s

Henry Moore-Forms of Life
(2010.7.31 - 10.17)This exhibition introduced, in addition to 6 sculptures, 40 works on paper, including pastel, watercolors, and lithographs. The exhibition includes works on paper addressing the Reclining Figure and Mother and Child themes that Moore pursued throughout his life.

Aoki Shigeru: Myth, Sea and Love
(2011.7.17 - 9.4)The first major Aoki Shigeru retrospective in 39 years, this exhibition presented 50 oil paintings and 150 watercolors and sketches, 200 works in all. It also introduced Aoki’s brief life and changes in the evaluation of Aoki’s work in the century since his untimely death.

Ishibashi Collection Selected
for the Exhibition in Paris, Spring, 1962
(2012.1.7 - 3.18)© 2021 - Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
In 1962, the first exhibition introducing the Ishibashi Collection abroad (La Peinture française de Corot à Braque dans la Collection Ishibashi de Tokyo) took place at the Musée National d’Art Moderne in Paris. This exhibition could be considered one of the starting points of our museum collection, which continued to grow, and was introduced here together with references dating from those days.

The Bridgestone Museum of Art at Sixty:
You’ve Got to See These Paintings
(2012.3.31 - 6.24)© 2021 - Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
January of 2012 was the 60th anniversary of the opening of the Bridgestone Museum of Art, Ishibashi Foundation. Reaching that milestone had inspired us to select a hundred of the masterworks in our collection. For this special exhibition, the works were organized by genre and subject matter into 11 thematic categories.

Debussy, Music and the Arts
(2012.7.14 - 10.14)This exhibition focused on Debussy’s relationships with Impressionism, Symbolism, Japonisme, and other currents in the arts to present 19th century French art in a newly compelling way, by presenting about 150 works, the majority lent by the Musée d’Orsay and the Musée de l’Orangerie or from the museum’s own collection, in addition to works borrowed from other collections in Japan and abroad.

Art Walk: Selections from the Collection
of the Bridgestone Museum of Art"
(2012.10.26 - 12.24)
Presented in this exhibition were approximately 170 works from the collection of the Bridgestone Museum of Art. The main focus lay on the development of Western art from Impressionism to the 20th century featuring works.

Through Japanese Eyes: Paris, 1900–1945
(2013.3.23 - 6.9)After the Meiji Restoration, learning from Western culture and then surpassing it became one of Japan’s goals. From the collections , we have selected 35 works depicting Paris by Asai Chu, Fujita Tsuguharu (Léonard Foujita) and Saeki Yuzo and so on.

The Color of Vision, the Color of Joy:Redon’s Dreams, Matisse’s Jazz…
(2013.6.22 - 9.18)With “The color” as our key phrase, presenting 170 works from the collection, included 20 prints from Matisse’s Jazz, an artist’s book he published late in his life, as well as Dreams (In the memory of my friend Armand Clauvaud), a group of lithographs by Redon recently added to the museum’s collection, and watercolors by Inokuma Gen’ichiro.

Chinese-Style Dresses: From Fujishima Takeji to Umehara Ryuzaburo
(2014.04.26 - 7.21)This exhibition presented 30 works depicting women in Chinese-style dress produced by Japanese Western-style painters between 1910 and 1940. Visitors were invited to enjoy exploring how they illustrate the growing maturity of Japanese Western-style painting during that period.

Time and the Painting-24 Episodes
(2014.8.2 - 9.23)This exhibition focused on time, a transitory element that slips in and out of view in paintings. The exhibition included some 160 works ranging from ancient art to Rembrandt, modern and contemporary art, and other Impressionists, and modern art from Japan.

Willem de Kooning From the John
and Kimiko Powers Collection
(2014.10.8 - 2015.1.12)© 2021 The Willem de Kooning Foundation, New York/ARS, New York/JASPAR, Tokyo C3728
In this exhibition, paintings from the John and Kimiko Powers Collection were joined by oil paintings, water colors, and sketches by de Kooning from Japanese museums’ collections, for a total of 35 works in all.

Best of the Best
(2015.1.31 − 5.17)© 2021- Succession Pablo Picasso - BCF(JAPAN)
The Bridgestone Museum of Art closed for reconstruction in May of 2015, to reopen several years later. This exhibition was the last before we close. For our Best of the Best exhibition, we have chosen 160 works. The exhibition includes a special corner introducing the Bridgestone Museum of Art’s 63-year history.

Best of the Best
(2015.1.31 − 5.17)The Bridgestone Museum of Art closed for reconstruction in May of 2015, to reopen several years later. This exhibition was the last before we close. For our Best of the Best exhibition, we have chosen 160 works. The exhibition includes a special corner introducing the Bridgestone Museum of Art’s 63-year history.