Miho Museum of Kyoto

Art Museum · 20th–21st century · Kōka, Shiga, Japan

Miho Museum

The Miho Museum is a private art museum set in the forested hills of the Shigaraki neighbourhood in Kōka, Shiga Prefecture, southeast of Kyoto. Designed by I.M. Pei and opened in 1997, the building is largely underground to protect the surrounding natural landscape. The collection spans ancient Egyptian, Near Eastern, Greek, Roman, South and Southeast Asian, and Japanese art.

At a glance

Type
Private art museum
Period
Opened 1997
Style
I.M. Pei contemporary architecture integrated with mountain landscape
Location
Shigaraki, Kōka, Shiga Prefecture, Japan
Coordinates
34.9149° N, 136.0161° E

Overview

The Miho Museum is an art museum located southeast of Kyoto, Japan, in the Shigaraki neighbourhood of the city of Kōka, Shiga Prefecture. Architect I.M. Pei designed the building so that approximately eighty percent of its structure is buried underground, preserving the cedar forest above. The museum is owned by the Shumei religious organisation and displays the personal collection of its founder, Mihoko Koyama.

History

The Miho Museum was commissioned by Mihoko Koyama, founder of the Shumei spiritual movement, who assembled a wide-ranging collection of ancient art over several decades. I.M. Pei, who had previously designed the glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris, was selected as architect. Construction required extensive tunnelling through the hillside, and the museum opened to the public in November 1997. The setting was inspired by the classical Chinese tale of the Peach Blossom Spring, reflected in the tunnel approach visitors must walk through to reach the galleries.

What you see

A suspension bridge and a tunnel cut through the hillside lead visitors to the main structure, most of which lies below ground. Natural light enters through a large glass-and-steel roof, illuminating galleries that hold some 3,000 objects across Asian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern art. Highlights include ancient Greek and Roman bronzes, Egyptian funerary objects, Gandharan Buddhist sculpture, Tang dynasty Chinese works, and fine examples of Japanese ceramics and lacquerwork. The panoramic views of the cedar-clad mountains from the entrance pavilion are themselves a central part of the visitor experience.

Cultural significance

The Miho Museum is widely regarded as one of I.M. Pei’s finest late works, celebrated for its synthesis of modernist architecture with a protected natural environment. Its collection of ancient non-Japanese art in a Japanese rural setting makes it an unusual gathering point for world heritage on a single site.

Practical information

Address
300 Momoyama, Shigaraki, Kōka, Shiga 529-1814, Japan
Opening hours
Check official website; museum is closed on certain weekdays and during seasonal breaks
Admission
Paid entry; check official website for current fees

Getting there

From Kyoto, take the JR Biwako Line to Ishiyama Station, then a dedicated shuttle bus to the museum (approximately 50 minutes total). The museum also operates seasonal direct buses from Kyoto Station. Private car access is possible via the Meishin Expressway (Tsuchiyama IC). Visitor numbers are managed, so advance reservations are recommended during peak seasons.

Sources & resources

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