Showing posts with label - - - Architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label - - - Architecture. Show all posts

12/02/2014

Interior Design Japan

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Interior Design - The Japanese Home

. Japanese Architecture 日本建築 - Introduction .


Japanese Aesthetics エスセティクス - Nihon no bigaku 日本の美学
The most common terms for aesthetics and design are introduced here.
. Japanese Aesthetics .


CLICK for more photos !

Japanese interior design
Japanese interior design has a unique aesthetic derived from Taoism, Zen Buddhism, specific religious figures and the west. This aesthetic has in turn influenced western style, particularly Modernism.
Interiors are very simple, highlighting minimal and natural decoration. Traditional Japanese interiors, as well as modern, incorporate mainly natural materials including fine woods, bamboo, silk, rice straw mats, and paper shōji screens. Natural materials are used to keep simplicity in the space that connects to nature. Natural color schemes are used and neutral palettes including black, white, off-white, gray, and brown.
- snip -
Traditional materials of the interior
Japanese interior design is very efficient in the use of resources. Traditional and modern Japanese interiors have been flexible in use and designed mostly with natural materials. The spaces are used as multifunctional rooms. The rooms can be opened to create more space for a particular occasion or for more privacy, or vice versa closed-off by pulling closed paper screens called shōji.

Walls made of shōji screens ...
Tatami mats ...
Bamboo ...
Paper, or washi ...
Wood ...

A recessed space called tokonoma is often present in traditional as well as modern Japanese living rooms. This is the focus of the room and displays Japanese art, usually a painting or calligraphy.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !

under construction
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. butsuma 仏間 room for the Buddhist house altar .
. . . . . butsudan 仏壇 Buddhist house altar

. byoobu, tsuitate 屏風、衝立 folding screen .

byooshitsu 病室 room for a sick person

. chabudai ちゃぶ台 / 卓袱台 / 茶部台 table for tatami rooms .
shippoku しっぽく
karazukue 唐机(からづくえ) "Chinese Tang Table"


. chanoma 茶の間 private living room "tea room" .
cha no ma, cha-no-ma

. chigaidana, chigai-dana 違い棚 staggered shelves .

chikachitsu 地下室 underground room

choozu 手水 place to wash your hands

chuunikai, chuu nikai 中二階 mezzanine "middle second floor"

. daidokoro 台所 kitchen - Introduction .
- - - - - irori 囲炉裏 / いろり open sunken hearth - and more vocabulary

daikokubashira 大黒柱 main support pillar of a wooden home "Daikoku-pillar"

doma 土間 dirt floor pit, parterre
- - - - - hiradoma 平土間 pit, orchestra, parquet

. furo 風呂, basuruumu バスルーム bathroom .
- - - - - yudono 湯殿, yokushitsu 浴室 $

. fusuma 襖 and shoji 障子 sliding door .

futobashira 太柱 core pillar

. fuyuzashiki, fuyu-zashiki 冬座敷 Japanese living room in winter .


genkan 玄関 entrance, entrance hall

gootenjoo 格天井 gotenjo, coffered ceiling

hitoma 一間 one room, one-room appartment / ikken - measure, about 1.8 m

hiroma 広間 large room (for gatherings or entertainment)


ima 居間 living room

ita no ma 板の間


kaidan 階段 staircase
- - - - - hashigodan 梯子段 (a flight of) stairs "like a ladder"

. kagu 家具 furniture // wa kagu 和家具 Japanese furniture .

. kawaya 厠, setchin 雪隠, habakari 憚り, benjo 便所 toilet .
. . . . . kooka 後架 toilet, gofujoo 御不浄

kodomobeya 子供部屋 room for children

koshitsu 個室 private room, individual room


. kugikakushi, kugi kakushi 釘隠し "hiding the nails" nail-hiding ornament .  
and all about kugi 釘, Japanese nails
. kugi 釘 nail, Nagel - Introduction .

kyakushitsu, kyakuma 客室 / 客間 guest room


. mado 窓 window .
- - - - - mado no shikii 窓の敷居 windowsill

. menkawabashira 面皮柱 Menkawa pillar or post .


nagaoshi, naga-oshi 長押 beam running between columns

nakaniwa 中庭 "inner garden" - see Japanese Garden tba

nando 納戸 storage room, closet, back room

. natsuzashiki, natsu-zashiki夏座敷 living room in summer .


nihonma, Nihon-ma 日本間 "Japanese room"

oku no ma 奥の間 - see
. okuzashiki 奥座敷 living room in the back .

oohiroma 大広間 banquet hall, reception hall
oosetsuma 応接間 parlor, reception room

. ranma 欄間 transom, open panel carvings .

robii ロビー loby

sanruumu サンルーム sun room

saron サロン saloon

senmenjo 洗面所 wash room, washroom

shikii, shiki-i 敷居 a wooden groove at the boundary of rooms in which sliding doors move, threshold

shinshitsu 寝室 bedroom
- - - - - nedokoro 寝所 / shinjo 寝所
- - - - - nema 寝間
- - - - - kei 閨 woman's bedroom

shoin 書院 study, drawing room
- - - - - shosai 書斎 study, library
- - - - - shoya 書屋 room for books

shokudoo 食堂 dining room

sujikai 筋交い diagonal brace


. tatami 畳 floor mats .
- - - - - tatami no ma 畳の間 $

. tansu 箪笥 / 簞笥 -- たんす chest of drawers, Kommode .


