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Tokyo Pride 2025: LGBTQ Events Happening This June

Tokyo Pride 2025: LGBTQ Events Happening This June

Tokyo Weekender06-06-2025
Tokyo is set to celebrate Pride Month in June 2025 with a vibrant lineup of LGBTQ+ events, marking a significant evolution in the city's commitment to diversity and inclusion. From the annual Tokyo Pride Parade to queer community events, here are some events not to miss this month to celebrate, be proud and show your support for LGBTQ+ rights in Japan.
List of Contents:
LGBTQ+ Events Happening June 2025
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LGBTQ+ Events Happening June 2025
Tokyo Pride 2025
The heart of Tokyo Pride 2025 beats at Yoyogi Park, where the main Pride Festival takes over the Event Plaza and Outdoor Stage, running from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on June 7 and 8. Plus, it's completely free. There will be diverse crowds, live performances, food stalls and booths representing organizations from across Japan's LGBTQ+ spectrum. On Sunday, June 8, the Pride Parade kicks off at around 12 p.m., following the classic Shibuya to Harajuku route that transforms Tokyo's busiest districts into a rainbow river of celebration.
Date & Time
Jun 07-08・11:00-18:00
Price
Free
Location
Yoyogi Park
More Details
Queer Art Exhibition
Explore diverse LGBTQ+ perspectives through 36 works by 30 artists at the Queer Art Exhibition, part of Tokyo Pride 2025. Free admission at Tokyu Plaza Harajuku, June 6 to June 18.
Date & Time
Jun 06-18・11:00-21:00・Closes at 19:00 on the Final Day
Price
Free
Location
BABY THE COFFEE BREW CLUB GALLERY ROOM/ART STREET
More Details
Queens' Brunch at The Tokyo Edition, Ginza
On Thursday, June 12, Sophie at Edition, the modern brasserie on the 14th floor of The Tokyo Edition, Ginza, will present its annual Queens' Brunch. Guests will enjoy dazzling live performances by Kily Shakley, DJ sets by Elli-Rose and an exciting raffle featuring fabulous prizes. The brunch menu showcases a variety of carefully selected gastronomic delights, including seasonal vegetables sourced from local farmers across the Kanto region and more.
Date & Time
Jun 12, 2025・12:00-15:00
Price
¥8,800 with welcome cocktail | ¥10,000 with a glass of champagne
Location
Sophie at Edition
More Details
UNIQUE at The Tokyo Edition, Toranomon
At The Tokyo Edition, Toranomon, pride month festivities will be in full-swing on Wednesday, June 18, with Unique, a two-part Pride event. The evening will kick off at the 31st-floor Lobby Bar and will continue with an after-party at the Gold Bar on the 1st floor. DJs and guests will be styled in statement pieces by Windowsen, the avant-garde Shanghai-based fashion brand, creating a tasteful atmosphere for both the main event and the after-party.
Date & Time
Jun 18, 2025・20:00-04:00
Price
Prices vary
Location
The Tokyo Edition, Toranomon
More Details
Queer Creative Fair at Black Bird Eatery
Celebrate pride month at Black Bird! This is an art fair by the queer people for the queer people and allies. Come out and support the unique and beautiful queer creative works of folks in Tokyo.
Date & Time
Jun 21, 2025・13:00-17:00
Price
1 drink order to enter
Location
Black Bird Eatery
More Details
Open Mic: Pride Month Special
Come share your creativity with a lively, supportive audience at Black Bird Eatery. Music, poetry, dance, illustrations, your story — anything you wish to share.
Date & Time
Jun 27, 2025・19:00-23:00
Price
¥1,000 including one drink
Location
Black Bird Eatery
More Details
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At Tokyo Pride's first queer art exhibition, intimacy and resistance share the wall
At Tokyo Pride's first queer art exhibition, intimacy and resistance share the wall

Japan Times

time14-06-2025

  • Japan Times

At Tokyo Pride's first queer art exhibition, intimacy and resistance share the wall

