The exhibition, unique in Switzerland, retraces Takahata’s career, from Heidi, Girl of the Alps (1974) to Grave of the Fireflies (1988) and The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (2013), through his notebooks and storyboards, original drawings, cels, film and video excerpts and audiovisual documents.
Isao Takahata
© Heidi, Studio 100 international
A Pioneer of Contemporary Animation, from the Post-war Era to Studio Ghibli
The exhibition, unique in Switzerland, retraces Takahata’s career, from Heidi, Girl of the Alps (1974) to Grave of the Fireflies (1988) and The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (2013), through his notebooks and storyboards, original drawings, cels, film and video excerpts and audiovisual documents.
It also highlights an entirely new aspect: the special ties Takahata maintained with the West throughout his life, from his intellectual education to his role as a cultural bridge, and the accuracy of his depictions of the European world in landmark works such as Heidi, Girl of the Alps (1974).
Grave of the Fireflies
© Akiyuki Nosaka / shinchosha, 1988
An exclusive section at mudac: Isao Takahata – A Life and a Body of Work in Dialogue with the West
This part of the exhibition explores Isao Takahata’s decisive relationship with the West, particularly the French-speaking world. It retraces his discovery of Prévert’s poetic realism – a foundation of both his aesthetic and political engagement – and presents his in-depth research into The Shepherdess and The Chimney-Sweep (1953), through original documents that shed light on the origins of his vocation. It then examines the unprecedented challenge of adapting classic Western stories into animation – Heidi, Girl of the Alps (1974), From The Apennines to The Andes (1976), Anne of Green Gables (1979) – combining ethnographic rigour with documentary ambition. Finally, it highlights Takahata’s exchanges with Western artists (Grimault, Ocelot, Back, Norstein and many others), his influence on world animation and his major role in establishing animated film as a recognised art form. This journey illustrates the importance of sustained cultural exchange, portraying Takahata as a key figure in intercultural dialogue and a source of inspiration across borders.
Isao Takahata
Isao Takahata
© Yasuo Ôtsuka
Isao Takahata (1935–2018) is regarded as one of the great masters of world animation. Co-founder of Studio Ghibli alongside Hayao Miyazaki in 1985, he had already, from the 1960s onwards, developed a body of work that is at once exacting, poetic and pioneering. Through his deeply humanistic vision, his narrative sensitivity and his daring formal approach, Takahata reinvented the language of animated work, liberating it from its traditional codes and turning it into an art form in its own right, recognised for what he himself called “the invention of animated reality”.
| Global Curator | Kazuyoshi Tanaka (Studio Ghibli) |
| Scientific Advisory Team | Ilan Nguyên (MEMA - Musée Européen du Manga et de l’Anime) |
| Curators for the new section at mudac | Xavier Kawa-Topor (NEF-Animation) Ilan Nguyên (MEMA) |
- Special Cooperated by Studio Ghibli
- Produced with the Cooperation of NHK Promotions Inc.
- Cooperated by The Tokuma Memorial Cultural Foundation for Animation, SHINCHOSHA Publishing Co., Ltd.