黑料不打烊


TOP Collection: The Illumination of Life by Death

Jun 17, 2022 - Sep 25, 2022

The TOP Collection exhibition features masterpieces from the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum鈥檚 collection of over 36,000 works.

This year鈥檚 exhibition on the theme of memento mori presents around 150 photographs and related works that probe how people have lived resiliently in the face of death, seeding our imagination for how to move forward through difficult times.

 鈥淢emento mori,鈥 a Latin phrase meaning 鈥渞emember that you will die,鈥 was meant as a reminder that people鈥檚 daily lives unfolded in the shadow of death. As the plague ravaged the medieval Christian world between the 14th and 17th centuries, this trope became associated with images of the 鈥渄ance of death鈥 showing skeletons and humans dancing, and was widely depicted as part of paintings, music, and other works of art. Photography, as well, has often been described by critics as a medium that evokes death.

This exhibition reconsiders the intimate relationship between memento mori and photography through prints depicting death and photographs by Eug猫ne Atget, W. Eugene Smith, Robert Frank, Mario Giacomelli, and others spanning from the 19th century to the present.



The TOP Collection exhibition features masterpieces from the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum鈥檚 collection of over 36,000 works.

This year鈥檚 exhibition on the theme of memento mori presents around 150 photographs and related works that probe how people have lived resiliently in the face of death, seeding our imagination for how to move forward through difficult times.

 鈥淢emento mori,鈥 a Latin phrase meaning 鈥渞emember that you will die,鈥 was meant as a reminder that people鈥檚 daily lives unfolded in the shadow of death. As the plague ravaged the medieval Christian world between the 14th and 17th centuries, this trope became associated with images of the 鈥渄ance of death鈥 showing skeletons and humans dancing, and was widely depicted as part of paintings, music, and other works of art. Photography, as well, has often been described by critics as a medium that evokes death.

This exhibition reconsiders the intimate relationship between memento mori and photography through prints depicting death and photographs by Eug猫ne Atget, W. Eugene Smith, Robert Frank, Mario Giacomelli, and others spanning from the 19th century to the present.



Contact details

Sunday
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Tuesday - Wednesday
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Thursday - Friday
10:00 AM - 8:00 PM
Saturday
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
1-13-3 Mita Meguro-ku - Tokyo, Japan 153-0062
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