tearai, te-arai 手洗い place to wash your hands, often toilet

tenjoo 天井 ceiling

tenmado 天窓 rooflight, "window to see heaven"

. tokonoma 床の間 alcove for decorations, art nook .
- - - tokobashira 床柱 tokonoma post, alcove post

tooriniwa, toori-niwa 通り庭 earthfloored area, long doma -
. tooriniwa - inour facebook gallery .
..... tsuuro 通路, tooridoma 通り土間
- 通り庭ある京の家炭を挽く 神田敏子

tsugi no ma 次の間 ante-room, antechamber

. uguisubari うぐいす張 / 鴬張 / 鶯張り nightingale floor .

washitsu 和室 Japanese-style room

yooshitsu 洋室 / yooma 洋間 Western-style room

. zabuton 座布団 sitting cushion .

. zashiki 座敷 guest room, drawing room, sitting room .
..... zashiki karakuri 座敷からくり mechanical dolls
..... zashiki warashi 座敷童子 / ざしきわらし girl spooks



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. My collection in facebook .


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- - - - - Literature and Reference


The Japanese House: Architecture and Interiors
Alexandra Black、 Noboru Murata
The simple beauty of Japanese architecture and design has inspired many of the world's top architects and designers-Bruno Taut, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Terence Conran, to name just a few. The grace and elegance of the Japanese sensibility is reflected in both modern and traditional Japanese homes, from their fluid floor plans to their use of natural materials. In The Japanese House, renowned Japanese photographer Noboru Murata has captured this Eastern spirit with hundreds of vivid color photographs of 15 Japanese homes. As we step behind the lens with Murata, we're witness to the unique Japanese aesthetic-to the simple proportions modeled after the square of the tatami mat; to refined, rustic decor; to earthy materials like wood, paper, straw, ceramics, and textiles. This is a glorious house-tour readers can return to again and again-for ideas, inspiration, or simply admiration.
- source : www.amazon.co.jp

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Living in Japan
Alex Kerr / Kathy Arlyn Sokol (Author), Angelika Taschen (Editor), Reto Guntli (Photographer)
So rich and unique is traditional Japanese architecture that it’s hard to improve upon. Yet contemporary Japanese designers and architects keep finding new ways to refurbish and take inspiration from the ways of old. Whether it’s a pristinely preserved traditional house or a cutting-edge apartment, the best Japanese homes share a love of cleverly designed spaces and warm materials such as wood, bricks, and bamboo.
From a thatched roof farmhouse occupied by a Zen priest to Tadao Ando’s experimental 4x4 House, Shigeru Ban’s conceptual Shutter House, and a beautiful homage to bamboo in the form of a home, this book traverses the multifaceted landscape of Japanese living today. Also included is a list of addresses and a glossary of terms, such as tatami.
Text in English, French, and German
- source : www.amazon.com

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Japan the Art of Living
Amy Slyvester Katoh、 Shin Kimura

Japan Style: Architecture
Geeta Mehta

Japan: The Art of Living
Amy Sylvester

Japan Home
リサ パラモア

and more on amazon com
- source : www.amazon.co.jp/Japanese-House-Architecture-Interiors

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Modern Japanese Interior Design:
Nature atmosphere inside Home

Basically, there are thousands great ideas about home interior design that will inspire you in deciding the right home interior design, western interior design, European home interior design or maybe Asian home interior design. Asian interior design is one of great ideas; one of Asian home interior design which maybe can be great inspiration for you is Modern Japanese interior design.

Special characteristic from Modern Japanese interior design is the minimalist design; commonly Japanese homes are small home that is occupied by one family. The other Japanese home character is, commonly Japanese home involve hallway, and the hallway is located between one room and the other. The hallway is used to connect the rooms of the home. Common modern Japanese home interior design provides an outdoor terrace inside home; this way is done to give fresh air for home.

Modern Japanese interior design is inspired from Traditional Japanese home.
- source : lookhomedesign.com


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. Japanese Architecture - cultural keywords used in haiku .

. - Doing Business in Edo - 商売 - Introduction .

. senryu, senryū 川柳 Senryu poems in Edo .


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10/12/2014

Aesthetics bigaku

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Japanese Aesthetics エスセティクス - Nihon no bigaku 日本の美学

The most common terms for aesthetics and design will be introduced here.


CLICK for more photos !

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. basara ばさら / 婆娑羅 / バサラ flamboyant elegance .


. fuuryuu 風流 elegant, tasteful refined .
fuuga, fūga 風雅 fuga, elegance, sincerity
fuukyoo, fûkyô 風狂 fukyo, poetic eccentricity
fuugetsu, fūgetsu 風月 fugetsu, to enjoy the beauty of nature, lit, "wind and moon"


. iki いき / イキ / 粋 / 意気 the CHIC of Edo .


karei 華麗 gorgeous, magnificent elegance


kazari 飾り ornamentation, decoration


. koogei, kôgei 工藝 / 工芸 Kogei, industrial art .

