Omiya Bonsai Art Museum

Bonsai Around the World: The Omiya Bonsai Art Museum in Japan

A panoramic view of the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum’s bonsai garden in May. All photos courtesy of Omiya. 

A panoramic view of the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum’s bonsai garden in May. All photos courtesy of Omiya. 

In August 2019, the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum established a historic Sister Museum partnership with the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum in Saitama City, Japan. For this edition of Bonsai Around the World, the National Bonsai Foundation is sharing the history and details of Omiya’s collections and staff members. 

We had the pleasure of speaking with one of Omiya’s curators, Dr. Fumiya Taguchi, who first learned about bonsai while receiving a doctorate in Japanese art history – specifically picture scrolls and ukiyo-e prints, a genre of Japanese art popular from the 17th to 19th centuries.

Taguchi had very little knowledge of the art form until one of his mentors, who became the first director of the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum, recommended that Taguchi take a test for a curator position at Omiya. He was hired as a curator in 2009 when the museum was first opening – his first true introduction to the art form. 

“I remember I was worried about what I could research because bonsai was an unknown field to me,” Taguchi said. 

He quickly became fascinated by, and still dedicates time to, exploring bonsai history from the perspective of Japanese art history. Taguchi loves to delve into how people have thought about, created, described and spread bonsai throughout decades of bonsai appreciation.

“Bonsai is the creation by human hands of the ideal form of a natural tree living in the deep mountains,” he said. “Since ancient times, East Asians have believed that, through bonsai, they can transcend the mundane world and immerse themselves in the free world of nature while remaining at home. In other words, bonsai is a symbol of spiritual freedom.”

A Japanese White Pine named “Higurashi” in the decoration room

A Japanese White Pine named “Higurashi” in the decoration room

Omiya’s extensive collection contains an impressive 125 bonsai pieces and grass bonsai, 342 bonsai pot and tray displays, 69 suiseki pieces, 74 table pieces, 174 hanging scrolls and ukiyo-e prints and 57 historical materials. 

Many bonsai are displayed in the museum’s indoor permanent exhibition hall along with suiseki, hanging scrolls, and nine seats, including traditional Zashiki decorations that change each week. About 60 bonsai are periodically displayed in the outdoor bonsai garden, while others are maintained in a backyard. Non-bonsai collections are found in a separate exhibition hall. 

One of Omiya’s most treasured bonsai is a Japanese white pine called “Higurashi” estimated to be 450 years old and in training since 1933. The pine has been passed down through 11 owners, is the most famous bonsai in Japan and is the symbol of the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum. 

Another famous Omiya bonsai is an ezo spruce named “Todoroki.” The spruce was collected on Kunashiri Island in Hokkaido in 1931 by Tomekichi Kato and his son Saburo Kato, the bonsai master known as the father of World Bonsai Day and one of the bonsai artists who opened Omiya Bonsai Village. The Kato duo’s spruce is estimated to be 1,000 years old and symbolizes the history of Omiya Bonsai Village. 

A 150-year-old Chinese quince at the museum also boasts several famous owners, including former Prime Minister Eisaku Sato and former Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, the second Japan Bonsai Association president and the Japanese representative at the bicentennial bonsai donation to the United States.

Left: A scene from the monthly kids bonsai workshop.Right: Bonsai Curator Mr. Nakamura (second from right) and Mr. Saito (far right) repotting a large black pine tree

Left: A scene from the monthly kids bonsai workshop.

Right: Bonsai Curator Mr. Nakamura (second from right) and Mr. Saito (far right) repotting a large black pine tree

But Taguchi doesn’t manage this massive collection alone. He and Dr. Shinichiro Hayashi lead curatorial operations for non-bonsai materials and exhibitions. Shinta Nakamura and Masayuki Saito, two bonsai artists who trained at Seiko-en, are full-time curators in charge of bonsai cultivation and management, while a bonsai artist from Omiya Bonsai Village works as an assistant.

Rumiko Ishida handles publicity and education, while Miyuji Tateishi recently joined Omiya as a curator for exhibitions and education. About 30 volunteer staff members work as visitor guides and workshop assistants, but they do not care for the bonsai.

Taguchi said Omiya is the only public museum in Japan that specializes in bonsai as a living work of art. The museum is the only one in the world that displays bonsai in tatami rooms, or traditional Japanese viewing rooms with tatami mats for flooring. 

