Category: Uncategorized

Making Art in the Arctic

No Comments
Cooling Off in Kyushu
Cooling Off in Kyushu

 

This photo might be from Kyushu, Japan but it still provides soothing, cool thoughts on this muggy day in the rainy season. The summers get so hot that I find glacial streams to be the perfect temperature. I can almost see the steam rising when I place my feet in the water where as everybody else complains that the water is so cold it hurts. As the sweat runs down my back, the thought of being in a cool place is very appealing. This article discusses a Kickstarter campaign to create an artist residency in Norway, but wouldn’t this also be a great idea for communities in northern Canada to generate some ecotourism? We all know that the arts is one of the cheapest ways to revitalise a local economy. Baker Lake is one example where a printmaking project resulted in the creation of world renowned artists. (I am also proud to say that Sheila Butler, one of the artists involved, was one of my favourite university professors and one of my favourite artists before that.) After spending hot and humid summers in Japan, I would be more than willing to spend some time on the tundra. And going in a tundra buggy to see polar bears in Churchill is on my bucket list!

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags:

Zoom

1 Comment

20140601-233752-85072844.jpg

 

Experimenting and playing with something new. Here is a close-up of a squarish section about 4 cm wide. Some people have  been surprised at how much detail goes on in my drawings. Maybe I will have to consider doing a drawing of these sections that I have zoomed in on. What do you think?

 

Coffee-Filter Textiles

1 Comment

omote

Do you remember Hitoko Fujisaki? She uses mineral-rich mud from various places to dye her textile work and uses unusual things, such as cardboard or coffee filters. The wall hanging in the photo on her card for direct mailing is made from coffee filters! She has another show coming up next week at the Art & Craft gallery in Ginza, Tokyo. Anybody want to go with me?

 

Drawing a Bancho with a Bad-Ass Attitude

No Comments

I went to Jun Matsushima’s drawing group at a renovated elementary school that serves as a community centre in Shinagawa, Tokyo the other day. I was a little late, but the model was even later because he had lost his wallet. That might have caused his bad attitude but probably not. I almost got into verbal fisticuffs with him over the term, “gaijin“. To me them’s fighting words. Regardless of my personal feelings, he came dressed as a typical Japanese delinquent and brought the long stick that is often used in gang fights. His clothes hid his body and his movements. He was playing an uncouth character and used it to his advantage. Although his early poses were typical of a Japanese male with attitude (pretending to smoke or urinate in the street), his later poses were more dynamic. We are meant to learn from such challenges, aren’t we?

NOTE: Interesting how the paper shows up more blue after being uploaded here. The photos were not as blue or green in iPhoto. I guess something decided to compensate for the blue crayon and pencils that I used. MZ

ChimpiraClothed

CHimpiraBaggyClothes

ChmpiraSMoking

THreatofViolence

CHimpiraSitting

CHimpiraPiss

CHimpiraPower

ChimpiraProne

ChimpiraLAdyBug

CHimpiraBackwardBEnd

CHimpiraDownwardDog

ChimpiraDancingProphet

ChimpiraLoincloth

ChimpiraCrouching

Chimpira10Min

ChimpiraPirate

CHimpiraShakespeare

Chimpira20Min

Chimpira20MinJesus

ChimpiraComparison

 

Categories: Uncategorized

Now what?

No Comments

You saw the exhibition and that took all of five-ten minutes. You want to do something more with your time in the big city? How about a haircut by Yasu at the Nakamura Biyoshitsu (Salon)? More information can be found at his website: http://yasunakamura.com/.  If you can read Japanese, he also has another website and blog that list his prices: http://www.nakamura-biyoushitu.com/.

Yasu Nakamura
Yasu Nakamura

He worked in New York for many years, speaks English, and imports dyes and some hair products from the United States. The occasional celebrity or circus performer might also pop in while you are there to get a trim. I kid you not.

Daimyo Cross Garden
Daimyo Cross Garden

After you have made an appointment and have seen the amazing art made by yours truly, walk for about one minute to the corner of the road. (That means you turn left when you leave the gallery’s building.) Are you feeling a little unsure about where you are going? Don’t worry! Can you see the modern white church called Daimyo Cross Garden at the end of the street? If so, you are going in the right direction.

The street turns left, so you should too. Turn onto the first street on your right. You should be able to see a small,

Blurry exterior of Nakamura Biyoshitsu
Blurry exterior of Nakamura Biyoshitsu

retro beauty shop with a brick storefront almost immediately on your left. That is the Nakamura Biyoshitsu (Salon). The shop was originally run his mother-in-law, and he renovated the place with all kinds of beautiful antiques.

What else can you do? How about a pint in a British pub very close to the hair salon and on the same side of the street but in a larger, more modern building. (I have not been there, so I don’t know the hours or if it is any good or not. I think it has been there for a while, so that is a good sign.)

Are you hungry? Well, if you want to try some falafel or hummus at a Sudanese restaurant called Kebabooz, you are going to have to walk to the other side of the block. Keep heading down the same street away from the gallery and the salon. Turn right at the first corner, and then turn right again so you are heading back to Z-side. By the way, Kebabooz does not sell alcohol, but you are allowed to bring some with you. That Lawson’s along the way is your last chance to pick up a beer to go with your shishkabob. They do sell other drinks as well as coffee and chai, just not alcohol.

The restaurant is on the left side of the street but it is a little hard to find. Keep an eye out for a signboard on the street in front of what looks like a building filled with bars,

Kebabooz for Sudanese food in Japan
Kebabooz for Sudanese food in Japan

Kebabooz is on the first floor, so you don’t have to go upstairs. Just like with the gallery,  you have to go further inside to find the door. Sana and the staff will greet you with big smiles! (When you look at the menu, tamiya are falafel balls. The smaller, cheaper choice is half of a pita. I recommend the ful (pronounced “fool”) if they have some.)

New Year and a New Perspective

6 Comments

View from Outside (Kyoto)

Thank you for your patience! I admit that I have been putting this off for too long, so I resolved that I would bite the bullet and just do it. I am still not completely sure what this blog will be about but I have a better idea than before. I will try to feature my own artwork of course but I also want to discuss the importance of finding one’s own voice and going upstream against the flow of the crowd. My opinions might change from day to day, and that is fine with me. I also hope to express myself on a regular basis even if it is just the occasional sentence expressing a thought that popped into my head. Those thoughts might be verbal instead of visual but they are still important to me. They  reflect who I am in many arenas. If possible, I hope that friends of mine who I respect as artists will also let me feature some of their work as well. Sometimes I will be verbose on all or some of these topics, and sometimes I will be as succinct as possible. Please join me as I peek into what it is like to be a recovering creative and artist in the 21st century in Japan and elsewhere.

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: ,