. Mingei 民芸 Beauty of Folk Art and Craft .   


. miyabi 雅 / みやび court elegance .


. mono no aware ものの哀れ the pity / pathos of things .


. shibui 渋い / shibusa 渋さ subdued elegance .


. Storytelling in Japanese Art .


. yuugen 幽玄 yugen. deep, mysterious elegance .
and the Noh theater 能楽


. wabi and sabi 侘び 寂び .
wabi ... simple and quiet, austere refinement
sabi ... elegant simplicity, patina, rusty


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Japanese Aesthetics
First published Mon Dec 12, 2005;
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Although the Japanese have been producing great art and writing about it for many centuries, the philosophical discipline in Japan corresponding to Western “aesthetics” did not get underway until the nineteenth century. A good way to survey the broader field is to examine the most important aesthetic ideas that have arisen in the course of the tradition, all of them before aesthetics was formally established as a discipline: namely, mono no aware (the pathos of things), wabi (subdued, austere beauty), sabi (rustic patina), yūgen (mysterious profundity), iki (refined style), and kire (cutting).

1. Introduction
2. Mono no aware: the Pathos of Things
3. Wabi: Subdued, Austere Beauty
4. Sabi: Rustic Patina
5. Yūgen: Mysterious Grace
6. Iki: Refined Style
7. Kire: Cutting
8. Ozu Yasujirō: Cinematic Cuts
Bibliography / Academic Tools / Other Internet Resources / Related Entries
- source : plato.stanford.edu

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CLICK for more photos !

Nihon no Bigaku 日本の美学 - monthly magazine


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- quote
Japanese Aesthetics, Wabi-Sabi, and the Tea Ceremony
Aesthetics (snip)
...
Japanese Aesthetics
To understand the art and aesthetics of Japan, it is necessary to investigate a Japanese world view, ideas about the nature of art, and influences brought about through contact with other cultures. The aesthetics of Japan developed in a unique fashion, partly because of its geographic location, a string of islands about 100 miles from Korea and 500 miles from China. Its isolation by the sea helped protect Japan from foreign invasion and allowed its rulers to control contact with other nations.

During long periods of self-imposed isolation, art forms and aesthetic ideas developed which were specifically Japanese. Over the centuries, when interactions with foreign cultures occurred, they influenced the traditional arts and aesthetics of Japan. For the purposes of this discussion, the focus will be on what remained essentially Japanese.

Traditional Japanese art and aesthetics we are most affected by the Chinese and by Buddhism, but influences from the West are also evident. For example, the Japanese made no distinction between fine arts and crafts prior to the introduction of such ideas by Europeans in the 1870s. The Japanese word that best approximates the meaning of "art" is katachi.
Katachi translates to mean "form and design," implying that art is synonymous with living, functional purpos e, and spiritual simplicity.

The primary aesthetic concept at the heart of traditional Japanese culture is the value of harmony in all things. The Japanese world view is nature-based and concerned with the beauty of studied simplicity and harmony with nature. These ideas are still expressed in every aspect of daily life, despite the many changes brought about by the westernization of Japanese culture. This Japanese aesthetic of the beauty of simplicity and harmony is called wabi-sabi.
- source : ntieva.unt.edu

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. Tea Ceremony Aesthetics .
Datsuzoku (脱俗) Freedom from habit or formula.
Fukinsei (不均整) Asymmetry or irregularity.
Kanso (簡素) Simplicity or elimination of clutter.
Seijaku (静寂)Tranquility.
Shibui/Shibumi (渋味) Beautiful by being understated,
Shizen (自然) Naturalness.
Yugen (幽玄) Profundity or suggestion rather than revelation.


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- - - - - Japanese aesthetics - wikipedia - - - - -
1 Shinto-Buddhism
2 Wabi-sabi
3 Miyabi
4 Shibui
5 Iki
6 Jo-ha-kyū
7 Yūgen
8 Geidō
9 Ensō
- - -Fukinsei: asymmetry, irregularity; Kanso: simplicity; Koko: basic, weathered; Shizen: without pretense, natural; Yugen: subtly profound grace, not obvious; Datsuzoku: unbounded by convention, free; Seijaku: tranquility.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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The one thing we can always count on in Japanese design is that aesthetics are important not only in the design industry, but also in the lifestyle of the citizens. From the culinary arts, to religion, to fashion, the visual aspect of life is an important part of Japanese culture. How a food is presented is just as important as how it tastes, if not more. It is then important to note how much aesthetics are important in the automotive industry of Japan.

Leon, an automotive design student at RMIT in Melbourne, Australia, has broken down the basic principles of Japanese aesthetics, and how they can help us better understand and work to Japanese design.
- source : vehicle4change.wordpress.com


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Kenya Hara On Japanese Aesthetics
by Oliver Reichenstein, 2009

What makes Japanese design so special? Basically, it’s a matter of simplicity; a particular notion of simplicity, different from what simplicity means in the West. So are things in general better designed in Japan? Well, actually, it’s not that simple…

The New York Times asked us to put them in touch with Kenya Hara, creative director of MUJI and professor at the Musashino Art University. The NYT wanted to know whether everything in Japan was designed as well as the famous bento boxes. Mr Hara gave an answer worth reading and contemplating. The text in the New York Times was shortened down to fit their format. We are proud to be able to provide the full text in English and in Japanese.

