library memorial museum

Shiba Ryotaro Memorial Museum Library

​​Location: Higashi City, Osaka, Japan

Architect Tadao Ando designed a new concrete building to sit alongside the original family home of the late Japanese author, Shiba Ryotaro.  The award winning memorial museum, opened to the public in November 2001, was designed to house the revered writer’s extensive library of more than 60,000 books. Ando decided that the library need not display all the books at one time and created a three-storey, 11 metre high display wall to showcase up to 20,000 books at any one time.

Architect Tadao Ando, explained his inspiration,

“an image of a faint space of light surrounded by books and surrounded by darkness”

Shiba Ryotaro

Post-WW2 Japanese writer Shiba Ryotaro emerged as an important literary figure his words spoke to a nation at a time of enormous change. He acknowledged the profound impact that his wartime experiences had on his later writing. Only 22 years old by the end of the war, he was a tank driver, serving on the Soviet border in what was then called Manchuria. 

He is best known for fictional novels about the history of Japan and essays focusing on the history of the Japanese dynasties and topics such as the activities of the Samurai and Shogun, which translates as Sei-i Taishōgun, ‘Commander-in-Chief of the Expeditionary Force Against the Barbarians’.

Shiba Ryotaro (born Teiichi Fukuda) 1923-1996

 

 

window detail Shiba Ryotaro

 

architecture of Shiba Ryotaro Museum

 

library memorial museum

 

path around exterior of museum osaka

 

view across library

 

view up to window of the shiba ryataro library

 

brutalist detail museum library

 

brutalist detail Shiba Ryota Memorial museum Tadao Ando

 

wall of books Shiba Ryotara museum

 

wall of books shiba ryotaro

 

All images Copyright of Christopher Iwata ©

Visit the memorial museum http://www.shibazaidan.or.jp/

Related Products


Related Posts


Brutalist Japanese sports stadium, Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Tokyo

Kenzo Tange, A Man With A Plan

Japan’s post war brutalist visitor favourite still suspends belief

Monday November 2017
By Greyscape

St Mary’s Cathedral, Tokyo, a sacred space where beautiful shafts of light play on the concrete

Tuesday September 2018
By Greyscape
Ginza architecture icon

Nakagin Capsule Tower

Future architecture 1970s style

Wednesday September 2018
By Greyscape