Ohara Museum of Art

E632896

The Ohara Museum of Art is a renowned private art museum in Kurashiki, Japan, best known for being the country’s first museum to permanently exhibit Western art, including works by major European masters.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Ohara Museum of Art canonical 1

Statements (57)

Predicate Object
instanceOf art museum
tourist attraction
architecturalStyle Western-style architecture
collectionType Japanese art
Western art
contemporary art
modern art
continent Asia
country Japan
exhibitsWorkBy Amedeo Modigliani NERFINISHED
Claude Monet NERFINISHED
Edgar Degas NERFINISHED
El Greco NERFINISHED
Fujishima Takeji NERFINISHED
Henri Matisse NERFINISHED
Hiraiwa Kōtarō NERFINISHED
Jackson Pollock NERFINISHED
Kandinsky NERFINISHED
Kuroda Seiki NERFINISHED
Marc Chagall NERFINISHED
Munakata Shikō NERFINISHED
Pablo Picasso NERFINISHED
Paul Gauguin NERFINISHED
Pierre-Auguste Renoir NERFINISHED
Rodin NERFINISHED
founder Magosaburō Ōhara NERFINISHED
hasCollection Bizen ware NERFINISHED
Egyptian antiquities
Greco-Roman antiquities
Islamic ceramics
Japanese folk art
Mingei movement works
Oriental art
crafts
paintings
prints
sculptures
hasPart Annex
Asian Art Gallery NERFINISHED
Crafts Gallery NERFINISHED
Greco-Roman Gallery NERFINISHED
Main Gallery NERFINISHED
Rodin’s Garden NERFINISHED
inception 1930
languageOfWorkOrName Japanese
locatedIn Bikan Historical Quarter NERFINISHED
Honshu
Kurashiki NERFINISHED
Okayama Prefecture NERFINISHED
namedAfter Magosaburō Ōhara NERFINISHED
notableFor location in Kurashiki Bikan Historical Quarter
pioneering Western art collection in Japan
openingDate 1930
operatedBy Ohara Foundation NERFINISHED
owner Ohara Foundation NERFINISHED
publicAccess yes
significantEvent first museum in Japan to permanently exhibit Western art

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan hasMuseum Ohara Museum of Art
subject surface form: Kurashiki