1. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima
  2. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima
  3. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima | 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
  4. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima
  5. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima
  6. 集英社マンガアートヘリテージ
    Photo: Kisa Toyoshima

Shueisha Manga-Art Heritage Tokyo Gallery

  • Art
  • Kamiyacho
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Time Out says

Manga-focused publishing house Shueisha runs this small but spiffy gallery showcasing pop culture art and artefacts in Azabudai Hills.

Details

Address
Azabudai Hills Garden Plaza A B1F, 5-8-1 Toranomon, Minato
Tokyo
Transport:
Kamiyacho Station (Hibiya line), exit 5
Opening hours:
11am-8pm / irregular closing days

What’s on

Hirohiko Araki’s JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure

Hirohiko Araki began serialising JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure in Weekly Shonen Jump in 1986, launching a saga that has since spanned decades, generations of protagonists and shifting aesthetic paradigms. Renowned for its flamboyant characters, bold compositions and philosophical undercurrents, JoJo stands apart for its synthesis of classical art, fashion, music and pop culture. With cumulative circulation exceeding 120 million copies, the series has become a global phenomenon, while Araki himself has become recognised as a singular figure bridging manga and contemporary art. From January 8 to June 28, the Shueisha Manga-Art Heritage Tokyo Gallery presents this three-part exhibition that foregrounds Araki’s work through the lens of fine-art printmaking. The exhibition has previously been shown in San Francisco and Kyoto, but this marks the first time Araki’s lithographs and lenticular works are displayed in Tokyo. To allow visitors to encounter as wide a variety of works as possible, the exhibition unfolds in three rotations: Part 1 (January 8–February 23), Part 2 (March 3–April 19) and Part 3 (April 28–June 28). At the heart of the display are nine lithographic prints, produced in 2025 at the request of Shueisha Manga-Art Heritage and representing Araki’s first foray into lithography. Unlike conventional manga printing, which reduces drawings to stark black-and-white data, lithography preserves the artist’s hand with remarkable fidelity. Drawing directly onto metal plates with...
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