Rakuto Ihokan
- Highlight
- Wedding headrests (pillows) with gold lacquer decoration
The collection of a wealthy Edo merchant
The Kawabara family was originally from Kyushu, with the family forefather being a samurai of rank who moved to Kyoto in 1645, and set up a shop on the present site, dealing in cotton cloth, lacquer ware and paper as a Kyoto businessman with a store in Edo. This business did so well that the family became wealthy Kyoto merchants.
The museum collection consists of Edo heirlooms passed down through each generation of the Kawabara family. Of these, some 8,000 are family-orientated pieces such as wedding robes and furnishings; while a further 10,000 pieces are manuscripts such as business records, old documents and old books. Added to these, there are panel paintings depicting scenes from the Tale of Genji as well as other arts and crafts such as paintings (scrolls, folding screens and ukiyoe), Zen monk penmanship, ceramics, tea utensils, swords and clothing. Pieces from this vast collection are selected each spring and autumn for themed exhibitions that are open to the public along with the magnificent house itself, which was built in 1763 and retains much of the ambience of a wealthy Edo merchant.

Part of the series of screens depicting the Tale of Genji


Address | 472 Nishi Tachibana-cho Tonyamachi-dori Gojo-sagaru 3 chome, Higashiyama-ku |
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TEL | 075-561-1045 |
FAX | 075-561-3651 |
URL | http://www.kuroeya.com/05rakutou/index.html |
Hours | 10:00~16:00 (entry by 16:00) only for 1/4~5/5 and 1/10~3/11 |
Closed | Mon (following day if Nat Hol) |
Adm | Adults ¥300, High school and college students ¥200, Elementary and junior high school students ¥100, people wearing kimono ¥100 |
Access | A 3-min walk from Keihan Kiyomizu-Gojo Stn/A 5-min walk from Gojo-Keihan-mae Stop of City Bus/A 5-min walk from Gojo-Keihan Stop of Keihan Bus |
Facilities near by

Yurinkan Museum
A wonderful experience in Chinese culture

Kyoto Ii Museum
Armor that brings to life the Age of the Warring States

The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
Exhibiting modern fine art cored around works produced in Kansai

Yogen-in Temple
A temple woven into the lives of the Imperial, Tokugawa and Toyotomi families