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19th-century ghost scrolls

July 31, 2008

Every August, as Japanese spirits return en masse from the otherworld, Tokyo’s Zenshoan temple exhibits a spine-chilling collection of 19th-century ghost scroll paintings. Here are a few. (Click the “+” under each image to enlarge.)

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost [+] // Sea Monster [+]

“Ghost” by Iijima Koga is a portrait of a floating, kimono-clad female apparition with all the ghastly physical features you hope to find in an undead spirit — bony hands, a head of stringy hair, and a pained grimace revealing a mouth full of black teeth. “Sea Monster” by Utagawa Hoen depicts an umi-bozu lurking near a boat anchored at shore, with the moon located precisely where the monster’s mouth should be.

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
The Ghost of a Blind Female Street Singer [+]

Utagawa Hiroshige’s “Ghost of a Blind Female Street Singer” portrays the restless spirit of a street performer, one white unseeing eye wide open, carrying a shamisen as she drifts above the surface of a river on the way to her next performance.

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Kohada Koheiji [+] // Willow and the Moon [+]

Utagawa Kunitoshi’s “Kohada Koheiji” shows the main character of a famous Edo-period novel (published 1803) by Santo Kyoden. In the story, after Koheiji is killed by his wife and her lover, his gangly ghost returns to haunt them by peering through the mosquito netting surrounding their bed. (This character is also the subject of ukiyo-e artist Hokusai’s famous print “The Ghost of Kohada Koheiji.”) “Willow and the Moon” by Koson might at first glance appear as nothing more than a peaceful moonlit scene at the water’s edge, but look again — the moon and clouds form a menacing face in the sky, and the bare willow branches form a scraggly head of hair.

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Kaidan Chibusa Enoki: The Ghostly Tale of the Wet Nurse Tree [+]

This painting by Ito Seiu, the godfather of Japanese bondage (kinbaku), depicts a scene from Kaidan Chibusa Enoki, an old horror story in which the ghost of a dead painter returns to protect his baby from his murderer, a wandering samurai who fell in love with his wife while he was away painting. This scroll shows the ghost holding the baby while standing under a waterfall at Juniso (where Tokyo’s Shinjuku Chuo Park is now located).

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost [+] // Ghost of the Wharf [+]

The subject of “Ghost” by Rinrin is a spirit with an eerie blank stare and gaunt ribs visible under its clothing, and who appears to be melting away. Shibata Zeshin’s “Ghost of the Wharf” depicts a feeble-looking apparition relaxing on a pier, casually glancing at something over its shoulder.

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost in the Rain [+] // Ghosts of Husband and Wife [+]

Ikeda Ayaoka’s “Ghost in the Rain” shows a forlorn-looking female apparition outside in a storm, with flames rising up from where her feet should be. “Ghosts of Husband and Wife” by Otai is a portrait of what appears to be an undead married couple — a subject rarely seen in ghost scroll paintings. The sinister pair are pictured clutching a human skull. The husband is wearing a traditional Buddhist funerary headdress worn by the dead, and he has blood smeared on his face.

* * * * *

Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple -- Ghost scroll at Zenshoan temple --
Ghost with a Severed Head [+] // Ghost [+]

Kawakami Togai’s “Ghost with a Severed Head” shows a female apparition lovingly cradling a man’s decapitated head. The subject of “Ghost” by Gyoshin is a pathetic, emaciated figure with thinning hair and blackened teeth. There seems to be a hint of humor in his expression.

* * * * *

These and dozens more hanging scroll paintings of ghosts are on display throughout the month of August at Zenshoan temple, located near Nippori station in Tokyo (map).

[Images from Yureiga-shu: Zenshoan/Sanyutei Encho Collection, published by Zenshoan, 2000]

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Circuit-bent Pikachu instruments

July 29, 2008

Circuit-bent Pikachu instruments --

Circuit bender Kaseo has a marvelous collection of musical instruments built from modified Pikachu toys.

- Bent Pikachu Limited Edition: Punk’s not dead.

* * * * *

- Y.M.O.: This “Y.M.O” (Yellow Mouse Orchestra), a group of MIDI-controlled circuit-bent Pikachus, performs a tweaked version of “Rydeen” by the original Y.M.O. (Yellow Magic Orchestra).

* * * * *

- 12 bent Pikachu orchestra +1: Live performance in Tokyo.

* * * * *

[Links: bEnt or diE?, Kaseo’s Youtube channel]

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Japanese golfing gadgetry

July 27, 2008

The vast majority of golfers would no doubt agree that Mark Twain’s famous suggestion that golf is a good walk spoiled is a little harsh to say the least, but rather strangely, the Showa-no-mori Golf Course in Akishima, western Tokyo, appears to have taken the denunciation to heart. As, while for obvious reasons the pummelling of the ball hasn’t been eradicated from proceedings, the hindrance of hauling one’s bag around has.

Japanese golf gadget

Meaning that, for the fairly efficient at least, a good walk now need only be spoiled by some seventy or so swishes of a club.

Japanese golf gadget

(click images for gargantuan golfing gadgetry)

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Japanese golfing gadgetry

Originally from Tokyo Times

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Japanese gravure grand champion

With Japan boasting such tantalising titles as best Jeanist and Nailist, it’s perhaps not surprising then to see that online entertainment site ZAKZAK has created the Japanese Gravure Idol Award. A prize that finally gives the nation’s hard-working bikini models the recognition they so richly deserve, with the judges taking into consideration the likes of photo album sales and media exposure, along with an ample number of other assets.

