久保晶 個展「潮風の町」 | メインビジュアル

Akira Kubo solo exhibition "Town of the Sea Breeze"

Tetoba Museum's Vol. 4 exhibition, "Kubo Akira Solo Exhibition: Sea Breeze Town," will be held from Sunday, September 14th to Friday, October 31st, 2025.

This exhibition will feature new works by artist Akira Kubo, created during his stay on Goto, while facing the island's sky, wind, and changing seasons. In addition to paintings that delicately express the atmosphere of light, color, and sea breeze, the exhibition will also feature painted plates and other works created during his stay.
Past works will also be exhibited, creating a space where the rhythms of Goto's nature and people's lives quietly resonate with each other.

◼Exhibition information
Exhibition title: Akira Kubo solo exhibition "Town of the Sea Breeze"
Date: September 14th (Sunday) – October 31st (Friday), 2025
Venue: Tetoba Museum (335-1 Tomie, Tomie-cho, Goto City, Nagasaki Prefecture)
Opening hours: 10:00-17:00 (last entry 16:30)
Closed: Tuesdays and Wednesdays
Admission fee: 1,000 yen for adults / 500 yen for high school students and younger and island residents
Organizer: te to ba LLC
Instagram: @tetoba_museum
*This exhibition is an authorized event of the Nagasaki Peace Culture Festival 2025.

◼Workshop
In conjunction with this exhibition, we will be holding a workshop to make your own decorative plates, brooches, and magnets using oven clay. Each workshop consists of two sessions, where you will shape the clay in the first session, and color it after firing in the second session, and you will be able to take home your finished product.

schedule:
・①September 27th (Sat) 10:30~ / October 4th (Sat) 10:30~
・②October 3rd (Friday) 13:00~ / October 9th (Thursday) 13:00~
Venue: Tetoba Museum of Art
Capacity: 5 people per session
Participation fee: 2,000 yen (museum admission fee not included)
subject:
・For adults: Original picture plate (brooches and magnets are also acceptable)
・For children: Making a magnet or brooch
・How to apply: From the Instagram profile of Tetoba Museum

Back to blog