I couldn’t resist this beauty at Tomioka Hachimangu today. Yes, it is looking like I might need some intervention…
Related Post: Buoys, Bottles and Bargains…The Rainy Day Special at Kawagoe
I couldn’t resist this beauty at Tomioka Hachimangu today. Yes, it is looking like I might need some intervention…
Related Post: Buoys, Bottles and Bargains…The Rainy Day Special at Kawagoe
By tokyojinja in Glass, Shrine Sales and Flea Markets Tags: flea market, glass bottles, shrine sale, Tomioka Hachimangu
Kyoto has a few major shrine sales each month – two at Toji Temple just south of the train station and one in the northern end of the city at the Kitano Tenmangu Shrine. The two very big markets have been happening on the grounds of the shrines for centuries. I think it is well worth planning a visit to Kyoto to include one!
1st Sunday of the Month
21st of the Month
25th of the Month
Ongoing updated information on shrine sales and antique shows can always be found on the “Shrine Sales” tab at the top of the blog.
By tokyojinja in Shrine Sales and Flea Markets Tags: flea market, japanese antiques, Kyoto
God gave us our memories so that we might have roses in December.
J.M. Barrie
Pierre de Ronsard, St. Cecilia, Baron Girod de l’Ain, Septer’d Isle…these are some of the roses that grow both literally and figuratively in Risa Hirose’s garden. The beauty of the flowers is matched by the beauty of their names and Hirose finds her inspiration in them. Rose is also a play on her name and that is often reflected in the titles of her pieces such as in her print Hi rose-essence- shown above. In her second and final year in the Master’s program at Tokyo Zokei Univeristy, Ms. Hirose’s wood engravings have already won numerous competitions and she has held solo exhibitions and been selected for the CWAJ Print Show for the past two years.
Wood engraving is a type of relief printmaking in which an image is cut away, leaving a raised surface on which the ink is applied and then transferred to paper. Traditional wood blocks are carved with the grain of the wood and the prints often display or even feature the grain as a part of the artist’s vision. On the other hand, wood engraving uses wood cut across the grain of the wood – like a slice of tree trunk. The prints tend to be small, as they are limited by the size of the trunk or branch (about 15cm in diameter), as in the example below.
Hirose uses the traditional tsuge (boxwood) for her blocks, which is very hard, very slow-growing and perfect for carving incredibly fine detail. Her small works are often single images in the round, using the shape of the block as the outermost border, such as in Passion ToKei, her first print to be exhibited at the 2009 CWAJ Print Show. Look very closely at the image below – it is not a print – it is actually the carved block used to make the print. Her technical mastery is amazing.
To get the meticulous detail she is known for, Hirose hand prints the blocks onto super fine translucent gampi paper. Thicker paper would not yield such detail. After drying, each one is carefully trimmed and attached with a natural based glue to heavier paper. Here is the artist herself, standing in front of drying gampi paper impressions of one of her newest works Things That Day. This new print is a memory of her trip to Okinawa and adds bougainvillea and coral to her repertoire.
To make a large wood engraving, an artist will align a group of blocks like a parquet floor, one square next to another. This is not the system Hirose uses. She uses (and re-uses) her blocks like modular components, placing them in her compositions. Unlike most traditional wood block prints, where uniformity is prized, each one of hers is different as placement cannot be exact. The large work below, Diary-pale,moisture-, is 110cm x 75cm, an unfeasible size for a regular wood engraving. Her collage-like approach and use of empty space is one of the thing that makes Hirose’s prints unusual.
In another large print, Document 1-one prior fragment-, shown below, you can see some of the components repeated from the print above. You can also see certain images repeated within the print, for example the hyacinth bulb, the small rosebuds and daisies.
Hirose’s artistic themes revolve around the idea of “sealing down time”, yet ironically, the prints themselves contain an impermanent and changeable material. After glueing each small print to the larger paper, she crushes rose petals directly on each piece, creating a wash of soft pigment. The color starts out as a rich purple and fades over time to a champagne-like color. In each step of her work she layers on the small differences giving each print in the edition a unique quality. Below is a close-up of the center of Document 1-one prior fragment- when it was originally created a few months ago.
Here it is faded as it currently appears now. I think it is amazing to watch a normally static art form develop and mature over time.
