Kanjō-ban (Banner for Kanjō ceremony)
1st floor Room 1
April 2, 2019 (Tue) -
April 5, 2020 (Sun)
The building was designed by Yoshio Taniguchi and has been furnished with the latest in conservation technology. The reference room on the 2nd floor mezzanine has the "digital archive" which allows visitors to view the entire collection of Horyuji Treasures on computer with explanations provided in Japanese, Chinese, Korean, English, and French. A restaurant is located on the ground floor.
* The Horyuji Treasures consist of over 300 valuable objects, mainly from the 7th - 8th century, which were donated to the Imperial Household by Horyuji Temple in 1878.
1st floor Room 1
April 2, 2019 (Tue) - April 5, 2020 (Sun)
The Kanjō-ban (gilt bronze banner for the Kanjō ceremony) is one of the most outstanding items of the Hōryūji Treasures. It is believed to be the item listed as "one gilded Kanjō ceremony article" in the History of the Buildings of Hōryūji and the Inventory of the Temple's Properties compiled in 747. The original is displayed here together with another metal banner, the "Small Gilt Bronze Ban".
Including:
Kanjoban, banner with canopy for Kanjo Ceremony, Asuka period, 7th century (National Treasure)
1st floor Room 2
April 2, 2019 (Tue) - April 5, 2020 (Sun)
All of the 48 works of gilt bronze Buddhist statues in the Hōryūji Treasures are no more then 30–40 cm in height, and many of them are believed to have been used for private worship by local rulers. The halos date from around the same time as these gilt bronze statues, but they are displayed separately.
Repoussé Buddhist images could be mass-produced by placing a thin sheet of bronze over a relief image of a Buddhist divinity and hammering it into shape. In Japan, repoussé images flourished from the second half of the 7th to the early 8th century and were mostly hung on the walls of temple halls or kept in small shrines for private worship. The repoussé Buddhist images among the Hōryūji Treasures are a very important collection, not only in terms of age and number, but also for the variety of images.
Including:
Amida (Amitabha) and Two Attendants, Asuka period, 7th century (Important Cultural Property)
Seated Bosatsu (Bodhisattva) with One Leg Pendent, Asuka period, dated 606 or 666 (Important Cultural Property)
Amida (Amitabha), Triad and Two Priests, Made by hammering copper plates, Asuka period, 7th century (Important Cultural Property)
1st floor Room 3
April 2, 2019 (Tue) - April 5, 2020 (Sun)
Gigaku was an outdoor Buddhist ceremony in which actors wearing large masks performed skits while parading to the accompaniment of music. Gigaku was introduced into Japan from the Korean kingdom of Baekje in the first half of the 7th century. After flourishing in the 7th and 8th centuries, however, it lost popularity and eventually ceased to be performed. The Horyuji Treasures include 19 Gigaku masks made from camphor wood, nine made from paulownia wood, and three made with the dry lacquer technique. The camphor masks were most likely created between the second half of the 7th and the beginning of the 8th century, while the rest are thought to have been made in the 8th century.
This room is open on Fridays and Saturdays.
Including:
Gigaku Mask Shishiko, Asuka period, 7th century (Important Cultural Property)
Gigaku Mask Chido, Asuka period, 7th century (Important Cultural Property)
Gigaku Mask Suiko, Asuka–Nara period, 8th century (Important Cultural Property; On exhibit through October 6, 2019: On exhibit from November 6, 2019)
2nd floor Room 4
February 18, 2020 (Tue) - April 12, 2020 (Sun)
Including:
Sutra Box, With marquetry decoration, Nara period, 8th century (National Treasure)
Sutra Desk, Decorated with tortoiseshell, Nara period, 8th century (Important Cultural Property)
2nd floor Room 5
April 2, 2019 (Tue) - April 5, 2020 (Sun)
The majority of metalwork objects are Buddhist implements, which are classified into various categories according to their use. Kuyôgu are objects used for offerings and Sôgu are items used daily by priests. There are also ritual implements used exclusively at Esoteric Buddhist temples and bon'ongu used to strike the hours or to give a signal. They mainly date from the Asuka and Nara periods with later examples reaching up to the Edo period. A significant number of pieces were made in China and the Korean Peninsula or were strongly influenced by works from these regions. The shape and decorative design of the Dragonhead Pitcher are evidence of an active cultural exchange between Tang China and Persia. Other masterpieces include the Incense Burner with a “Magpie Tail"-shaped Handle (which is the oldest example of an incense burner with a handle in Japan), Cupronickel Mirrors with Seashore Designs which were donated by Empress Kômyô to Hôryû-ji Temple in 736, and the Set of an Ink Cake Stand, Water Holder, and Spoon which are said to have been used by Prince Shôtoku when he wrote the Hokke Gisho annotations on the Lotus Sutra.
Including:
Incense Burner with Magpie's Tail-shaped Handle, Asuka period, 7th century (National Treasure)
Pitcher with Dragon Head, Asuka period, 7th century (National Treasure)
2nd floor Room 6
January 21, 2020 (Tue) - February 24, 2020 (Mon)
Exhibit includes:
Calligraphy:
Bonmō-kyō(Sutra of Brahma's Net), Heian period, 9th century (Important Cultural Property)
Textiles:
Fragments of Textile with Paired Birds in Roundels, Asuka–Nara period, 7th–8th centur