Mori Art Museum FY2026 Exhibition Schedule Announced!
2025.8.6 [Wed]
For the FY2026, the Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, is organizing two solo exhibitions, Ron Mueck and Mariko Mori.
Ron Mueck
Period: Wednesday, April 29, 2026 (public holiday) - Wednesday, September 23, 2026 (public holiday)
Ron Mueck (born 1958 in Australia, based in the UK) is a contemporary artist who has pushed the boundaries of figurative sculpture through his innovative use of materials, techniques, and methods of expression. These sophisticated works are created through close observations of humanity combined with philosophical reflection, and are imbued with a sense of life. They capture the inner emotions and experiences of human beings, including loneliness, vulnerability, anxiety and resilience. The artist gained attention through his participation in Sensation: Young British Artists from the Saatchi Collection at the Royal Academy of Arts, London (1997), and has since held solo exhibitions around the world.
Ron Mueck’s sculptures challenge our perception of reality through the careful manipulation of scale by depicting figures much larger or smaller than their real-life counterparts. They possess a mysterious yet intensely powerful presence which interrogates our relationship with our bodies and, more broadly, with existence itself.

In Bed
2005
Mixed media
162 x 650 x 395 cm
Collection: the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain
Installation view: Ron Mueck, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, 2025
Photo: Nam Kiyongbr
Photo courtesy: the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea
Mariko Mori
Period: Saturday, October 31, 2026 - Sunday, March 28, 2027
The Mori Art Museum will present a retrospective of Mariko Mori, highlighting her innovative integration of art, science, and metaphysics. Featuring eighty works spanning three decades, the exhibition surveys Mori’ s practice across interactive installations, sculpture, video, photography, drawing, and performance. Throughout her career, Mori has adopted scientific perspectives and new technologies in pursuit of art forms that transcend time and connect past and future. Her ventures are linked to “Oneness” grounded in Buddhist cosmology, exploring the mutual connectedness of all things.
Mori gained attention in the early 1990s for performance-based photographic and video works exploring posthuman cyborg identity. Her interests evolved from aesthetics fusing Japanese anime and futuristic worldviews to encompass ancient philosophies including Japanese nature worship, Buddhism, and prehistoric Jomon and Celtic cultures. Her work draws from quantum field theory, astrophysics, and neurophysics, collaborating with leading scientists and engineers. Since the early 2000s, she has staged large-scale installations offering immersive spatial experiences. In 2010, she established the Faou Foundation to install site-specific public art on six continents, encouraging renewed engagement with nature. Permanent installations exist in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil and Miyako Island, Japan.
Organized by the Mori Art Museum in collaboration with the Asian Art Initiative of the Guggenheim Museum New York, this is Mori’s first exhibition in Japan since Pure Land at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo in 2002. The survey features iconic works from international museums and other collections, arranged in loose chronological order with drawings and archival material displayed publicly for the first time. Envisioned as an immersive journey, this exhibition engages audiences with urgent issues including humanity and environmental conservation.

Wave UFO
1999-2002
Brainwave interface, vision dome, projector, computer system, fiberglass, Technogel®, acrylic, carbon fiber, aluminum, and magnesium
528 x 1134 x 493 cm
Installation view: Mariko Mori: Wave UFO, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria, 2003
Photo: Richard Learoyd
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