
The Otsuka Museum of Art is a place of extremes. It’s the biggest exhibition space in Japan, housing masterpieces of Western art from antiquity to the modern day. The route around its 1,000 artworks is 4km long (2.5 miles), and it takes a full, tiring day to see it all. And with a 3,150 yen (US $29.22) adult admission fee, it’s also Japan’s most expensive gallery.
The works on show are, quite literally, too good to be true. The Mona Lisa, The Last Supper, Guernica, Van Gogh’s Sunflowers, Rembrandt’s self-portraits: everything is here. And every single one of them is a replica. But why are so many people prepared to pay through the nose to see prints of masterpieces?
The museum, which is located near the Naruto Straight in Tokushima-ken, was founded by Otsuka Pharmaceutical in 1998 – the company that brought the world Pocari Sweat and Calorie Mate. It contains more than 1,000 masterpieces of Western art, all of them reproduced onto ceramic boards. As well as replicas of an enormous range of paintings including the complete works of Leonardo da Vinci and all of Rembrandt’s self-portraits, the museum is also home to large-scale reproductions including the interior of the Sistine Chapel and a long-lost El Greco altarpiece.
▼ Possibly contains even more Japanese tourists than the actual Sistine Chapel.
At a whopping 3,150 yen ($29.22) for adult admission, it’s reported to be Japan’s most expensive gallery (for comparison, the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo is 420 yen [$3.90]). But the price tag doesn’t seem to have held the Otsuka museum back: in 2011, TripAdvisor users voted it the best museum/art gallery in Japan. (We bet the curators of all those “real” paintings in Japan’s other art galleries were cheering when the Otsuka gallery slid back down to Number 8 in TripAdvisor’s rankings this year.)
Like those copies of entire cities that appear suddenly in China, it’s easy to laugh at this “museum of fakes”. But leaving aside the difference between making replica prints with permission, and breaking architectural copyright, the Otsuka Museum of Art fills the same gap in the market as China’s fake Manhattans and little Venices do: it provides an affordable alternative to travelling abroad to see the originals.
Huge collections of Western art don’t come on tour to Japan: even the relatively large-scale Louvre exhibition coming to Tokyo next year is only 70 pieces. Compared to that, a permanent collection housing 1,000 pieces of Western art – from 25 different countries, no less – starts to sound pretty amazing, even if they are replicas. The original version of Picasso’s ‘Geurnica’ is too delicate to be moved; the El Greco altarpiece ‘Doña María de Aragón’, is split between Madrid and Bucharest.
▼ ‘El Replico’ (they don’t call it that, but they should).
The museum actually attempts to provide a visitor experience that is better than the real thing, freeing visitors from the restrictions that conventional museums have to apply to protect artworks from damage. Photography is allowed in all parts of the Otsuka galleries, and there are no ropes or wires to stand behind. You can stand as close to the replica paintings as you want, and even touch them.
Otsuka’s museum directors see their porcelain replicas as capturing a moment in history: they form a permanent record of the condition these works were in at the turn of the millennium. While the original artworks, scattered around the globe, will continue to fade and deteriorate, the ceramic prints in Tokushima are intended to last for at least another 2,000 years.
Sources: Naver Matome, Otsuka Museum
Images: Wikipedia/663highland, colocal, toffee-chan
Top image: Wikipedia/663highland
Featured image: Tokushima Prefecture Tourism Association




Majority of Japanese women in survey regret marrying their husband, but that’s only half the story
Visiting Japan’s Gyarados Pokémon park in the city with a special connection to Magikarp【Photos】
Bear meat noodles?!? Tokyo restaurant adds a new kind of niku soba to its menu【Taste test】
Sailor Moon celebrates 30 years with beautiful purse, accessory lines from Samantha Group【Pics】
New Japanese menstrual product seeks to help women spot unidentified iron deficiencies
Majority of Japanese women in survey regret marrying their husband, but that’s only half the story
Visiting Japan’s Gyarados Pokémon park in the city with a special connection to Magikarp【Photos】
Bear meat noodles?!? Tokyo restaurant adds a new kind of niku soba to its menu【Taste test】
Sailor Moon celebrates 30 years with beautiful purse, accessory lines from Samantha Group【Pics】
New Japanese menstrual product seeks to help women spot unidentified iron deficiencies
Japan’s super easy sweet potato spread lets you make sweet potato bread thanks to Don Quijote
Which Japanese beef bowl chain’s near-identical demon grater onioroshi ponzu gyudon is the best?
Studio Ghibli animators’ West Japan Railway ad has us ready for summer! 【Video】
New adults go wild at Seijinshiki Coming-of-Age ceremony in Kitakyushu, Japan 【Photos】
Pokémon Lego kits are finally on their way!【Photos】
Starbucks Japan releases new drinkware and goods for Valentine’s Day
Starbucks Japan releases new Frappuccino and latte for Valentine’s Day
Massive manga collaboration bringing 100 years of Shueisha manga to Uniqlo T-shirts【Photos】
Totoro cream puffs and Catbus cookies are finally available in downtown Tokyo
Japan’s kid-friendly ski program is now selling Pikachu snowboards for a limited time only
Japanese women showing rebounding interest in giving Valentine’s Day chocolate【Survey】
McDonald’s Japan releases a Mushroom Mountain and Bamboo Shoot Village McFlurry
Ramen restaurant’s English menu prices are nearly double its Japanese ones, denies discriminating
10 times to avoid traveling in Japan in 2026
Starbucks Japan ready to get Year of the Horse started with adorable drinkware and plushies【Pics】
Our 52-year-old pole dancing reporter shares his tips for achieving your New Year’s exercise goal
7-Eleven Japan starts new temporary luggage storage service in over 300 branches
Disillusionment at Tsukiji’s tourist-target prices led us to a great ramen restaurant in Tokyo
Japan may add Japanese language proficiency, lifestyle classes to permanent foreign resident requirements
Lacquerware supplier to emperor of Japan and Pokémon team up for new tableware
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Starbucks Japan reveals new sakura drinkware collection, inspired by evening cherry blossoms
Updated cherry blossom forecast shows extra-long sakura season for Japan this year
Japan’s super easy sweet potato spread lets you make sweet potato bread thanks to Don Quijote
Which Japanese beef bowl chain’s near-identical demon grater onioroshi ponzu gyudon is the best?
Studio Ghibli animators’ West Japan Railway ad has us ready for summer! 【Video】
New adults go wild at Seijinshiki Coming-of-Age ceremony in Kitakyushu, Japan 【Photos】
Pokémon Lego kits are finally on their way!【Photos】
Japan’s kid-friendly ski program is now selling Pikachu snowboards for a limited time only
New KitKat pizzas are coming to Pizza Hut Japan
Sushi cars are the newest crazy cool dream from Japan’s Tomica line
Pikachu was supposed to have a second evolution called Gorochu, with fearsome fangs and horns!
Meet Chiyomaru: the cutest gosh-darn sumo wrestler you’ll ever see
Forget shuriken: 10 stealthy and dangerous ninja tools you didn’t know existed
Massive manga collaboration bringing 100 years of Shueisha manga to Uniqlo T-shirts【Photos】
Leave a Reply