ASAKURA MUSEUM OF SCULPTURE
- Fumio Asakura
7 Chome-18-10 Yanaka, Taito City, Tokyo 110-0001, Japan
Before becoming a museum, the Asakura Museum of Sculpture was the home and creative sanctuary of Fumio Asakura, one of the fathers of modern Japanese sculpture. This was where art, family, and more than ten beloved cats shared space under one roof.

Asakura moved to the Yanaka area in 1907 after graduating from Tokyo School of Fine Arts. He expanded the property over the years, completing a major renovation in 1935 to open a sculpture school. As a professor at his alma mater, he mentored countless students while developing his realistic style and portrait sculptures that bridged Western techniques with Japanese sensibilities.
The building itself reflects his innovative vision. It combines a concrete Western-style studio with traditional Japanese wooden residential architecture. The ground level features a serene garden with a pond where Asakura kept koi fish, while his rooftop garden served as both an outdoor studio and meditative space.


Three years after Asakura's death in 1964, the building became a museum in 1967. The living quarters remain preserved with original furniture. Located in Tokyo's Taito ward near Nippori Station, the museum houses many of his works, from intimate portrait busts to larger sculptures.


