The exhibition Impressionist Interiors: Intimacy, Decoration, Modernity at the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo offers a poetic journey through around one hundred works from the Musée d'Orsay and other international collections, exploring how Impressionist artists transformed domestic interiors into spaces of introspection, decorative aesthetics, and modern experimentation. Among the featured masterpieces are The Kitchen Table by Paul Cézanne, which turns an everyday object into the focal point of an innovative composition, and The Tub by Edgar Degas, where the elevated perspective and intimate depiction of a woman engaged in personal care redefine the relationship between subject, setting, and viewer. The exhibition highlights how artists such as Monet, Renoir, and Pissarro used light, decorative patterns, and spatial compositions to depict the private lives of the urban bourgeoisie between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, turning rooms, parlors, and domestic corners into expressive environments that reflect desire, modernity, and social transformation. Interiors are presented as places where functionality and beauty coexist, where human presence is suggested rather than directly portrayed, giving each space a sense of suspended intimacy between lived reality and aesthetic aspiration. Through this intersection of art and everyday life, the exhibition underscores the tension between private space and artistic innovation: each work becomes a bridge between bourgeois intimacy and the modern transformation of domestic life, offering a renewed perspective on Impressionist interiors and the way they mirrored evolving habits, tastes, and domestic identity in Paris at the time.