Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Macrame Rope Doorways of Kyoto
I am so inspired to do something like this over a hall window at home! If I see any more before leaving Kyoto I will add them to this post. The first and last doorways above are in the house museum of the William Morris of Japan----next post!
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Toto (We're not in Kansas anymore)
Travel Quiz: This is....
(A) The climate control panel for the Presidential Suite at the Kyoto Tokyu Hotel,
(B) The control panel for the audio-visual system at the Science Research Building of Kyoto University.
(C) The control panel for the toilet in the public restroom of the Kyoto Tokyu Hotel lobby.
(click to enlarge....yes, those are the flush and "fake flush sound" buttons on the top, along with many other functions that bear closer investigation).
Labels:
travel
Monday, June 14, 2010
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Nishiki Food Market, Kyoto
For over 400 years this 400 meter-long covered indoor market has been the destination of Kyoto foodies....and I can see why! I didn't know so many types of small eatable marine organisms existed. For your viewing pleasure, we'll start with the very best.....octopops! I'd like to see Anthony Bourdain eat one of these puppies.
"How about trying this? Delicious, a quail egg is in the head of the octopus." (click to enlarge to fully appreciate their juicy looking deliciousness)
more octopops...
lots of small seafoody things...
Saturday, June 12, 2010
The Many Uses of Bamboo in the Garden....
Holding up tree limbs.....I'm wondering, does the added support lead to the tree growing in a more sprawling pleasing way? "Tree"spalier?
Fashioned into various shapes to contain plants -- the bamboo is held together at corners with wrapped wire. This would be so easy to do in your own garden.
A simple trellis for climbing.....
A rustic arbor.....this one was 3 posts x 5 posts, quite large, with triple layer open "mat" of bamboo laid on top. Crossovers wrapped with twine.
Another extremely simple arbor, a two-post lean-to against side of building with a climbing vine going up far post.
Cool geometric grids which seemed to be most common under weeping willowy-like trees. Not sure exactly what the point is but nice to walk under (maybe that is the point).
.....on a zen like path.
Labels:
DIY,
gardens,
landscaping
Friday, June 11, 2010
Heian Shrine, Kyoto, Japan
Yesterday I went on a marathon walk around Kyoto, a city full of shrines and their gardens. Unlike nearly every other city in Japan, Kyoto was fortunate not to be firebombed to ashes by the U.S. during WW2 (they don't teach us that in school). The Shinto Heian Shrine is relatively young, built in 1895 to commemorate the 1100th year since the founding of Kyoto. It has numerous buildings all painted vermilion, a color that was apparently first derived from the application of clay (see more about vermilion below). It also has a garden so beautiful you walk around in a daze of blissful revery---it was designed by Ogawa Jihei (1860-1933), one of Japan's great gardeners.
the main gate
Had Monet been here he would have called for his paints.
Note all the Japanese women carrying parasols! It was in the high 80's.
a prayer "shrub"
Stepping stones that form the tail of a dragon. The island forms the dragon's body.
These rope decorations hang over doorways in many of the shrines and are called shimenawa (the rope) and shime (the strips of white paper). They are meant to ward off evil spirits and the white paper symbolizes purity in the Shinto faith. DIY?
the inherent duality of life?
Heian's Torii, one of the largest in Japan, is the traditional gateway to a Shinto shrine marking the transition between the sacred and the profane.
Labels:
architecture,
gardens,
Kyoto
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Banksy, Where's the Gift Shop?
I had the pleasure of seeing Banksy's new movie Exit Through the Gift Shop a few days ago. Banksy is a British street artist who is well-known for his graffiti take on anti-war, anti-capitalist, anti-establishment themes.
I think if William Morris had lived today he would have been a big fan of the anonymous and pseudonymous Banksy. He shared the same strong anti-war, anti-capitalistic views, views which of course led Morris to become one of the founding father's of the British socialist movement.
Exit Through the Gift Shop is one of those movies that stays with you for days afterward as you try to unravel and decipher the message and meaning of the "story".....specifically, was it all an elaborate joke and if so, on whom?
As we left the movie, my friend and I both wondered "Where was the gift shop?" ---it was never shown or mentioned in movie (Banksy escaping museum guards, for instance?). Upon reflection, an obvious interpretation is that Banksy is commenting on the commercialization of art and how it is all a large money-making undertaking that ultimately corrupts the point of the art. Go to the gift shop and get your William Morris mug or Monet umbrella....take home your bit of kitsch and leave your dollars, euros, pesos, yen behind. But then I thought maybe it goes even deeper, and that Mr Brain Wash's one-man show was the gift shop. For a street artist, the world is the "museum". Maybe Banksy set up MBW in this large space reproducing hundreds of kitschy spin-offs of real art, and was able to so perfectly manipulate the LA art scene that he had hundreds (thousands?) of people lining up in the "museum" (outside) to exit through the gift shop where they bought the derivative crap.
I realize you can't really follow this without seeing the movie but I'm still left wondering if MBW (Thierry) was a willing, perfect, unwitting pawn of Banksy's or an integral co-conspirator? Thierry seemed so utterly and genuinely daft it is hard for me to imagine anyone being that good an actor.
_______________________
Wall and Piece
Labels:
art
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