The Mitsubishi Ichigokan Museum in Tokyo is presenting an exhibition devoted to the role of cafés in the emergence of modern European art between the late nineteenth century and the early decades of the twentieth. The exhibition reconstructs the cultural context in which these places became sites of encounter, exchange, and experimentation for artists seeking new forms of expression outside official institutions. Between Paris, Barcelona, and other European cities, cafés established themselves as informal centres of artistic life. Painters, illustrators, and writers frequented them not merely as places of leisure, but as true social laboratories. Figures such as Édouard Manet, Vincent van Gogh, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Pablo Picasso found in these environments a privileged vantage point on urban modernity, shaped by conversation, solitude, movement, and fleeting relationships. The exhibition brings together paintings, drawings, prints, and posters that depict life in cafés, cabarets, and nightlife venues. The works reveal how these spaces influenced themes, compositions, and visual languages, fostering the shift from realism to impressionism and opening the way to the experiments of the early twentieth century. The café scene thus emerges as a recurring motif, capable of condensing the relationship between art and everyday life. Alongside the major figures of French art, the exhibition also considers less familiar but equally significant contexts, such as the experience of artistic cafés in Spain, where meeting places modelled on the Parisian example contributed to the formation of new generations of artists. In these environments, networks of relationships developed that transcended national borders and encouraged the rapid circulation of ideas and styles.
The National Museum of Western Art presents the complete series of Hokusai’s Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji from the Iuchi Collection. The prints depict Fuji as a shifting presence, seen from multiple viewpoints and embedded in everyday life. A unified project that reshaped the visual language of landscape.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum presents an exhibition devoted to Marimekko, revisiting its history through the art of printmaking. Fabrics, garments, and graphic materials trace a visual language built on pattern and colour. The exhibition connects design, production, and everyday life.
The National Museum of Art in Tokyo presents an exhibition devoted to Eric Carle, a key figure in twentieth-century picture books. The show traces his career through original works and working materials. The exhibition highlights the picture book as an autonomous artistic practice.