Asakura Gallery – Tokyo, Japan - Atlas Obscura

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Asakura Gallery

Kawaii meets poisonous at this unique art gallery.  

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Originating from Harajuku, Japan’s kawaii subculture has found its way beyond Tokyo, influencing the rest of the world in its sugary wake. Even so, the notoriously dodgy district of Takenotsuka may be the last place in Tokyo one would expect such a cutesy culture to materialize, let alone thrive.

And yet, here stands the Asakura Gallery, where kawaii meets poisonous.

Located in the quiet corner of a residential neighborhood, visitors can sense its strange, quasi-sinister aura with a single look: a small two-story house painted in dazzling pink, covered all over with disturbingly kawaii art. As you stop in hesitation, you’ll find yourself being stared at by characters with Margaret Keane-esque big eyes that surround the narrow, unlit entrance.

Once inside, though, the gallery’s owner and artist Shuhei Tsuji will greet you and heartily give you a tour through the building, where he works on new art day after day. After inheriting the house from his grandmother, Tsuji gave it a drastic makeover and transformed it into a quirky art gallery, furnishing it with hundreds of his works. Pop and surreal pieces of outsider art fill up the space, from floor to ceiling (literally), so much that there is almost no room to step in.

Drenched in every shade and hue of pink, the first-floor interior is decorated with glitter, hearts and plushies, cartoonish paintings of doll-like girls hanging on each wall. But among all this cuteness is grotesque, often violent imagery: brains and blood-spewing babies are recurring motifs, while ominous kanji characters that mean “blood,” “curse,” and “poison” can be found everywhere.

In the corner of what was once the living room sits a bizarre Buddhist-style altar, on which a portrait of Tsuji’s grandmother stands. Next to it is an effigy of some flesh-colored, heart-studded Lovecraftian entity adorned with sparkly prayer beads, enthroned upon a heap of candy wrappers.

Climbing up the narrow staircase, visitors can check out the upper atelier, where more untitled paintings are exhibited by the dozens. The opposite side of the staircase has been renovated into a slide, a relic from the times when the gallery served mainly as a favorite haunt of local grade-schoolers. There’s also a swing downstairs, as well as a number of doodles by said children.

According to Tsuji, every single thing in his art gallery is available, including the gallery itself, which is up for sale for 60 million yen (approx. US$560,000). Once the house is sold off, he intends to move on to a new, bigger gallery where he can continue creating bizarro-kawaii art. 

Know Before You Go

The gallery is about a 15-minute walk from Takenotsuka Station. It's open every day except Wednesdays from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.; admission is 1,000 yen for adults, free for children up to 18 years old. You can also ask Shuhei to paint you a caricature for 1,000 yen.

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