Why does it seem like Japan is more attuned to the appreciation of beauty? Do the Japanese value the aesthetic component and experience more than other places? Are things in general better designed in Japan?
When coming back to Tokyo from abroad, my first impression usually is: what a dull airport! And yet it’s clean, neat and the floors deeply polished. To the Japanese eye, there’s a particular sense of beauty in the work of the cleaning staff. It’s in the craftman’s spirit — “shokunin kishitsu” — which applies to all Japanese professionals, be they street construction workers, electricians or cooks.

A Japanese cleaning team finds satisfaction in diligently doing its job. The better they do it the more satisfaction they get out of it.

The craftman’s spirit, I think, imbues people with a sense of beauty, as in elaboration, delicacy, care, simplicity (words I often use). Obviously, this also applies to bento-making and the pride people take in making them as beautiful as they can.

There is a similar craftman’s spirit (“shokunin kishitsu” or “shokunin katagi“) in Europe. Yet in Europe I can see it coming alive only from a certain level of sophistication. In Japan, even ordinary jobs such as cleaning and cooking are filled with this craftman’s spirit. It is is common sense in Japan.

While Japanese are known for their particular aesthetic sense, I would say we also have an incapacity to see ugliness. How come?

We usually focus fully on what’s right in front of our eyes. We tend to ignore the horrible, especially if it is not an integral part of our personal perspective. We ignore that our cities are a chaotic mess, filled with ugly architecture and nasty signage. And so you have the situation where a Japanese worker will open a beautiful bento box in a stale conference room or on a horrendous, crowded sidewalk.

Are things in general better designed in Japan?
A central aesthetic principle in Japan is simplicity, but it is different from simplicity in the West. Let me explain the difference by comparing cooking knives. For example, the knives made by the German company Henckel are well crafted and easy to use because they are highly ergonomic. The thumb automatically finds its place when you grab the knife.

HENCKEL knife, photo by Kenya Hara
Japanese cooks who have special skills prefer knives without any ergonomic shape. A flat handle is not seen as raw or poorly crafted. On the contrary, its perfect plainness is meant to say, “You can use me whichever way suits your skills.” The Japanese knife adapts to the cook’s skill (not to the cook’s thumb). This is, in a nutshell, Japanese simplicity.

YANAGIBA knife, photo by Kenya Hara
The knife’s simple shape is not seen as poor or raw. Beauty beyond fanciness is an aesthetic principle that is sleeping at the bottom of Japanese perception. It’s also a guiding principle to Japanese high tech architecture, and the minimal products of Muji.

Applied to the bento this simply means: don’t try to be fancy; don’t overdo it. A beautiful bento is done using seasonal ingredients; it is done quickly and easily.
- source and Japanese text : ia.net/blog


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A History of Modern Japanese Aesthetics
by Michael F. Marra / Michele F Marra, 2001

This collection of twenty-one essays, a companion volume to Modern Japanese Aesthetics, constitutes the first history of modern Japanese aesthetics in any language. It introduces readers through lucid and readable translations to works on the philosophy of art written by major Japanese thinkers from the late nineteenth century to the present. Selected from a variety of sources, the essays cover topics related to the study of beauty in art and nature.
- source : books.google.co.jp

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The Aesthetic Feeling of the Japanese - 日本人の美意識

INSPIRED DESIGN - Japan's Traditional Arts
by Michael Dunn

anji, "suggestivity"; 暗示
kanso, "simplicity"; 簡素
fukinkoo,"asymmetry"; 不均衡
hakanasa, "transience"; 儚さ, 果敢なさ
ma, "space."  間
. Japanese Design and Daruma .


Traditional Japanese Design: Five Tastes
Michael Dunn
Japanese craftsmen, fusing a love of natural materials like wood, bamboo, and clay with an eye for bold, essential form, elevated the design of utilitarian objects to an art unparalleled elsewhere in the world. Today the finest of these objects created for daily use are hugely popular-and eminently collectible.
This richly illustrated book, which accompanies a major exhibition organized by the Japan Society, is divided by five aesthetic tastes. It presents a superb selection of objects of lacquer, ceramics, metalwork, basketry, and textiles-ranging from humble tools for farmers to spectacular arms and armor, and refined utensils associated with the tea ceremony. Craft lovers, collectors, artists, and designers will welcome this tribute to these highly influential Japanese crafts.
- source : http://www.amazon.com


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John LaFarge -  ジョン・ラファージ 
(March 31, 1835 – November 14, 1910)
He was a pioneer in the study of Japanese art.
. AN ARTIST'S LETTERS FROM JAPAN .


