MUSEUM OF WESTERN ART, Main Building

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The National Museum of Western Art is divided into two parts: the original building and the new wing.

The main building is one of the most important architectural works in Tokyo. It was designed by one of the greatest names in international architecture, the Swiss-born French citizen, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris, better known as Le Corbusier. The building is considered a work of genius on a par, in terms of beauty and significance, with the paintings that can be admired inside. Built in reinforced concrete, it was officially opened on June 10th 1959, after work which lasted two years.

The exterior is covered with prefabricated concrete panels. The green bricks you can see today were added later.

The museum has a square floor plan, with the main body of the galleries on the first floor raised on seven columns.

The entrance to the museum is on the first floor, where you’ll find the 19th Century Room, dedicated to the works of the sculptor Auguste Rodin. This space, on two levels, is illuminated from above with a pyramid-shaped skylight intersected by reinforced concrete beams and a column. From here, a passageway designed to offer spectacular views of Rodin’s sculptures, leads to the galleries where you’ll find masterpieces by Veronese, Tintoretto, Rubens, Bruegel and Fragonard....

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