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Since ancient times, Japanese have taken advantage of locally growing trees and plants in their daily lives, constructing homes from pillars and beams of cedar or cypress wood, thatching their roofs with susuki grass and yoshi reeds, and weaving mats from soft reeds for flooring.

This exhibition focuses attention on the plants that support traditional Japanese architecture and the craft techniques that were developed, particularly from the point of view of plant science and architecture.

Highlights

01 Architecture

Enjoy large-scale models of wooden architecture

See up-close models of kigumi woodwork, kayabuki thatching, hiwadabuki cypress bark roofing, and kokerabuki bark roofing. The roofing models show the internal structure of the roofing type for easy understanding of the procedure and parts that make up the roof. The displays offer a deeper appreciation of the fine points of professional roofers’ skills.

02 Plants

The Plants Used in Architecture

A wide variety of plants are introduced from the sugi cedar, hinoki cypress, and pine used for building to the bamboo used for the internal structure of earth-plastered walls and interior woodwork, the gama bulrush woven for ceilings, the igusa rush woven mats used for tatami flooring, and susuki grass and yoshi reeds used for thatching.

03 Commentaries on the Exhibits

The Bounty of Nature Illustrated

Lifestyles in Japan have long been sustained by the bounty of nature and its cyclical use in rural areas. The displays explain visually the close connections between local forests and kaya thatch-growing fields and the settlements of local farmers. Here is a chance to reflect on the relationship between nature and humans in the past and today, and what it might be from now on.

04 Woodworking

Professional Crafts that are Being Passed Down

Along with the exhibits, here we introduce the fine points of the skills and lore accumulated by craftspeople in the practical use of materials and tools through photographs and videos.

05 Special Exhibit

Ise Shrine’s Kaya Fields

Every twenty years, the Ise Jingu Shrine sanctuaries are rebuilt in a ceremony known as shikinen sengū. Fields of grass (kayachi) used for renewing the thatch on the shrine roofs covering about 100 hectares extend over the hills in Kawaguchi, Mie prefecture. A video introduces these kaya fields and the way they are being maintained.

Exhibition

Outline

TOKYO

National Museum of Nature and Science, Japan Pavilion

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Location
7-20 Ueno Koen, Taito-ku, Tokyo 110-8718
Hours
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
(entry until 30 minutes before closing)
Admission
Adults and University students ¥630 (¥510 for groups), free

TOKYO

KOBE

Takenaka Carpentry Tools Museum

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Location
7-5-1, Kumochicho, Chuo-ku, Kobe-shi, Hyogo 651-0056
Hours
9:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
(entry until 30 minutes before closing)
Admission
Adults 700 yen;
seniors (over 65) and students (college/university, high school) 500 yen;
children (junior high school age and younger) Free
*Includes permanent exhibition fee

KOBE

Exhibition
Catalog

The exhibition catalogue is available for purchase at the museum shop of the National Museum of Nature and Science.
(A4 size, 180 pages, ¥2,500)

めぐるいのち、つなぐ手しごと