And, after some no doubt lengthy deliberations, the judges finally presented the first ever title to 24-year-old Yuko Ogura.

Japanese gravure idol

Although obviously overcome with emotion, Ogura-san managed to just about pull herself together enough to proclaim that, “I really appreciate my fans who support me all the time. When I started bikini modelling eight years ago, everybody thought models should have big breasts. But it’s different now. Diversified girls with different characters and shapes can succeed in modelling.”

A well intentioned statement that on closer inspection, however, may,

Japanese gravure idol

or indeed may not,

Japanese gravure idol

have much merit.

Japanese gravure idol

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Japanese gravure grand champion

Originally from Tokyo Times

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Frilly Japanese fashion

Despite Tokyo’s blistering summer heat, the busy city streets suggest that it’s certainly not just mad dogs and Englishman that go out in the midday sun. However, whereas parasols are now practically a prerequisite, and even boasting only one’s birthday suit wouldn’t make the conditions more comfortable, it’s nice to see that some people are still very particular about their appearance.

Japanese fashion

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Frilly Japanese fashion

Originally from Tokyo Times

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Street performance by Koharu and friend

From the amazing and talented Koharu and friend comes the following video of their Tokyo street performance.

If you missed our past posts on Koharu, here is a blast from the past.

More here.

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Street performance by Koharu and friend

Originally from Japundit

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Robot sea bream

July 25, 2008

Robot sea bream --

Engineers at the University of Kitakyushu have developed an underwater survey robot that looks good enough to eat. “Tai-robot-kun,” a 7-kilogram (15.4 lb) robotic sea bream (red snapper) with a silicone body covered in realistically hand-painted scales, features a unique propulsion system that allows it to move its tail and drift silently through the water like a real fish. (Watch a video.)

The robotic fish can swim for an hour on a full battery charge, and it relies on a ballast system similar to those used in submarines to adjust its buoyancy and depth.

Tai-robot-kun’s creator, professor Ikuo Yamamoto, says the robot can easily be mass-produced, outfitted with various cameras and sensors, and released into the sea to perform a wide range of oceanographic survey tasks. He adds that because the robot swims silently and looks like a real fish, it would be able to gather data without alarming the creatures it encounters.

Yamamoto and his team are also reportedly developing a robotic manta ray that uses some of the same technology.

[Source: Robot Watch]

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Video: Actroid stars in TV commercial

July 24, 2008

Actroid female robot actress --

Actroid DER-2, Kokoro’s uncannily lifelike fembot, has made her acting debut in a TV commercial for Kincho’s Preshower UV insect repellent/sunscreen spray. Titled “The Woman Who Doesn’t Rust,” the 15-second commercial spot shows Actroid outdoors at a campground, where she recommends using Preshower because, as a female, her skin is important. After a few squirts of the spray, she cheerily adds, “Surprisingly, I don’t rust.” (Watch it.)

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Fake Mickey Mouse Olympic statues in Beijing

Fake Mickey Mouse Olympic statues in Beijing --

The Yomiuri Online has posted a photo of some new Olympic-themed statues on display in Beijing’s financial district. The statues — which appear about one year after Disney cried copyright infringement in response to a host of knock-off Disney characters at Beijing’s Shijingshan Amusement Park — depict five Mickey Mouse-like characters engaging in Olympic sports. When asked about the resemblance to Mickey, a spokesperson replied, “They have square holes in their ears. They are not copies.” The spokesperson suggested the statues are unique because they incorporate the themes of old Chinese coins (the square holes), the year of the rat, the Olympics and the financial district into the design. However, children passing by the statues were seen pointing and saying, “Look! It’s Mickey!”

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Light-sensitive shape-shifting plastic drives motor

July 23, 2008

Motor powered by light-activated plasticA research team led by professor Tomiki Ikeda at the Tokyo Institute of Technology has developed what is being called the world’s first plastic motor powered solely and directly by light.

Unlike solar-powered motors that use photovoltaic cells to convert light to electric power (and which require wires and batteries to deliver and store the power), this first-of-a-kind motor converts light directly into mechanical energy, thanks to a belt made from a special elastomer whose molecular structure expands or contracts when illuminated, depending on the wavelength of light.

Ikeda began working on the light-activated motor in 2003, after discovering that a plastic compound containing azobenzene would contract when exposed to ultraviolet light and resume its original shape when exposed to visible light. Since then, in addition to working on improving the material’s shape-shifting properties, Ikeda’s team has been looking at ways to use the material in a motor that converts light directly into motion.

To test whether the material could be used as a mechanical power source, the researchers coated a polyethylene film with the shape-shifting plastic to create a 0.08-millimeter thick belt, which they looped around a pair of wheels measuring 10 millimeters and 3 millimeters in diameter. Then, by shining ultraviolet light on the belt near the smaller wheel and visible light near the larger wheel, the belt snapped into action and began turning the wheels. The larger wheel recorded a top speed of 1 rpm.

According to the researchers, the film demonstrated about 4 times more elastic strength than human muscle, and its strength remained unchanged even after contracting and expanding every 7 seconds for 30 hours.

“The material is still not very efficient at converting light to energy, but it can be improved,” says Ikeda, who suggests the shape-shifting plastic can be used in larger-scale applications. He hopes to one day see the material used to power plastic automobiles and other fantastic plastic machines.

The results of the research were published in the July 19 edition of the German chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie.

[Source: Tokyo Shimbun]

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