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Japanese Design: Art, Aesthetics and Culture
Patricia J. Graham - Spetember 2014
What exactly is the singular attraction of Japanese design? And why does Japanese style speak so clearly to so many people all over the world?
The Japanese sensibility often possesses an intuitive, emotional appeal, whether it's a silk kimono, a carefully raked garden path, an architectural marvel, a teapot, or a contemporary work of art. This allure has come to permeate the entire culture of Japan—it is manifest in the most mundane utensil and snack food packaging, as well as in Japanese architecture and fine art.
In Japanese Design, Asian art expert and author Patricia J. Graham explains how Japanese aesthetics based in fine craftsmanship and simplicity developed. Her unusual, full-color presentation reveals this design aesthetic in an absorbing way, using a combination of insightful explanations and more than 160 stunning photos. Focusing upon ten elements of Japanese design, Graham explores how visual qualities, the cultural parameters and the Japanese religious traditions of Buddhism and Shinto have impacted the appearance of its arts.
Japanese Design is a handbook for the millions of us who have felt the special allure of Japanese art, culture and crafts. Art and design fans and professionals have been clamoring for this—a book that fills the need for an intelligent, culture-rich overview of what Japanese design is and means.
- source : www.amazon.com


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Elements of Japanese Design
Boye Lafayette De Mente
Learn the elements of the timeless beauty that is Japanese design in this concise reference volume.
Japanese design is known throughout the world for its beauty, its simplicity, and its blending of traditional and contemporary effects. This succinct guide describes the influence and importance of 65 key elements that make up Japanese design, detailing their origins—and their impact on fields ranging from architecture and interior design to consumer products and high fashion.
Learn, for example, how the wabi sabi style that's so popular today developed from the lifestyle choices made by monks a thousand years ago. And how unexpected influences—like tatami (straw mats) or seijaku (silence)—have contributed to contemporary Japanese design.
Elements of Japanese Design offers new insights into the historical and cultural developments at the root of this now international aesthetic movement. From wa (harmony) to kaizen (continuous improvement), from mushin (the empty mind) to mujo (incompleteness), you'll discover how these elements have combined and evolved into a powerful design paradigm that has changed the way the world looks, thinks and acts.
- - - Chapters include:
Washi, Paper with Character
Ikebana, Growing Flowers in a Vase
Bukkyo, The Impact of Buddhism
Shibui, Eliminating the Unessential
Kawaii, The Incredibly "Cute" Syndrome
Katana, Swords with Spirit
- source : www.amazon.com


. Nichōsai 耳鳥斎 Nichosai, Nicho-sai and Kawaii 可愛い .
(?1751 - 1802/03) - - A painter from Osaka.

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Japan Style
by Gian Carlo Calza
Japan Style, written by one of the world's most respected scholars of Japanese art and culture, is an authoritative and wide-ranging visual essay on the aesthetics of Japan.It serves as a unique handbook that aids an understanding of Japanese culture through its architecture, arts, crafts, cinema, and literature.
It gives an insight into the essence of Japanese culture, identifying its specific qualities and characteristics from ukiyo-e to Tadao Ando. The author draws connections between art, religion, history, philosophy, and mythology, using the links to frame specific examples of Japanese cultural memes.
The book features over 150 illustrations ranging from the traditional to the contemporary. Japan Style is a perfect introduction to Japanese style and culture.
- source : www.amazon.com




A Grammar of Japanese Ornament and Design
by Thomas W. Cutler
With the opening of Japan to the West in the mid-19th century, much of Japanese life that had been sealed off from the rest of the world for centuries was now revealed to the public at large — including the artistic styles and subjects depicted in this excellent collection. Rendered by a trained British architect, the images comprise one of the most comprehensive surveys of Japanese art and ornamentation. Included are graceful details from landscapes, floral motifs, abstracts, sea life, and other designs — ideal for use in modern textiles, graphics, and a host of other art and craft projects.
A delight for anyone interested in Japanese art and culture, this volume will be an invaluable source of permission-free graphics for designers and decorators in search of new subjects with authentic Japanese flavor. Over 300 figures on 65 plates.
- source : www.amazon.com


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WA: The Essence of Japanese Design
Stefania Piotti
Explore the enduring beauty of Japanese design through some 250 objects, ranging from bento boxes, calligraphy brushes, and Shoji sliding doors to Noguchi’s Akari lamp, the iconic Kikkoman soy sauce bootle, and a modern‐day kimono designed by Issey Miyake.
Printed on craft paper and bound in the traditional Japanese style, WA features stunning, full‐page illustrations and an introduction by MUJI art director Kenya Hara.
- source : www.amazon.com


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Influence of Japanese Art on Design
Hannah Sigur, 2008
This stunning book explores the story of Japan as the catalyst of modern design in the Gilded Age. Author Hannah Sigur juxtaposes glass, silver and metal arts, ceramics, textiles, furniture, jewelry, advertising, and packaging with a spectrum of Japanese materials ranging from one-of-a-kind art crafts to mass-produced ephemera, showing the ways that Japanese arts and ideas about Japan changed the world.
The "Japan Craze" came at a time of radical change in society. Western culture was yearning for the values of a past it believed were embodied in Japanese traditional arts, and Japan felt the demand for modernity it saw embodied in the West. During this time, both traditional arts and modern manufactures from Japan became the focus of an international coterie of artists, dealers, and thinkers who proselytized Japanese aesthetics as a model.
- source : www.amazon.com

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Zen and the Fine Arts
Shin'ichi Hisamatsu (Author), G. Tokiwa (Translator)

Examples of painting, architecture, gardens, drama and ceramics probe the relationship between Zen Buddhism and the fine arts.

