
Original Art Exhibition, "Nobita and the Birth of Japan and the Journey Through Time," Confirmed to Start on Friday, July 10!!
"When did humans first settle on the Japanese archipelago? And where did they come from?" (※)
Doraemon's Long Tales "Nobita and the Birth of Japan" is a special work that became the monumental 10th film in the "Doraemon's Long Tales" series, a body of work that Fujiko F. Fujio Sensei dedicated his life to creating.
This time, in addition to "Nobita and the Birth of Japan," we will also feature and display original art from stories throughout Fujiko F. Fujio's works that involve "Journeys Through Time (Time Travel)," such as "The Apprentice T.P." (T.P. Bon), "One-Way Time Machine" (Kiteretsu Daihyakka), and "His Time Machine" (SF Short Stories).
"Everyone in the world is alive today, having inherited the same bloodline from the distant past." (※)
What kind of thoughts did Sensei have when he depicted the stories of travelers traversing "time and space"? We invite you to experience this for yourselves through the numerous original artworks and his brushstrokes, visible only at the museum.
※ Fujiko・F・Fujio Sensei, from the afterword of Tentoumushi Comics Anime Version Movie Doraemon Nobita and the Birth of Japan (Part 2), Shogakukan, 1998.

Original Art Exhibition, "Nobita and the Birth of Japan and the Journey Through Time," Confirmed to Start on Friday, July 10!!
"When did humans first settle on the Japanese archipelago? And where did they come from?" (※)
Doraemon's Long Tales "Nobita and the Birth of Japan" is a special work that became the monumental 10th film in the "Doraemon's Long Tales" series, a body of work that Fujiko F. Fujio Sensei dedicated his life to creating.
This time, in addition to "Nobita and the Birth of Japan," we will also feature and display original art from stories throughout Fujiko F. Fujio's works that involve "Journeys Through Time (Time Travel)," such as "The Apprentice T.P." (T.P. Bon), "One-Way Time Machine" (Kiteretsu Daihyakka), and "His Time Machine" (SF Short Stories).
"Everyone in the world is alive today, having inherited the same bloodline from the distant past." (※)
What kind of thoughts did Sensei have when he depicted the stories of travelers traversing "time and space"? We invite you to experience this for yourselves through the numerous original artworks and his brushstrokes, visible only at the museum.
※ Fujiko・F・Fujio Sensei, from the afterword of Tentoumushi Comics Anime Version Movie Doraemon Nobita and the Birth of Japan (Part 2), Shogakukan, 1998.