Omiya also produces specialized academic research on the history and culture of bonsai. The results are presented to the public through numerous historical and cultural materials.

The museum’s permanent indoor exhibition room takes visitors through more than 42 feet of a bonsai history panel display. The final section features a detailed explanation of the history of Omiya Bonsai Village. Trees from the village's garden are regularly displayed at the museum to expand local knowledge about the village and its bonsai.

The Omiya Bonsai Art Museum lobby

The Omiya Bonsai Art Museum lobby

Taguchi added that the Sister Museum partnership between Omiya and the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum in Washington, D.C. helps to demonstrate the range of bonsai culture and interest to people in Japan. 

“As representatives of each country, it is important for our two museums to introduce the expansion of bonsai culture in the other country through core projects such as history, culture, educational promotion and volunteer activities,” he said. “By deepening our relationship through the ‘language’ of bonsai and joint public relations, we can enhance the value of bonsai, revitalize the bonsai community on both sides and gain support for both museums as institutions of global importance.”

Taguchi said Omiya hopes to partner with other bonsai museums and botanical gardens around the world to promote the value of bonsai.

“By maintaining not only personal connections but also lasting relationships between museums, we will be able to build friendships around the world through bonsai, just as Saburo Kato said,” he affirmed.

Learn more about our Sister Museum on their website and follow them on Facebook and Instagram

Left: the central part of the bonsai garden | Right: Curator Dr. Taguchi preparing for a lecture

Left: the central part of the bonsai garden | Right: Curator Dr. Taguchi preparing for a lecture

Species Spotlight: Cypress (Taxodium distichum, ascendens, mucronatum)

This month’s Species Spotlight (by our First Curator’s Assistant, Andy Bello) turns the light on three different species that constitute the genus Taxodium: Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum), Pond Cypress (Taxodium ascendens) and Montezuma Cypress (Taxodium mucronatum). All three species are located in our collections at The National Bonsai & Penjing Museum. 

Old Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) at Lake Drummond, VA (Photo by Andy Bello)

Old Bald Cypress (Taxodium distichum) at Lake Drummond, VA (Photo by Andy Bello)

Taxodium are extremely flood-tolerant, deciduous conifers in the cypress family Cupressacae. These trees can reach heights of about 100-150 feet and trunk diameters reaching more than 37 feet. A distinctive feature of taxodium is the formation of pneumatophores, also known as “cypress knees.” Some bonsai experts debate whether the knees aid in the uptake of oxygen or if they support the trees in wet soil conditions. 

Species history and general facts

Bald cypresses are mainly found along rivers with silt-rich flood deposits throughout the Southeastern United States and even up the Mississippi River into Southern Indiana. 

Pond cypresses live within the Southeastern Coastal Plain, from North Carolina to Louisiana, and grow in more stagnant blackwater rivers, ponds and swamps, rather than silt-rich flood deposits. 

Montezuma cypresses are found between the lower Rio Grande Valley down to the highlands of Guatemala. This cypress is a riparian tree that grows along streams and rivers. This species tends to be evergreen and not deciduous, given its distribution in a consistently warm climate. Montezuma cypresses on average have the largest trunk size, with some reaching about 37.5 feet in diameter.

Take a look at some of the cypresses we have at the Museum!

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Bald Cypress

This bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) #269 is located in the North American Collection. It has been in training since 1972, and the late Vaughn Banting donated the tree in 2000. Banting originally purchased the tree as a nursery plant. This bald cypress, along with one at the Pacific Bonsai Museum, are the first two trained into a configuration Banting championed called “Flat Top Style.” The flat top style with knees protruding from the soil is a very distinctive trait of bald cypresses.

Read more about the history of this bald cypress, Vaughn Banting and the flat top style here.

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Montezuma Cypress

This montezuma cypress (Taxodium mucronatum) #274, now located the North American Collection, was donated by Mike Naka in 2004 in honor of his grandfather and bonsai master, the late John Y. Naka. 

John Naka purchased this bonsai from a nursery in Los Angeles after traveling from Denver in 1946 and began training the tree in 1948. The bonsai is trained in the formal upright style to invoke the massive height and girth often seen in the species. By keeping the primary branches short and closer to the trunk, Naka provided an even grander image of the species’ height. 

Montezuma cypresses are evergreen in their native warm climate, but their seasonal beauty can truly be appreciated when they are allowed to thrive in Northern climates.

