Stranger Gaze. Japanese Artists in Europe

Stranger Gaze. Japanese Artists in Europe
#Exhibitions
Masamune Tokusaburo, Fresh Verdure, 1915, Artizon Museum | Courtesy © Ishibashi Foundation

It begins with a simple and unstable condition: being a stranger. In Tokyo, at the Artizon Museum, the exhibition Stranger’s Gaze follows Japanese artists who, from the late nineteenth century onward, arrived in Europe and found themselves looking at a world that was not their own. After the Meiji Restoration, travel to the West became a necessary step. For painters, it meant encountering major works firsthand, but also confronting a different system of techniques, rules and hierarchies. The exhibition brings together works created during these stays: academic studies, copies made in museums, portraits and plein air landscapes. These are not finished statements but tools of learning, attempts, exercises. Precisely for this reason, they become direct records of a gaze in formation. Artists such as Kuroda Seiki, Fujishima Takeji, Yasui Sotaro and Tsuguharu Foujita mark a decisive moment in the modernization of Japanese painting. In their works, Europe is not simply a model to absorb, but a site of tension, where perception shifts, adjusts and sometimes resists. The title echoes the word étranger, used by Shimazaki Toson to describe a condition that is as much existential as geographical: being out of place, and therefore seeing differently. Rather than narrating influence, the exhibition traces a movement. There is no single direction, but a series of crossings in which the encounter with the West produces images that are neither fully Japanese nor simply European. It is within this in-between space that a new gaze emerges.

Veronica Azzari - © 2026 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo