Tokyo history in e-hagaki

October 3, 2007

ginza1903650.jpg

Old Tokyo is a fascinating pictorial history of modern day Tokyo depicted through e-hagaki (Japanese postcards).

From the site:

With the establishment of the Meiji Restoration, Japan’s modernization began. Many modern practices, conveniences, and processes were imported, adopted, or acquired, including the Western-style printing press1 that would allow for the rapid reproduction and dissemination of artwork worldwide. Dutch traders introduced photography into Japan during the waning years of the Tokugawa shogunate; Japan’s modern postal service was formed in 1871. These three developments combined together to create the e-hagaki, the Japanese picture postcard, the earliest of which displayed a unique blending of Old and New Japan.

Similar in style to Western-style picture postcards then in vogue, e-hagaki combined Western technology with Japanese sensibilities. The subject matter was wide and varied: famous landmarks, tourist destinations, popular past times, scenes of everyday life, and important historical moments were all portrayed in color at a time when color photography did not exist. Long experience with traditional woodblock printing, ukiyo-e, enabled Japanese artists to reproduce subtle tinted colors, sometimes applied by hand, in ways that had not been before seen in the Western printing. Reproductions of ukiyo-e were realistically limited to a few hundred copies; the Western collotype printing process and, later, the offset printing press, made possible reproductions numbering in the thousands.

The results were a plethora of very beautiful, inspired artistic renditions that even the later development of the color lithographic process could not match. This site comprises a sampling of e-hagaki, and other Tokyo postcard images, from the early years of the 20th century.

The above picture is of Ginza crosing in 1903, the beginnings of what was to become Tokyo’s most sought after and expensive retails real estate - where today a square metre can set you back tens of thousands of dollars. In the background on the left hand side ofthe picture is the Hattori clock tower, home of K. Hattori & Co., the company who would later introduce later introduce the brand name “Seiko” to the world.

Old tokyo pool

The above picture taken from the 1907 Meiji Industrial Exposition at Ueno Park shows the first swimming pool in Japan.

More awazing photos, maps and Tokyo history can be found at http://oldtokyo.com/


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Japanese student pen tricks

Tim Ferris, author of the Four Hour Workweek, demonstrates the essential skills of being a student in Japan - learnt while on a high school exchange programme. Shown here, in order of difficultly is The Wheel, The Helicopter, The Drummer, The Pincher and The Flip.

and here is the real deal (note - an essential part of mastering these tricks is the ability to appreciate speed j-rock)…


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Gimmie FIVE….tons

August 28, 2007

Kurata HandI first heard of Kogoro Kurata through his steampunk laptop. Now the guy is making massive armed robots and this giant hand you see here. If his scale continues to grow at this rate, plan on Godzilla’s new nemesis by next summer.

All links through the venerable Engadget


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Field of Themes

August 26, 2007

paddy art 3Sunday’s Japan Times had a feature on the awesome rice field paintings we wrote about a few months ago.

paddy art 4

Apparently, time is running out to see them in full detail because:

…now in August, the lengths of each kind of rice are different due to their different growth rates. Now, we cannot clearly see the drops falling off the waves, as the yellow rice for the drops is shorter than Tsugaru Roman. So by now the drops have begun sinking into the green background of the Tsugaru Roman.”


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Spooky-uki

August 21, 2007

spooky-uki

PingMag has an interesting piece on the two Ukiyo-e exhibits presently on display in Tokyo. Both deal with Ukiyo-e’s connection with ghosts, Yokai and other spooky/surreal elements.


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www.allURbasesRbelong2us.jp

flag in video game

So communications minister, Yoshihide Suga plans to replace the internet by 2020, huh? Good luck selling that idea to the Chinese.

Via Kotaku and Engadget


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Fuck YU-kata

August 19, 2007

yukatas on display

I went to see the Punk Yukatas at Point Gallery yesterday. These are my pics, but PingMag has better images and info HERE. Great patterns (leopard skin, lips, chains, etc).

yukata patternsyukata chain

The Obis on sale were the coolest, tho. Checkit:

obi 999

Obi snake/ginza

The bottom one? That’s images of a fish market:

Obi fish

Pretty ballsy, as is this beer mug chain medallion. Or how about a mini-steak or gyoza?

necklace gyoza


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