Friday, September 20, 2013

JUGOYA (Harvest Moon Festival)


o-tsukimi* night

two eyes watching from the grass
tanuki views me


(*Moon viewing)

Thursday, September 19, 2013

TSUKIMI THOUGHTS (The Japanese Moon Viewing Festival)




TSUKIMI THOUGHTS

white light through the glass
kitty lying on his back
time for a moon bath

white light through the glass
cat meditates in the beam
becoming more strange

tsumiki evening
bunny and panda watching
different angles*


(*Aoi and I are on different sides of the Pacific tonight)

Thursday, September 5, 2013

HERON MAIDEN A variation by Kitano Tsunetomi




HERON MAIDEN

     A variation by Kitano Tsunetomi (1880-1947) of his famous "Umekawa" print, dated 1925. The title refers to a one-act kabuki play and dance by the same name.

Kitano Tsunetomi was a well known bijin-ga printmaker and painter. Although woodblocks, his prints have a painterly quality, and look very similar to the scroll paintings on which they were based. In 1880, he was born in Kanazawa with the name Tomitaro. As a young man, Tsunetomi worked as an apprentice to a woodblock carver after which he became a print carver for the newspaper Hokkoku Shinpo. He later moved to Osaka to study nihon-ga style painting under Inano Toshitsune, a student of Yoshitoshi. In 1901, he began working as an illustrator for the newspaper Osaka Shinbun.

     Beginning in 1910, Tsunetomi began to exhibit paintings in the Bunten shows, and he won a prize in the 5th Bunten (1911) for his bijin-ga painting "Rain during Sunshine". He published a folio of four prints in 1918 titled "Spring and Autumn in the Licensed Quarter" (Kuruwa no shunju). These designs were self-carved and printed. In 1924, Tsunetomi founded an art school and publishing house called Hakuyodo. His students included the bijin-ga artists Kotani Chigusa and Shima Seien, who like Tsunetomi, designed woodblocks for the 1923 series, The Complete Works of Chikamatsu.


     Around 1925, Tsunetomi's most famous woodblock print, Heron Maiden (Sagi musume), was published by Nezu Seitaro in a limited edition of 100 prints. Featuring a striking silvery mica background and gofun snowflakes, this print is a masterpiece of minimalist design. The carved lines in the woman's clothing and face capture the spontaneous quality of Tsunetomi's original brushstrokes while the rather stark colors — primarily white, gray, and black, punctuated by small areas of bright red — underscore both the feeling of winter and the otherworldliness of the subject matter. During the 1980s, the Japanese publisher Ishukankokai recarved the blocks for Heron Maiden and issued a posthumous edition, also limited to 100 prints.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

SOME OF MY FAVORITE NEIGHBORS



     On this past Sunday, Hayao Miyazaki, Japan's premier animated film director officially announced his retirement.Thank you Miyazaki-san for all the laughter, tears, and dreams you have given us, not to mention the inspiration, and all the little characters, from the dust gremlins to Totoro, and even the house that I would so much like to live in. Thank you for giving so many of us the opportunity to be kids again. Sometimes it is good to rest however.





Sunday, September 1, 2013

ELEPHANT ROCKS II


ALONG THE NATURAL TRAIL: Oniwa Park, Mitake, Gifu-ken.

ELEPHANT ROCKS I



     "ELEPHANT ROCKS" along the nature trail to Matsuno Lake at Oniwa Park, Mitake, Gifu Prefecture.

KAKI SEASON: Getting a Kaki

GETTING A KAKI
(An Illustration by Aoi Tokugawa


getting a kaki
the kitty mafia wants one
not me!











MIDNIGHT IN A KATAYAMAZU GRAVEYARD

MIDNIGHT IN A KATAYAMAZU GRAVEYARD - 


Hearn would have liked it.

STARRY NIGHT IN A KATAYAMAZU GRAVEYARD



IN A KATAYAMAZU GRAVEYARD

starry starry night
not even a semi stirs
“Ghostly,” whispers Hearn

ONIWA HOTEL: CHA-CHA




Oniwa Hotel ~

flirtatious laughter
a band playing the cha-cha
can you hear them too?

ONIWA HOTEL: STRANGE SHAPES




Oniwa Hotel ~ 

strange shapes through the glass
a faint moaning down the hall
just ghosts making love

ONIWA HOTEL




ONIWA HOTEL ~ 

oniwa hotel
tanuki and spiders wa
now the only guests

A PALACE FOR BATS




the trains have now passed
tiny eyes watch from above
a palace for bats

AN ELEGANT FAN




an elegant fan
for fashionable ladies
on the JR Line

KUMANO SHRINE: Kwaidan




Kumano Shrine ~ 

     “I should like, when my time comes, to be laid away in some Buddhist graveyard of the ancient kind, so that my ghostly company should be ancient, caring nothing for the fashions and the changes and disintegrations of Meiji.”
Lafcadio Hearn, "Kwaidan"

KUMANO SHRINE: Shimenawa




Kumano Shrine ~ 

old shimenawa
soiled shide in the breeze
abandoned prayers

KUMANO SHRINE: HEAVENLY MAIDEN





Kumano Shrine ~ 

heavenly maiden
her flute playing for eons
only ghosts listen

KUMANO SHRINE: Ceiling Art




Kumano Shrine ~


faded shapes above
visions of centuries past
from Hearn’s ghostly world

KUMANO SHRINE


kumano shrine ~
the kami sits invisibly,
cradling his head in his hands
no one comes to call.

KUMONO SHRINE: BAA SAKURA




Kumano Shrine ~


baa sakura
lonely national treasure
no one strokes her hair

FIELD OF FLOWERS: Kumano Shrine

FIELD OF FLOWERS




All the brightness and color of youth now fades,
turns brown and withers away.
Autumn approaches quickly...too quickly.
So, I suppose, it is with all of us