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- further reference and books


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. Japanese Architecture - cultural keywords used in haiku .

. - Doing Business in Edo - 商売 - Introduction .

. senryu, senryū 川柳 Senryu poems in Edo .


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8/14/2014

Edo Crafts

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. shokunin  職人 craftsmen, artisan, Handwerker .
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Traditional Crafts of Edo and Tokyo

- quote
Currently, 40 art and craft items are designated as "Traditional Crafts of Tokyo".
- This is an official growing list, their hyperlinks are here
Bureau of Industrial and Labor Affairs
- source : www.sangyo-rodo.metro.tokyo.jp/shoko

現在、40の伝統工芸品が東京都の伝統工芸品として指定されています。
- source : www.sangyo-rodo.metro.tokyo.jp - japanese -

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. Edo Bekko 江戸鼈甲 Tortoiseshell Products.

. Edo Fude 江戸筆 Handmade Calligraphy Brushes .

. Edo Garasu 江戸硝子 Edo Glassware .

. Edo Hake 江戸刷毛 Edo Brushes .

. Edo Hyogu 江戸表具 scroll mounting .

. Edo Ishogi Ningyo 江戸衣裳着人形 Costumed Dolls .

. Edo Karakami 江戸からかみ Hand-Made Patterned Paper .

. Edo Katchu 江戸甲冑 Warrior Armor from Edo .

. Edo kimekomi ningyoo 江戸木目込人形 kimekomi dolls from Edo .
Wood and Cloth Dolls

. Edo Kiriko 江戸切子 Cut Glassware .

. Edo Moku-Chokoku 江戸木彫刻 Wood Sculptures .

. Edo Moku-Hanga 江戸木版画 Woodblock Prints .

. Edo Oshi-e Hagoita 江戸押絵羽子板 Padded collage Paddles, Battledore, Shuttlecock .

. Edo Sarasa 江戸更紗 Printed Silk Calico .

. Edo Sashimono 江戸指物 Wood Joinery .

. Edo shikki 江戸漆器 Edo laquerware .

. Edo Shishu 江戸刺繍 Embroidery .

. Edo Sudare 江戸簾 Slatted Blinds .

Edo Tegaki Chochin (Hand-Painted Paper Lanterns) 江戸手描提灯 - see below -

. Edo Tsumami-Kanzashi 江戸つまみ簪 Ornamental Hairpins .

. Edo Wazao (Bamboo Fishing Rods) 江戸和竿 .

. Edo Zoge (Ivory Carvings) 江戸象牙 Zooge .

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. Tokyo Butsudan (Buddhist Altars) 東京仏壇 Buddhist family altar .

. Tokyo chokin 東京彫金 metal chasing .

. Tokyo Gakubuchi (Picture Frames) 東京額縁 .

. Tokyo ginki 東京銀器 Silverware, Tokyo Silversmithery .

. Tokyo Honzome Yukata 東京本染ゆかた Indigo-Dyed Summer Kimono .
Edo Yukata 江戸浴衣

. Tokyo Kumihimo 東京くみひも Braided Cords .

. Tokyo Koto 東京琴 Japanese Harp .

. Tokyo Shamisen (Three-Stringed Musical Instrument) 東京三味線 .

. Tokyo Shippo (Cloisonne Enamelware) 東京七宝 cloisonne .

. Tokyo Some-Komon (Tokyo Fine-Patterned Dyeing) 東京染小紋 .

. Tokyo Tegaki Yuzen 東京手描友禅 Hand-Painted Kimono . 江戸友禅 Edo Yuzen

. Tokyo Teue Brush (Handmade Brushes) 東京手植ブラシ .

. Tokyo Tokogei (Rattan Craft) 東京籐工芸 .

. Tokyo Uchihamono (Hand-Forged Blades) 東京打刃物 .

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. Honba Kihachijo (Hachijojima Silk Fabric) 本場黄八丈 .

. Murayama-Oshima Tsumugi (Textured Silk Pongee) 村山大島紬.

. Tama-ori, Tama Ori 多摩織 Woven Fabrics from Tama .

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Edo Tegaki Chochin 江戸手描提灯 Hand-Painted Paper Lanterns



■ Traditional Technologies and Techniques

1 - Line sketching of lettering: 文字の素描き
Japanese characters are applied in outline to lanterns using a menso-fude 面相筆 (a fine-point brush). This is done by following a rough sketch outline drawn in advance. (The method for doing this was developed in the 1750s).

2 - Line sketching of family crest(s): 家紋の素描き
Family crest(s) are painted on lanterns in outline using a menso-fude 面相筆. This is done by following a rough sketch outline drawn in advance. (The method for doing this was developed in the 1750s).

3 - Painting in: 塗り込み
Outlined characters and crests are painted in. If thin or diluted ink is being used, dosa どうさ液 (a protective liquid called "sizing" in English) is also applied to prevent smearing. (The method for doing this was developed in the 1750s).

