The music for “Ark of Light” was created by Abe Kaitaro. He has participated in numerous stage productions, including some directed by Ninagawa Yukio, and pursues new possibilities in theater music and the contemporary expression of musical instruments. In this theater museum, which traces the faint afterglow of memories that remain in folkcraft articles, music is not just a background sound but an essential element that creates a story by connecting memories of things and the places where those things used to be to the memories of each person in the audience.
You will hear music played by instruments, Suzu festival music, sounds of the waves and the wind, sounds that resonate in the community, and former sounds that have disappeared. Sounds will come from various places in the museum as the storehouse items light up with a flashlight.
The music for “Ark of Light” was created by Abe Kaitaro. He has participated in numerous stage productions, including some directed by Ninagawa Yukio, and pursues new possibilities in theater music and the contemporary expression of musical instruments. In this theater museum, which traces the faint afterglow of memories that remain in folkcraft articles, music is not just a background sound but an essential element that creates a story by connecting memories of things and the places where those things used to be to the memories of each person in the audience.
You will hear music played by instruments, Suzu festival music, sounds of the waves and the wind, sounds that resonate in the community, and former sounds that have disappeared. Sounds will come from various places in the museum as the storehouse items light up with a flashlight.
The music for “Ark of Light” was created by Abe Kaitaro. He has participated in numerous stage productions, including some directed by Ninagawa Yukio, and pursues new possibilities in theater music and the contemporary expression of musical instruments. In this theater museum, which traces the faint afterglow of memories that remain in folkcraft articles, music is not just a background sound but an essential element that creates a story by connecting memories of things and the places where those things used to be to the memories of each person in the audience.
You will hear music played by instruments, Suzu festival music, sounds of the waves and the wind, sounds that resonate in the community, and former sounds that have disappeared. Sounds will come from various places in the museum as the storehouse items light up with a flashlight.
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Exhibition Area Otani|SUZU THEATER MUSEUM“Ark of Light”
Viewing hours: 9:30-17:00
Closed Thursdays (except for September 23, a national holiday)