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With a cumulative total of over 12.3 million visitors (1) since its inception, this immersive entertainment museum is a stunning fusion of art, design, and aquarium science, featuring elegant goldfish as its primary centerpiece. (1 Total visitors from 2007 to 2024)* This exhibition ingeniously combines high-tech sound and light effects, installation art, and an aquarium to create a dreamlike goldfish art display. A popular Instagrammable spot, every corner of the venue offers the perfect backdrop for vibrant, magical photos. Each paying adult may bring up to two children in elementary school or younger for free. The Tokyo Ginza Art Aquarium, located in the heart of Tokyo, is a living art exhibition. Inside this museum, you’ll see thousands of goldfish and koi displayed in meticulously designed aquariums that change with the seasons, transforming aquatic life into vibrant works of art. Artworks at Art Aquarium Museum GINZA Goldfish Corridor: Stroll through this illuminated passage and admire rows of dazzlingly lit aquariums, where goldfish swim gracefully amidst the interplay of light and shadow. Goldfish Collection: Explore the “Goldfish Collection” area, featuring rare goldfish in creative tanks that showcase their vibrant fins and unique silhouettes. Goldfish Waterfall: Visit the Goldfish Waterfall, a breathtaking installation where aquariums are stacked in tiers to resemble a cascading falls. Temaririum: Watch fish glide through vibrant patterns inspired by Temari, traditional Japanese hand-embroidered balls. Goldfish Bamboo Grove: Wander through this glowing forest of towering cylindrical tanks that mimic bamboo stalks, with fish darting through the shifting light.
Tokyo

Art Aquarium Museum GINZA

Admission Ticket

Since ancient times, in Eastern philosophy, it has been believed that all things are composed of the five elements—“wood, fire, earth, metal, and water.” These five elements not only influence the workings of the natural world, but are also closely connected to human mind and body, fortune, directions, and the seasons. The philosophy of Yin-Yang and the Five Elements is a natural worldview formed by combining Yin-Yang theory with the Five Elements. It regards the creation and transformation of all things as a cycle of “mutual generation” and “mutual restraint.” “Mutual generation” refers to the elements supporting and generating one another in sequence, while “mutual restraint” refers to them controlling each other to prevent excess. Through this cyclical interaction, balance and the continual creation of all things are maintained. It is said that wood generates fire, fire generates earth, earth generates metal, metal generates water, and water generates wood. Through this cycle of harmony, the order of heaven and earth is sustained. In Japan as well, since ancient times, great importance has been placed on nature and the Five Elements, with gratitude for the blessings of the sun and moon. People greet the sun in the morning, touch the earth, feel the flow of water, listen to the sounds of trees, experience the warmth of fire, and touch metal objects. At night, they gaze up at the moon. By engaging the five senses and experiencing nature, people coexist with nature, reflecting a fundamental philosophy of Japanese life. The Five-Elements omamori (amulet) embodies blessings that harmonize these five forces, helping to regulate the flow of energy in daily life so that one’s innate abilities can be fully expressed. From the five elements—wood, fire, earth, metal, and water—please choose the one you wish to protect or value most, place it in the omamori pouch, and carry it with you as a safeguard.
Fukuoka

Mekari Shrine (a religious corporation)

Five-Elements Omamori (amulet)

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