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Final Days of Water Embodied: Flow and Meaning of Water in Japanese Art at Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art

NelsonAtkins_Water

Kimura Yoshirō (Japanese, born 1946). Droplet (Vessel with Blue Glaze), 2017. Half-porcelain with glaze, 21 1/4 × 23 inches (54.0 x 58.4 cm). The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, MO. Purchase: the Asian Art Acquisition Fund in memory of Laurence Sickman, 2025.28.

Water Embodied: Flow and Meaning of Water in Japanese Art
Closing Sunday, April 26, 2026
Gallery 205

This is the final week to experience this captivating exhibition before it closes on April 26 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

Water—an essential element of life on Earth—has long played a vital role in shaping human civilization. In Japan, a country made up of islands, water is more than a natural resource. It is a constant presence that surrounds, connects, and sustains life, while shaping Japan’s culture, beliefs, and artistic creations.

This exhibition traces the diverse ways water has been represented, revered, and reimagined in Japanese art over the past 500 years. Through nearly 50 objects, it highlights water’s presence in daily life, its appearance in legends and deities, and its layered symbolic meanings. The exhibition also explores water’s dual nature—as both boundary and bridge—and how it facilitated the movement of people, goods, and ideas.

To learn more, click here.