1. リビング・モダニティ 住まいの実験 1920s-1970s
    フランク・ゲーリー、フランク&ベルタ・ゲーリー邸 1978年 ©Frank O. Gehry. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (2017.M.66)
  2. リビング・モダニティ 住まいの実験 1920s-1970s
    藤井厚二 聴竹居 1928年 撮影:古川泰造
  3. リビング・モダニティ 住まいの実験 1920s-1970s
    メインビジュアル

Living Modernity: Experiments in the Exceptional and Everyday 1920s-1970s

  • Art
  • The National Art Center, Tokyo (NACT), Nogizaka
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Time Out says

If you’re curious about why city living looks like it does today, you’ll want to stop by the National Art Center by June 30. The Roppongi institution is hosting a landmark exhibition tracing the evolution of modern residential architecture and the visionary ideals that shaped the way we live in the 21st century. 

Spanning over half a century of innovation, ‘Living Modernity’ presents 14 iconic homes from around the world, designed by luminaries such as Le Corbusier, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Alvar Aalto and Frank Gehry, each revealing aspects of how architects in the 1900s radically reimagined domestic life through form, function and comfort. Organised around seven themes, the show explores how modern housing responded to both global challenges and intimate, everyday needs.

Visitors will encounter a rich assemblage of original drawings, models, photographs, furniture and household items. A highlight is the full-scale reconstruction of Mies van der Rohe’s unbuilt ‘Row House’ (1931), which offers an immersive experience into the German-born architect’s minimalist vision. Interactive displays and VR installations further deepen the engagement.

‘Living Modernity’ is a reflection on how architectural experimentation from a century ago continues to inform contemporary life. Through the groundbreaking homes on display, the exhibition invites us to reconsider what it really means to live well.

Details

Event website:
living-modernity.jp
Address
The National Art Center, Tokyo (NACT)
7-22-2 Roppongi, Minato-ku
Tokyo
Transport:
Nogizaka Station (Chiyoda line), Roppongi Station (Oedo, Hibiya lines)
Price:
¥1,800, college students ¥1,000, high school students ¥500, younger children free
Opening hours:
10am-6pm (Fri, Sat until 8pm) / closed Tue (except Apr 29 & May 6), May 7

Dates and times

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