Risa Hirose will have a print at the upcoming annual exhibition of the Daigaku Hanga Gakkai (Committee of Universities of Art for Print Studies in Japan) held at Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts from December 5-19, 2010, along with other print work by more than 280 students. There will small prints by the students available for sale – some for only 1000yen each.
And her new day job when she graduates this spring? Ms. Hirose will be an engraver at the Japanese Mint. So each time you hold a fresh yen bill, you too can have your own Risa Hirose engraving.
N.B. I am a little frustrated with this post as none of the photos begin to show the elusive quality of her work, or even the absolute excellence of her technique. I guess it is simply a limitation of the medium.
All images copyrighted by Risa Hirose. Please do not re-post without writing to me for permission. Thank you.
By tokyojinja in Artist Spotlight Tags: CWAJ Print Show, japanese prints, Risa Hirose, roses, wood block prints, wood engraving
While not actually a secret, no one ever seems to list or mention the small shrine sale held in the patio square of Azabu Juban. I guess in all fairness, it isn’t an actual shrine sale as there is no shrine, but the feel is the same. No more than 12 dealers come every first Saturday of the month and they usually pack up by 3 p.m. As it is just down the hill from my house, I go regularly and always get lucky. There is something about small sales that makes shopping easier – like going to a favorite boutique instead of a large department store – it just gives you a more focussed view.
There was a bit of everything this past Saturday – lacquer serving pieces and small chests perfect for holding jewelry.
This set of really pretty Imari plates with tiny diapered patterns.
I can imagine them hanging on the wall in Olya and Charles Thompson’s richly colored Brooklyn brownstone.
An adorable collection of tiny shoyu (soy sauce) dishes, particularly the more unusual blue and white and celadon ones, looks like a plate wall display in miniature…
I loved this tiny wooden hibachi (charcoal brazier) with inlaid wisteria. It had its original copper lining and would be perfect for autumn flower displays. I’ve not seen this wooden style so small – it was about the size of a pineapple.
I also loved these two fabulous huge iron hibachi…
…perfect for planting palms in the Schuyler Samperton style. (And if you love palm trees and layered eclecticism make sure to look through her portfolio).
And for myself? OK, I admit I have gone a little crazy – glass crazy that is. Ever since my finds at Kawagoe I am obsessed with blue-green glass, old bottles and floats! I am not sure if my huge bottle will fit where I want it, so what about a small collection of little bottles, just in case?
These two had visible bubbles in the glass and an older hand blown feel.
The smaller bottle had a threaded neck. When I bought it, I hoped to be able to add a spout or pump and use it for liquid soap.
Kind of like this!
More information on the shrine sale schedule can be found in the tab at the top of the blog. Feel free to email me if you have any questions!
Image credits: 1,2,4,5, 6, 8 & 9. me, 3. Vogue January 2010 , photo credit: Francois Halard, 7. Domino April 2007, photo credit: Paul Costello, 10. Unknown
By tokyojinja in Glass, Metals, Porcelain and Pottery, Shrine Sales and Flea Markets Tags: flea market, glass bottles, imari, japanese antiques, lacquer, Olya Thompson, porcelain, Schuyler Samperton, shrine sale
The October/November issue of Lonny Magazine featured this photo from popular decorator Celerie Kemble’s Central Park South apartment. The glamorous interiors included this dining room, with suits of samurai warrior armor standing guard.
Popular culture has given us an idealized view of samurai living their lives by the codes of Bushido (Way of the Warrior) and committing seppuku (ritual suicide) if dishonored. By the time this photo was taken during the peaceful Edo period, many samurai like this fellow below no longer needed to fight and became bureaucrats and administrators instead.
A fair number of antique dealers here specialize in war related items – there is always someone selling swords, tsuba (sword guards) and other paraphernalia at a market or antique show. While not completely uncommon, you don’t see armor everyday though. However I did see this set a few weeks ago and took this photo because I knew sooner or later this very question would need to be addressed.
Classic estates in Europe routinely display suits of armor, but what say you all to samurai in New York? Brilliant or creepy? Or something else entirely?
I am holding my opinion until the votes are in…Please comment on this post and let me know what you think!
Image credits:1. October-November 2010 Lonny Magazine, 2. Spacious Planet, 3. me.
By tokyojinja in Interior Design Tags: armor, Celerie Kemble, Lonny, samurai warriors