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いっしょに散歩しませんか?	Wander for wonder

ABOUT TOKYO BIENNALE

Held every two years, the Tokyo Biennale is an international art festival that sets the city of Tokyo as its main stage. The festival aims to dig deep into the city, as it is created together with the area’s local citizens, as well as a wide variety of artists and creators from around the world. The theme of the second Tokyo Biennale 2025 is “Wander for wonder.” The festival period runs from October 17 to December 14, 2025, with various pre-events taking place in the lead-up to the opening.

Exploring Six Diverse Areas of Northeastern Tokyo

Tokyo Biennale 2025 will be held in numerous facilities and public spaces in Chiyoda, Chuo, Bunkyo and Taito wards across the northeastern part of Tokyo. Based around two main exhibition venues—Etoile Kaito Living Building and Toeizan Kan’ei-ji Temple (both requiring admission)—visitors can enjoy exhibitions and events held in six distinct areas (most of which offer free admission), each with its own history and culture.

Artists

TB Art Projects

NEWS

Exhibitions

Coming Soon

Coming Soon

Notes on Note(web magazine)

Ueno/Okachimachi Area

Toeizan Kan'ei-ji Temple was found in the Edo period and will celebrate its 400th anniversary in 2025. In addition to the main hall of Kan'ei-ji Temple, the Tokyo Biennale 2025 will make use of the Kiyomizu Kannon-do and Bentendo halls in Ueno Park, as well as the nearby Kaisan-do, as its base exhibition venues. Here, visitors will be able to experience exhibitions thoughtfully composed in dialogue with each site’s unique character. In addition, sound artist Akio Suzuki will be carrying out his signature project o to da te in various nearby locations.* Like the "nodate" tea ceremony, he will select outdoor spots where you can listen carefully and open up your senses.

*Akio Suzuki’s o to da te will also be set up in other areas.

Participating artists

Nobuyuki Fujiwara, Mami Kosemura, Gaku Kurokawa, Juniichi Mori, Akio Suzuki

Kanda/Akihabara Area

The Billboard Architecture Project* will be held among the historic buildings that remain in Kanda, paying homage to Tokyo's foundational culture while considering the future. At one of these buildings, Ebihara Shoten, the International Collaborative Project will be carried out in partnership with Tenthaus, a Norwegian art collective, and The OVEN Network, a transnational group of artists from Bangkok, Seoul, Jakarta, and Singapore. The team will use the site as a base for translocal actions, workshops, and research. Artist Juri Akiyama, known for her beeswax works, will also take part in activities in the Kanda–Akihabara area. In the Sotokanda area, adjacent to Akihabara, the city of electronics and pop culture, sound artist Akio Suzuki will be carrying out his signature project, o to da te.*

*Billboard Architecture (Japanese: “Kanban Kenchiku”) refers to a Japanese form of architecture that spread during reconstruction after the Great Kanto Eearthquake (1923), made up of both living and business quarters, with a signature shopfront façade and billboard.

*Akio Suzuki’s o to da te will also be set up in other areas.

Participating artists

Juri Akiyama, Akio Suzuki, Tenthaus Art Collective and the Oven Network

Suidobashi Area

Suidobashi, home to Tokyo Dome City, is an area known for entertainment that attracts many visitors. Here, Tokyo Biennale 2025 will incorporate two art displays within Tokyo Dome City. On the digital signage over 100 meters long, visitors will be able to see a video work by Goro Murayama, and in the waterscape area, there will be a wall art piece by Hogalee. These will serve as part of the "Tokyo Dome City Art Project," that has been carried out by Tokyo Dome, Tokyo University of the Arts, and the Tokyo University of the Arts Art Creation Institute since 2022, under the theme of exploring the possibilities of combining Tokyo Dome City and art.

Participating artists

Hogalee, Goro Murayama

Yaesu/Kyobashi Area

Tokyo Station is known as the gateway to Tokyo, where many different people come and go. A dynamic and detailed painting by Shun Yonaha will appear at the Yaesu Exit/North Exit (in front of the entrance to Daimaru Tokyo). Nearby, Kyobashi is known as a business district as well as a distinct antique and art district. Around the Artizon Museum, sound artist Akio Suzuki will carry out his signature o to da te project.* Like the "nodate" tea ceremony, he will select outdoor spots where you can listen carefully and open up your senses.

*Akio Suzuki’s "o to da te" will also be set up in other areas.

Participating artists

Akio Suzuki, Shun Yonaha

Nihonbashi/Bakurocho area

Nihonbashi is a town of commerce and culture that developed as the home of the Edo Shogunate. It is characterized by a rich streetscape in which long-established stores retaining their historic atmosphere coexist with new facilities. For the Tokyo Biennale 2025, the Sukima Project (tentative) will be held, in which participants will walk around the area to trace the art scattered throughout. Encountering works by nine artists that mimic potted plants in alleyways will allow participants to rediscover the area’s margins and potential for creativity.
The neighboring Bakurocho is an area where the activities of a historic wholesale district coexist with new trends in the fields of art and design. The Tokyo Biennale will make use of the long-established wholesaler Etoile Kaito Living Building as its base exhibition venue, offering artwork displays and project information.

Participating artists

[Nihonbashi]
Sukima Project (tentative):
6lines Studio,Sumiko Iwaoka,Junya Kataoka and Rie Iwatake,Yoshiaki Kuribara, Milk Souko The Coconuts, Osamu Mori, Shingo Suzuki, Koko Terauchi, Shoko Toda

[Bakurocho (Etoile Kaito Living Building)]
Piotr Bujak (Poland), L PACK., Nguyen Phuong Linh and Truong Que Chi (Vietnam), Nozomu Kubota, Eiji Watanabe
Photography Project—Tokyo Perspective:
Naoya Hatakeyama, Mari Katayama, Chihiro Minato, Masato Nakamura, SIDE CORE, Risaku Suzuki, Yasuko Toyoshima
SOCIAL DIVE Project:
Naraka Wijewardane (Sri Lanka), Camilla Svensson (Brazil), Mariam Tovmasyan (Armenia), Adam Reigert (Sweden)

Otemachi, Marunouchi, Yurakucho area

Otemachi, Marunouchi, and Yurakucho are the leading business districts of the Japanese economy, and are home to many museums and public art, as well as popular shops and restaurants. At the Tokyo Biennale 2025, works from Naoki Sato's series There, It Has Grown. will be exhibited at the Gyoko-dori Underground Gallery and the 1st Floor of the Otemachi Park Building. The series, which involves drawing familiar plants on large plywood boards that are then connected, has been ongoing for over 10 years and has now reached a length of over 330 meters. Visitors can experience its continued growth within our city that is also constantly changing. In addition, a large-scale wall art piece by artist Fu Ouchi, who expresses that "drawing a picture is thinking about life," will be displayed on the wall of the Otemachi First Square Building.

Participating artists

Fu Ouchi, Naoki Sato