Wednesday, March 27, 2013

The Sakura Matsuri: Still a Beautiful BFD in Japanese Culture

Adapted from the article titled,
Relationships with Nature (1): Cherry Blossom
by Namiko Abe, for About.com
 


By far, spring is my most favorite time of the year!  Under the
full moon, I toast my ancestors in the Summerland.  I love 
to observe the baby leaves uncurling from the tree branches,
and the blossoms, like snow, drifting everywhere in the wind.
And in Japan, spring is considered, "cherry blossom time"...


        The cherry blossom (桜, sakura) is the national flower of Japan. It is probably most beloved flower among the Japanese.  People gather under the trees, eat picnic lunches, drink sake (rice wine), view the cherry blossom flowers, and have a great time.  In cities, viewing cherry blossoms in the evening (夜桜, yozakura) is also popular.  Against the dark sky, the cherry blossoms in full bloom are especially beautiful.

         During this period, the weather forecasts include reports on the advance of sakura zensen (桜前線, "sakura front") as the blossoms sweep north.  As the trees begin to bloom, the Japanese participate in hanami (花見, "flower viewing").  The Japan Meteorological Agency actually records the opening and full bloom of the blossoms from Kyūshū in late March to Hokkaidō in the middle of May.  And the advancing "sakura front" is also the subject of regular reports by the major news agencies.


As in ancient times, it's still one BFD in Japan...


...even at night.



Eat, Drink and Be Merry 
...But Designate a Driver-san

         The word for cherry blossom in Japanese is synonymous with the word, "flower" (花, hana).  The saying, Hana yori dango (花より団子, "dumplings over flowers")  is a proverb which expresses, "the practical is preferred over the aesthetic."  Indeed, during hanami, people often seem to be more interested in eating foods or drinking alcohol, than appreciating the beauty of the flowers.

        Sakura-yu is a tea-like drink made by steeping a salt-preserved cherry blossom in hot water.   It is often served at weddings and other auspicious occasions.  Sakura-mochi is a dumpling containing sweet bean paste wrapped in a salt-preserved cherry tree leaf.



A cup of sakura-yu drink.
(to make sakura-yu, click here)



Creative sakura-mochi treats!
(to make sakura-mochi, click here )


 






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The Cherry Blossom Motif
in Japanese Culture

The Cherry Blossom Squadrons:
Born to Die, by Andrew Adams
(see: kamikaze images )
        The blooming of cherry blossoms signifies not only the arrival of spring but the beginning of the new academic year for schools (Japanese school year starts in April) and of the new fiscal year for businesses.  The cherry blossoms are symbols of a bright future.  Also, their delicacy has poetic appeal, suggesting purity, transience, or melancholy.

        Of course, as with most things, there is also a dark side to the cherry blossom concept, as well.  The blossoms open at once, and seldom last more than a week.  The way they quickly and gracefully fall from the cherry trees inspired Japanese militarism to propagandize the "beauty" of death, thereby motivating wartime "suicide units" as to the beauty of their sacrifices.  From the samurai in ancient times, to the soldiers of the modern World Wars, there was no greater glory than dying on the battlefield...like scattered cherry blossoms.

        Finally, on a more humorous note, a "sakura" is also a term meaning some shill who goes about raving over a mock purchase that he made, trying to inspire others to also shop at the particular store that paid him for his marketing services.  The term originally referred to people admitted to plays for free, the way cherry blossoms are "free" for the  viewing.


 
Workin' it, Sakura-style!
Kirei desu, ne? (aren't they cute?).
And that samisen music is kinda' catchy. 




And While We're on 
the Subject of Fertility...

        The sap is rising in the trees at springtime.  This metaphor doesn't go unnoticed with the celebration of the spring season in Japan, for not long after the Sakura Matsuri festival, is the Kanamara Matsuri, or "Phallus Festival."  Yes, you're seeing what you think you're seeing. lol  Sex is kind of a light-hearted, in-your-face topic there, despite the world's perception of Japanese culture being so sexually conservative and repressed.  I've never thought of it that way.


Words fail me.  This makes Carnival in Western culture, 
by comparison, seem terribly tame!  And don't miss the phallus 
lollipops, candles and other obscene goodies sold during festivities,



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Other Stuff
Inspired by Sakura Matsuri:


A wedding theme inspired by the 
"cherry blossom" motif  (click here)


A cherry blossom painting with an old 
soda bottle --great craft for kids! (click here)




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Friday, March 22, 2013

Monday, March 11, 2013

A Convergence of Art and Surveillance


Adapted from 
"Art from DNA Left Behind"
by Josh Dawsey for the
Wall Street Journal
March 11, 2013

image
Artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg with a 
DNA-created self-portrait sculpture.
www.deweyhagborg.com



 Gimme a Booger and I'll Make You a Face

[image]
"Sample 6," from Heather's sculpture
exhibit, "Stranger Visions."  What if 
you walked into an art gallery and 
your or your kid's or your momma's 
face was displayed like this on a 
wall...with no prior notice to you?
Such is the world we live in
        They are the faces of real people, portrait-like sculptures etched from an almost powdery substance. The eye colors are distinct, the facial contours sharp, even though the artist, Heather Dewey-Hagborg, has never met or seen her subjects.

        Instead of using photographs or an art model for her work, Heather scoops detritus from New York City's streets—cigarette butts, hair follicles, gum wrappers—and analyzes the genetic material people leave behind. Heather, a Ph.D. student in electronic arts, makes the faces after studying clues found in DNA.

        "I don't think I'm creepy, but I could see how someone would think this project is creepy," said Heather, 30 years old, who splits her time between Brooklyn and upstate, where she attends the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.  "Maybe I'm kind of weird." 



Friday, March 1, 2013

Whether the Best or Worst of Times, Make the Best of What's Still Around





 A Tale of Two Terras...à la Dickens

       It is the best of times, it is the worst of times.  It is an age of wisdom, it is an age of utter foolishness, an epoch of belief, an epoch of incredulity.  It is a season of light, it is a season of darkness, both a spring of hope, and a winter of despair.

        We have everything before us, yet we have absolutely nothing before us.  Some believe they're going directly to heaven, some that we are all going directly the other way.

        In short, this period is so far like so many other periods we've experienced on Terra, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only.

Know Thyself

        And what will you do when the storm comes?  Where will you stand...and why will you have chosen such a stance?  Know who you've been, who you've truly been  --and that may take some digging.  Know who you really are right now, your True Purpose here, not that persona you project every day to please others who, like you and me, get lost within the Matrix.

        Most importantly, know who and what you will be in the future because every step you take, every move you make, every cake you bake today, will determine that tomorrow.


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