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Japanese Paper Dolls

Friday, October 28, 2011

Japanese Paper Dolls by Futami Isogawa; now in store 

 

Exclusive to Yoshi Jones!
Come in to the Newtown store to see Futami Isogawa's beautiful Japanese Dolls.
These exquisite sculptures are available to purchase from $50-150
 

    

 

 

Japanese paper, or washi, is perhaps most famous for its use in origami, a traditional Japanese art of paperfolding. The Japanese paper dolls on display in this exhibition are hand crafted using authentic 'chirimen' paper. Chirimen paper is preshrunk and hand made with a luxurious feel.

The dolls are imbued with a sense of movement and natural feminine grace, and each pattern carries a unique meaning. They would make a striking addition to a sophisticated interior space, and are ideal gifts for friends and family.

Amy Jones' Art Featured in Our Window and Shop

Saturday, September 17, 2011

 

I immediately responded to the work of Amy Jones (no relation!) when I went along to her exhibition at Chrissie Cotter Gallery in Camperdown.

Amy used fabric from my Vintage Kimono collection to construct beautiful artwork; when I saw it I knew that her work would look so fantastic in the Newtown store.

It is excellent timing to display her work as Spring is traditonally an important time in Japan to celebrate new beginnings, it's when the cherry blossom trees come into bloom for a fleeting week; the hanami season. The store is buzzing with new season energy and we are very excited about the new stock which is arriving every week!

 

I am so pleased to feature Amy's work as she is a Newtown based artist whose paintings and craft based works are influenced by the Japanese landscape. Jones has particularly responded to the deliberate manner of planting, and the sculptural nature of Japanese garden design, seeing an echo of the artistic process – selection and discernment of colour, composition and form.

 

Jones’ Installation “there are no birdies in my garden”, is a response to inner city life – attempting to recreate part of the whimsical beauty of a garden, whilst surrounded by a concrete jungle.

The sculptures are available to purchase for $19-45 in our Newtown store.

 

 

Jones currently teaches painting and drawing classes privately, and at the Hazelhurst Gallery in Gymea.

Boltanski; Heart Beat Art at Teshima

Thursday, September 08, 2011

Powerful work!
A collection of heart beats, from all over the world.
Like fingerprints; heart beats are unique. Captured, the human memory seems to live on... 

I have been reading about "Les Archives du Cœur"- The Heart Archive; work by French artist Christian Boltanski currently showing at the Teshima Art Museum. I wish I'd had the time to go and check it out myself when I was recently in Japan.

 

 

Boltanski collects recordings of human heartbeats, the installation is then kept at this site permanently, on the uninhabited island of Teshima. Visitors are invited to donate a recording of their own heartbeat in a little booth join the archive with the 15,000 others.

“I am interested in what I call ‘little memory’, an emotional memory, an everyday knowledge, the contrary of the Memory with a capital M that is preserved in history books”, Boltanski says. “This little memory, which for me is what makes us unique, is extremely fragile" says Boltanski (via Serpentine Gallery)

 

Teshima Art Museum is shaped like a drop of water, a floating droplet on an island.

"...two oval openings allow the air, sounds, and light of the world outside into this organic space where nature and architecture seem intimately interconnected. Inside one finds an ever-flowing fountains and an ambiance that changes from hour to hour and season to season, revealing countless appearances as time passes."

More information about the exhibition available on the Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum website; Benesse Art Site

Yayoi Kusama; installation art

Friday, August 19, 2011
I came across the work of Yayoi Kusama again recently and I remembered what a powerful aesthetic she has. Her installation art is incredible and I urge you to see it if you ever get the chance.











Fireflies On The Water, 2000.

images from
here

From her official website:
Polka dots, the trademark of “Kusama Happening”. Red, green and yellow polka dots can be the circles representing the earth, the sun, or the moon. Their shapes and what they signify do not really matter. I paint polka dots on the bodies of people, and with those polka dots, the people will self-obliterate and return to the nature of the universe.
An excerpt from “Infinity Nets”, Kusama Yayoi Autobiography




Architecture and Fashion

Friday, July 29, 2011

I've recently discovered a connection between two Japanese artists who I admire;
Tadao Ando the architect and Issey Miyake, my favourite fashion designer.