■ Traditionally Used Raw Materials
Hibukuro chochin (literally "fire bag lanterns"):
These lanterns are hung up by themselves (without a pole). The skeleton (ribbing) of the lantern is made of bamboo, the covering over the skeleton is made of washi (traditional Japanese paper). ) Takahari chochin and other types: Takahari chochin are parade lanterns that are hung from long poles. They have been used since the 1700s.
火袋 高張提灯等(1700年代から使用)

■ History and Characteristics
It is recognized that in the Muromachi Period (1337-1573), the earliest examples of Chochin lanterns were being used at the start of the 16th century during the Bunki Era (1501-1504). The lanterns used then were said to be kago-chochin 籠提灯 (lanterns inside bamboo baskets). Prototypes of what would later become the modern collapsible chochin are believed to have been created during the Tenbun Era (1532-1555). During the following Azuchi-Momoyama Period (1573-1596), chochin adopted the form of a skeleton of thin split-bamboo hoops covered by paper. Such lanterns came equipped with a flat base for housing a candle. This design resulted in lanterns that could be expanded and collapsed at will. Chochin use subsequently became widespread during the Edo Period (1603-1868).

From the mid Edo Period onward, a great number of craftsmen skilled in calligraphy and brushwork resided in Edo's Asakusa district. Wholesaling systems were developed in the Meiji Era (1868-1912), this resulted in a growing division of tasks between chochin production processes and character/crest decoration processes. Even today, some Tokyo craftsmen make a living based on writing Japanese characters on finished hibukuro 火袋 ("fire bag lanterns"). The Japanese characters written on chochin are generally referred to as being in the Edo moji style (the Edo lettering style), and such chochin calligraphers also prepare senjafuda, slips of paper bearing pilgrim names that are affixed to the gates of Shinto shrines and Buddhist temples. Although lettering is written inside an outlined area on senjafuda 千社札, chochin lack such restrictions. This leads to a slightly more free-flowing calligraphy style. Furthermore, painting family crests on chochin differs from applying them to kimono, in that the former are painted in black ink on a white background. Crests are painted in a way that facilitates visibility from a distance, and unique methods are utilized to achieve a balanced appearance.

Tokyo Paper Lantern Manufacturing Guild
7-7-2 Minamisenju, Arakawa Ward, Tokyo
- source : www.sangyo-rodo.metro.tokyo.jp

. choochin 提灯 lanterns of Japan .

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. shokunin  職人 craftsmen, artisan, Handwerker .

. - Doing Business in Edo - 商売 - Introduction .


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9/10/2013

Architecture

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Japanese Architecture - technical terms

Nihon Kenchiku 日本建築 Japanese Architecture - then and now



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. Interior Design - The Japanese Home .
- Introduction -
a long list of rooms and items



. My collection in facebook .


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arakabe 荒壁 / 粗壁 "rough wall"

daikokubashira 大黒柱 central pillar, "Daikoku pillar"

gootenjoo, goo-tenjoo 格天井 coffered ceiling

. hafu 破風 / 搏風 gable, gables .
karahafu, kara hafu, kara-hafu 唐破風 "Chinese Gable"
chidori hafu 千鳥破風,
sugaruhafu 縋破風,
irimoya hafu 入母屋破風,
chigi 千木,
aori hafu 障泥破風


. hari, ryoo 梁 beam, crossbeam .

hashira 柱 pillar / 太柱 thick pillar

ie 家 house, home

. iori, an  庵 thatched hut, hut, hermitage .

iriguchi 入口 entrance - door
- deguchi 出口 exit
- hijooguchi 非常口 emergency exit
- kadoguchi 門口 gate
- katteguchi 勝手口 kitchen door
- tobira 扉
- toguchi 戸口 door
- uraguchi 裏口 back door

. jinja 神社 shrines - a LIST .


kabe 壁 wall
. namakokabe 海鼠壁 namako walls .

kaidan 階段 stairs, stairway

kamoi 鴨居 a head jamb

. kasugai 鎹 / かすがい clamp, cramp, cleat, staple .

. kugi 釘 all kinds of nails .
and
kugikakushi, kugi kakushi 釘隠し "hiding the nails" nail-hiding ornament

kura 蔵 storehouse
. WKD : Storehouse, warehouse (kura) .

mon 門 gate / hei 塀 fence
. WKD : mon 門 (kado .

muna 棟 large building (munagi 棟木 ridgepole)

nageshi 長押 horizontal piece of timber

- - - pagpda

. shakan, sakan 左官 plasterer, stucco master - making walls .

shikidai genkan 式台玄関 special entrance for the Tonosama lord.

shiki-i 敷居 wooden groove for sliding doors

. shiro 城 castle, fortress - Burg, Schloss .

sujikai 筋交い diagonal brace

taruki 垂木 rafter

tenjoo 天井 ceiling / ichimai tenjjoo 一枚天井 (Higashiyama)

. - tera 寺 て Temples - a LIST - .

udatsu - udachi, odatsu or odachi うだつ / 卯建 / 宇立 special roof struts - "sleeve wall"
. WKD : udatsu - fire-preventing wall .

yane 屋根 roof


- - - and a few more
source : HAIKUreikuDB

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- - - - - Reference, Books and Links


