The giant mural by Taro Okamoto that has been restored
"Asu no Shinwa (Tomorrow's Myth)," a giant mural by Taro Okamoto (1911-1996) has been restored and was displayed for reporters in Toon, Ehime Prefecture, on Tuesday.

The motif of the 5.5-meter-high and 30- meter-wide mural, which was made from 1968 to 1969, is an exploding atomic bomb. During the same period, Okamoto made "Taiyo no To" (Tower of the Sun) for the Japan World Exposition in Osaka in 1970.
The mural with its antinuclear message is known as an atomic bomb version of "Guernica," a painting in which Pablo Picasso expressed his anger against fascism, and is considered Okamoto's best work.
The mural had been thought lost until the summer of 2003, when it was found in pieces in Mexico City. Restorer Emiiru Yoshimura and others worked on the restoration project in Toon since July.
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