Miyake is one of the directors of 21_21 Design Sight ; a kind of museum, gallery and research space for design in Tokyo.
Ando was the architect given the awesome brief of "a structure which would represent Japan".

Regarding the design process for the building, Ando explains
"...it was said that, "If there were one nation in the world whose demise would have serious consequences it would be the Japanese." I interpret this statement to mean that we mustn't allow the characteristic Japanese aesthetic to die out. Aesthetics also include things like a sense of responsibility and a sense of justice. They also incorporate a respect for other people and for nature, an appreciation of the gift of life, and courtesy. They even extend to the ability to look at the world around one, properly."
via
21_21 Design Sight



21_21 Design Sight building; the roof is one sheet of folded steel which echoes the single piece of fabric  that Miyake uses to make his garments. So elegant! 

The current exhibition is on til Sunday 31: THE SPIRIT OF TOHOKU: "CLOTHING" BY ISSEY MIYAKE






Pleats Please by Issey Miyake via FIDM

His garments in the Pleats Please range are pleated after being cut and sewn so as to retain their knife pleats to perfection. Miyake is a true innovator of design!

Ando is perhaps best known for his Church of the Light, a small Church in Ibaraki, Osaka Japan. Slits in the concrete reveal a cross shape when the sunlight peaks through. The incredible concrete walls are 15 inches thick, and yet the space is equally defined by the light as the solidness of its structure. 
Simple yet sublime.



photo by Sanghyun Lee via http://www.andotadao.org/

take a look at the website for more info re 21_21 Design Sight
http://www.2121designsight.jp/en/



Mr Yamamoto

Friday, June 24, 2011

If only I had a week off and a ticket to London!

The 
Yohji Yamamoto exhibition at the V&A is on now and continues til 10th July.

 
image used for show via V&A show curator's blog

Yamamoto is the charismatic and talented Japanese fashion designer whose work I very much admire.
His Paris debut in 1981 was quite revolutionary. He uses unconventional fabrics and shapes that are oversized and deconstructed, challenging the usual ideas of femininity, of sexuality and indeed of fashion itself.
He features decorative elements such as embroidery, shibori and yuzen.





  
the V&A space is dotted with life drawings of a woman's body on the walls, which he drew himself over two days from a live naked model. via id-online


I like that his clothes are somewhat contradictory; intellectual yet playful. Strong and seductive yet androgynous. 
Yamamoto designs for Opera yet has partnered with Adidas to make very cool sportswear: Y-3.
He dresses businessmen like vagabonds.




Y-3 F2011 RTW via style.com

He starred in Wim Wenders 1989 film Notebook on Cities and Clothes.
In 2008, he launched a charity called Yohji Yamamoto
Fund for Peace to sponsor Chinese fashion students and models.




His involvment in the Wapping Project Bankside entitled Yohji's Women showed the photos of seven artists who have collaborated with Yamamoto to produce images for his catalogues- which are themselves amazing and artistic.

 

Yohji's Women, Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin for Yohji Yamamoto, Spring/Summer 1999, Wapping Bankside, March 2011

via V&A

What an interesting designer!

Japanese Craft

Friday, April 01, 2011

"Today, everyday, I think about what I am going to draw on the fabric of my choice… "

I recently came across the work of Shumei Kobayashi -a traditional textile dye master. 
Tsutsugaki yuzen is a 400 year old practice for creating prints using a resist paste made from rice applied to fabric. Natural pigment is then used to colour the fabric and the paste is washed away revealing the design outlined by the dye.





'Japanese Traditional Craft Workshop, Reviving a dyeing art: discover the secrets of tsutsugaki yuzen' is on at the Australian Academy of Design, Melbourne in April, having finished up at The Japan Foundation.

Shumei has previously taught workshops at The Japan Foundation, Sydney as well as exhibiting his work.
In 2007 he taught the many ways to fold and use the furoshiki (decorative wrapping cloth)
We held our own Furoshiki Demo in stores just before Xmas last year!

Here is one of his furoshiki designs




Thanks to everyone who came to our Vintage Kimono Sale on the 26/27th, it was a great weekend and we raised $1200 for the Japan Red Cross Appeal.