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Pond Cypress (with bald cypresses)

This group planting of a pond cypress (Taxodium ascendens) and multiple bald cypresses (Taxodium distichum) #250 is located in the North American Collection. Jim Fritchey and Dick Wild donated the planting, comprised of trees collected from the wild Floridian swamps, in 1990 after arranging the original planting in 1988. 

As the forest in this planting evolved, a number of trees were removed after some trees couldn’t keep up with the competition for light – a common phenomenon in natural forests. The composition was rearranged to ensure the longevity of the planting.

The photo above is how the planting appears at the Museum today. The large pond cypress on the left with a strong lean provides directionality, while the group of bald cypresses on the right provides depth. The seven-foot stone slab, which weighs about 1,500 pounds, evokes a natural look compared to the typical ceramic container. 

Come and visit The National Bonsai & Penjing Museum in all four seasons to experience the beauty of Taxodium in the collection. The lush bright green spring growth and the brilliant red and orange fall foliage is best to appreciate in person. I hope that these trees inspire everyone to work more with native species and create bonsai in a meaningful manner.

National Bonsai & Penjing Museum Enters into Historic “Sister Museum” Relationship with Omiya Bonsai Art Museum in Japan

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

The National Bonsai & Penjing Museum officially became a Sister Museum to The Omiya Bonsai Art Museum in Saitama, Japan on Monday, Aug. 5th! 

Our Museum was formed in 1976 as the result of Japan’s Bicentennial Gift of 53 masterpiece bonsai. The Omiya Bonsai Art Museum, created in 2010, is located in the famous “Bonsai Village” that has been at the center of bonsai in Japan for almost 100 years.

Many board members and leaders from both museums attended the ceremony, which was held at our Museum in Washington, D.C. Dr. Richard Olsen – Director of the U.S. National Arboretum, which houses our Museum – and The Honorable Hayato Shimizu, Mayor of Saitama, signed the “Sister Museums Declaration.”

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

Attendees heard remarks from Dr. Olsen, Mayor Shimizu, Felix Laughlin – National Bonsai Foundation Co-President – and Takahiro Shimada, Minister for Communications and Cultural Affairs at the Japanese Embassy. A luncheon in the Exhibits Gallery followed the ceremony, and Dr. Fumiya Taguchi – Manager of The Omiya museum – gave a presentation called “The History of Bonsai in Japan.”

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

In the advent of their new partnership, the two museums plan to share information about their upcoming educational bonsai exhibits and programs. 

“Both museums hope to help increase awareness and appreciation for the other as premier destinations to experience the art of bonsai at its highest level of creativity and development,” Laughlin said.

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

Photo Credit: Stephen Voss

MEDIA ADVISORY: Sister Museum Announcement

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


The U.S. National Arboretum’s National Bonsai & Penjing Museum and the Omiya Bonsai Art Museum of  Saitama City, Japan to Sign Sister Museum Declaration


Official signing, private celebration and special presentation will take place August 5th at the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum

WASHINGTON, DC – On Monday, August 5, 2019, the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum, located at the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, DC, will officially become a “Sister Museum” to Omiya Bonsai Art Museum of Saitama City, Japan. The National Bonsai Foundation (NBF) will help host a formal dedication ceremony to mark this occasion at the Washington, DC Museum. Discussions around this idea started in 2012 when NBF Co-President, Jack Sustic visited OBAM to discuss beginning a relationship between the two museums. 

On August 5th, Dr. Richard Olsen, Director of the U.S. National Arboretum, and the Honorable Hayato Simizu, Mayor of Saitama City, will sign the "Sister Museums Declaration.” This will be followed by brief remarks from Richard Olsen, Mayor Simizu, NBF Co-President, Felix Laughlin, and Minister Takehiro Shimada, of the Japanese Embassy.  There will be lunch in the Museum’s Exhibits Gallery followed by a presentation from Dr. Fumiya Taguchi, of Omiya Bonsai Art Museum on "Japanese Bonsai History."  

This event is invite only. Members of the press interested in attending can contact Kendra@KendraRubinfeldpr.com


The National Bonsai and Penjing Museum will be closed from 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. for this special event.

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Founded in 1982, the National Bonsai Foundation is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit that works in cooperation with the U.S. National Arboretum to supply financial, programmatic and curatorial support for the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum. The Foundation offices and Museum are located on the grounds of the Arboretum in Northeast Washington, DC.

www.bonsai-nbf.org