The Roof in Japanese Buddhist Architecture
Mary Neighbour Parent

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Japanese Buddhist architecture
is the architecture of Buddhist temples in Japan, consisting of locally developed variants of architectural styles born in China.[1] After Buddhism arrived the continent via Three Kingdoms of Korea in the 6th century, an effort was initially made to reproduce original buildings as faithfully as possible, but gradually local versions of continental styles were developed both to meet Japanese tastes and to solve problems posed by local weather, which is more rainy and humid than in China.
The first Buddhist sects were Nara's six Nanto Rokushū (南都六宗 Nara six sects), followed during the Heian period by Kyoto's Shingon and Tendai. Later, during the Kamakura period, in Kamakura were born the Jōdo and the native Japanese sect Nichiren-shū. At roughly the same time Zen Buddhism arrived from China, strongly influencing all other sects in many ways, including architecture. The social composition of Buddhism's followers also changed radically with time. In the beginning it was the elite's religion, but slowly it spread from the noble to warriors, merchants and finally to the population at large. On the technical side, new woodworking tools like the framed pit saw and the plane allowed new architectonic solutions.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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8/06/2013

Daimyo Yashiki

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Daimyoo yashiki 大名屋敷 Daimyo Residence


CLICK for more photos.

The local lords had to have a residence in Edo at all times.

buke yashiki 武家屋敷 samurai residence

. daimyoo 大名 Daimyo, Lord of a Domain .


. buke yashiki 武家屋敷 at Katsuyama, Okayama .


shimo yashiki 下屋敷
naka yashiki 中屋敷
kami yashiki 上屋敷

quote
One of the residences granted to daimyou 大名 by the Edo government, as part of the system where feudal lords were compelled to spend alternate years away from their provinces, in Edo.
A daimyou's main residence in Edo was called kamiyashiki 上屋敷; the shimoyashiki, located outside of central Edo, was an additional residence used as a refuge in emergencies, or as a holiday retreat. Another spare Edo residence was the nakayashiki 中屋敷, usually inhabited by the younger generation who will succeed to the daimyou.
source : JAANUS

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. Kanda - The Estate of Lord Matsudaira 松平屋敷 .


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quote
"Waterfront of Edo and Daimyo Yashiki"
Shinsuke Kaneyuki

This report focused on the visual relationship between daimyo yashiki (daimyo's residence) and water, through old pictures and photos.

Many mansions of daimyo were built along the waterfront and along the Sumida River in Edo. Many of them were shimo yashiki (a spare residence of daimyo located in the suburbs) with gardens, where the view toward the ocean or a river was important as borrowed landscape (shakkei) of the garden. For example, Hamayashiki of Sadanobu Matsudaira (Fig.1 Fukagawa) was built for water view from a shed called Shogetsusai, by borrowing the ocean view as the pond in the garden. In other mansions for daimyo, creative spaces for water view were commonly found such as a kind of lookout tower and tsukiyama (artificial hill in a garden). Meanwhile, the mansions with water view were not limited to waterside shimo yashiki; mansions on the upland of Yamanote (High City) had often the view of the bay of Edo.

The third storey lookout tower in a daimyo yashiki was based on the awareness of water view. Naka yashiki of the domain of Shimabara (Shimabara han) of Mita had three- storey building called "Tsukinami-rou", which was compared to Tungting lake (洞庭湖) and Yueyang tower (岳陽楼) in China ("Views of famed edo spots"). Other three-storey buildings were naka yashiki of Matsuyama-han on the north side of the Tsukinami-rou, Shimoyashiki of Shibata-han (Fig.2 Kobikicho), and kami yashiki of Hitotsubashi-Tokugawa family (wthin the Hitotsubashi-mon (gate)). The characteristics of "culture of view" in Edo focusing on the visual relationship with "water" can be seen in the locations or buildings of daimyo yashiki.

On the other hand, the buildings of daimyo yashiki composed the view of urban space of Edo. Though excluded from the list of notable spots, daimyo yashiki had been the original architecture of the Capital, Edo, attracting attentions of people by their magnificent facade. While daimyo yashiki can rarely be found in pictures, they had been often drawn in combination with water; e.g., kami yashiki of Saga-han (within the Yamashita-mon) painted in "Edo Shokei" by Hiroshige Ando, kami yashiki of Hikone-han (Fig.3, Sotosakurada) and kami yashiki of Nobeoka-han (Fig4, Toranomon). The waterside mansions were painted as a beautiful notable spot, and the water provided the spatial spread highlighting the architecture.



Fig. 5

In the Meiji era, mansions of nobility often took over former daimyo yashiki along the Sumida river, such as Hakozakitei of Yamauchi family (former lord of Tosa-han) (Fig.5 Shimo yashiki of former Tayasu-Tokugawa family). These residences had gardens and buildings with scenery, obtained by famous feudal domains in the early years of Meiji. This fact may show that water view had been considered as one of the values of a residence.

Photos :
source : eco-history.ws.hosei.ac.jp


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- - - - - H A I K U - - - - -

. Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .

大名の鶯弟子に持にけり
daimyoo no uguisu deshi ni mochi ni keri

the war lord's
nightingale
is an apprentice

Tr. David Lanoue


. WKD : Warlords and Samurai in Edo .



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