On the third floor of Tokyu Plaza Harajuku's Harakado space, the inaugural Queer Art Exhibition — one of the main events of Tokyo Pride 2025 — unfurls as both celebration and reflection. With 36 works by 30 LGBTQ+ and allied artists, the show presents a broad spectrum of media: painting, photography, illustration, mixed media — and an equally wide spectrum of voices. The result is less a tightly curated gallery show than a spirited, grassroots salon: uneven, but moving. The range of artistic quality is as wide as the range of mediums, and that goes for the messaging as well. While some pieces are fairly predictable — rainbow flags in various settings (one work is simply a painted flag) — others are intricate, formally sophisticated art objects. These standout pieces offer layered social commentary on what it means to live as an LGBTQ+ individual in Japan today, while also showcasing the technical and conceptual ingenuity of their creators. Organized through an open-call submission process, the exhibition is crowdsourced in the best sense, shaped by community rather than institution. That openness extends to the structure: visitors are invited to vote for the Tokyo Rainbow Pride Award, a ¥100,000 prize granted by public decision. Donations and artwork sales go directly to the artists themselves. In its structure and spirit, this is a show designed not just to exhibit queer art but to empower queer artists. 'Ordinary' by moriuo | ©TOKYO PRIDE 2025 Among the more resonant pieces is 'Ordinary' by moriuo, a painting drawing lightly on comic-book style, depicting a young male couple hand-in-hand by the ocean as a train passes in the background — perhaps in Kamakura. The image is seen through the eyes of an older gay man, who never had the freedom to express love so openly. 'I wish you could see this view ... this time that has finally come,' reads the artist's quietly devastating caption. It's a moment of tenderness across generations — a reckoning with what was once impossible. Noumra's 'In My Closet' turns introspection into visual poetry. A large, cutout panel painted in exquisite detail, it features the face of a bearded man surrounded by a wreath of flowers, foliage and a fox-like creature whispering into his ear. The face is serene. Here, the 'closet' is not a site of repression but a blooming inner landscape — a place where identity takes root. Noumra rejects outward signifiers of queerness and instead renders the closet as a space of psychological richness, where pride grows inside before reaching the surface. 'わたしたちの生活' ('Watashi-tachi no Seikatsu,' 'Our Lives') by Moe Kano | ©TOKYO PRIDE 2025 Moe Kano's photographic collage 'わたしたちの生活' ('Watashi-tachi no Seikatsu,' 'Our Lives') also echoes a commitment to pride via smaller gestures. A collection of slice-of-life, candid domestic moments shared with her partner — boxed lunches packed, rooms lived in, messes left uncleaned — it resists spectacle in favor of truth. 'We argue. We disagree. Sometimes we're broke,' she writes. 'But we're together.' The work gently insists that queer love doesn't need to be extraordinary to be valid. Then there are pieces that pierce more directly. Kazutaka Nagashima's '玫瑰少年' ('Meigui Shonan,' 'Rose Boy'), a gorgeous woodblock print, memorializes Yeh Yung-chih, a Taiwanese queer teenager who died as a result of bullying. Nagashima merges a rose tattoo motif with printmaking in an aching tribute. 'I could have ended up like him,' he confesses, reminding us survival can be political. '玫瑰少年' ('Meigui Shonan,' 'Rose Boy') by Kazutaka Nagashima | ©TOKYO PRIDE 2025 Natsuki Yoshida's trio of partially monochrome paintings — rooted in manga — traces lesbian romance with emotional clarity and quiet intensity. Through tender embraces, haunted gazes, and symbols like smoke and floating neck halos, these works capture the intimacy between young women, and also the beauty, hesitation and ache of desire in a world still learning how to hold it. Otokokokoto's '屁' ('He,' 'Fart') is a playful standout, a mixed-media depiction of a man in a public bath. Both irreverent and strangely tender, the work turns bodily humor into a bold artistic gesture. Queer art, it turns out, can embrace absurdity and the delightfully unserious. Taken together, these works form a constellation of perspectives — some polished, some raw, all urgent in their own way. And in this mix lies the true strength of the exhibition. Because it is crowdfunded and community-sourced, the show makes no claim to curatorial perfection. But it does succeed, powerfully, in reflecting a grassroots artistic community in all its heartfelt and irreducible complexity. The overall message is one of unity and inclusion: Everyone is welcome. The Queer Art Exhibition at Tokyu Plaza Harajuku's Harakado, runs through June 18. For more information, visit

Pride and prose: Novels that illuminate queer lives in Japan
Pride and prose: Novels that illuminate queer lives in Japan

Japan Times

time11-06-2025

  • Japan Times

Pride and prose: Novels that illuminate queer lives in Japan

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Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities
Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities

NHK

time07-06-2025

  • NHK

Tokyo Pride 2025 aims to promote rights of sexual minorities

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