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      • All Categories
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      • Gardens
      • Japanese Bathing
      • Tea and Refreshments
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Yū BATHHOUSE

  • About
  • Journal 
    • All Categories
    • Architecture
    • Gardens
    • Japanese Bathing
    • Tea and Refreshments
  • …  
    • About
    • Journal 
      • All Categories
      • Architecture
      • Gardens
      • Japanese Bathing
      • Tea and Refreshments
Join the Club

Why bathhouses have murals

· Architecture

Walk into a traditional Japanese sentō and there's a good chance you'll find a huge mural behind the baths.

Most famously, it's Mount Fuji.

The tradition dates back to the early twentieth century, when bathhouses in growing cities wanted to create a stronger sense of space. A painted mountain, lake or coastline gave bathers the feeling of soaking beneath an open sky, even though they were inside a busy urban neighbourhood.

Over time, the murals became part of the sentō experience. Traditionally, they were painted directly onto the plaster walls by specialist mural artists, a craft that only a handful of painters continue today.

Not every bathhouse has one now, and modern designs often take a different approach. But many historic sentō still preserve these hand-painted murals, making them as much a part of the experience as the baths themselves.

It's a reminder that a bathhouse isn't simply a functional space. It's somewhere designed to transport you, if only for half an hour. Today, the murals remain one of the most recognisable features of the traditional Japanese sentō.

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Yū Bathhouse is bringing the traditions of Japanese bathing to Britain.

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