“Samurai: Japanese Armor from the Ann and caught fucking my best friend daughter sex videoGabriel Barbier-Mueller Collection” will be on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s Resnick Pavilion from Oct. 19 to Feb. 1, 2015.

Travel back in time and discover remarkable objects that illuminate the life, culture, and pageantry of the samurai, the revered and feared warriors of Japan. The Samurai Collection of Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller, one of the finest and most comprehensive collections in the world, presents a treasure trove of battle gear made for high-ranking warriors and daimyo (provincial governors) of the 14th through 19th centuries.
The exhibition illustrates the evolution of samurai equipment through the centuries, featuring more than 140 objects of warrior regalia, with full suits of armor, helmets and face guards, weapons, horse trappings, and other battle gear.
During the centuries covered by the exhibition, warfare evolved from combat between small bands of equestrian archers to the clash of vast armies of infantry and cavalry equipped with swords, spears, and even matchlock guns. Arms and armor were needed in unprecedented quantities, and craftsmen responded with an astonishingly varied array of armor that was both functional and visually spectacular, a celebration of the warrior’s prowess.
Even after 1615, when the Tokugawa military dictatorship brought an end to battle, samurai families continued to commission splendid arms and armor for ceremonial purposes. Because the social rank, income, and prestige of a samurai family were strictly determined by the battlefield valor of their ancestors, armor became ever more sumptuous as the embodiment of an elite warrior family’s heritage.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with essays by some of the leading Japanese samurai armor experts. To buy the catalogue, click here.
Organized by the Ann & Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Museum, Dallas.
To become a LACMA member and see the exhibition free, click here. To reserve at ticket, click here.
LACMA is lcoated at 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. Museum hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Saturday, Sunday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Early closure on Saturday, Nov. 1.
General admission plus specially ticketed exhibitions: $25 for adults, seniors (62+) and students with valid ID, free for children (17 and under) and members.
For more information, visit www.lacma.org.

Photography: Brad Flowers.