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JF news from The Japan Foundation
 
 
OMUSUBI MAIL MAGAZINE

Thank you for helping us to trial our new email magazine. We have taken this step towards online communication so that we may make the Japan Foundation more accessible to our members and to the general public throughout Australia and overseas.

Commencing in the next couple of months, our new mail magazine will run concurrently with the existing paper version of the newsletter, but will provide more frequent updates regarding our events and activities, with direct links to our website.

We also hope that it will provide a more immediate reference to Japan-related issues both in Australia and beyond. We hope that you will find the Omusubi Mail Magazine to be a useful reference point, and welcome any feedback or suggestions: omusubi@jpf.org.au.
 
 
Kijyu Fukuda: World of Embroidery
To coincide with a visit to Australia by Japanese embroidery artist Mr Kijyu Fukuda, the Japanese Society of Sydney (JSS), in conjunction with the Japan Foundation, will present a lecture and exhibition on Mr Fukuda's work.

Embroidery as an art form in Japan has a history stretching back more than one thousand years, and is intrinsically linked to other textile art forms such as dyeing.

Born in Kyoto in 1932, Mr Fukuda learnt the traditional techniques under the guidance of his father. In 1997, after a long and distinguished career, Mr Fukuda was designated as one of Japan's Living National Treasures, a prestigious title awarded to certain masters of traditional crafts and performances. Mr Fukuda is the first and sole Living National Treasure in the field of embroidery.

The greatest of his work employs a subtle gradation of few tones, fluidly expressing natural elements such as the sky, clouds, flowers and water. In pursuit of his work, Mr Fukuda has managed to produce creations of high quality, endowed with a refined elegance and graceful style.

In his lecture, Mr Fukuda will discuss the role of embroidery in kimono design, the process of creating his work, and will provide an interpretation of some of his creations. This is a rare opportunity to meet a Living National Treasure and the foremost expert in his field, and is not to be missed.
Lecture
Date:   Monday, 21 January 2008
Time:  6.30–8.00 pm
Venue: Japan Foundation Multipurpose Room
Admission:  Free for JF members and JSS members
$10 for non-members
Bookings: Japanese Society of Sydney (JSS)
Fax. (02) 9262 5290
jss@jssi.org.au
*Please supply your membership number, full name and telephone number.
 
Exhibition
Dates:   22–24 January
Time: 11.00 am – 4.00 pm
Venue: Japan Foundation Gallery
 
 
The Philosophy of Ichigai: Exhibition of Zen Art by Ichigai Kanamori

Be enlightened this New Year by the spiritual world of Zenga, an amazing style of art inspired by Zen Buddhist philosophy that harmonises traditional brush ink drawing and calligraphy.

While Zen – a school of Buddhism which emphasises the attainment of wisdom through practice and experience, particularly as realised through meditation – arrived in Japan from the end of the fourteenth century, Zenga was established some 200 years later, at the beginning of the Edo period in 1600. Frequently associated with Tea ceremony and martial arts, zenga is noted for its use of simple brush strokes to create pieces that are characteristically bold and abstract. The subject is frequently expressed simultaneously as both an image and as calligraphy. Traditionally, the calligraphy used denotes a poem or saying that teaches an element of Zen philosophy and the true path to enlightenment.

Artist and philosopher Ichigai Kanamori has been practising his unique style of zenga for many years. Born in Osaka in 1941, he began his artistic career with brush ink art and calligraphy, drawing inspiration from ancient Zen Buddhist poetry and teachings. Kanamori works from his studio in Niigata, on the Japan Sea coast, where he established Gallery Kanzan ("Cold Mountain") in 1991.

He opened his first exhibition in Shinjuku, Tokyo, in 1986; in the years since, he has held many exhibitions throughout Japan and overseas, including New Zealand in 2002. This will be his first major exhibition in Australia.

Kanamori has also published a number of books, including Ichigai's Ink Brush Portfolio (1989), a collection of his paintings, and Hotei no Fukuro (1995), a collection of haiku, philosophy and ink paintings. He has also provided artistic design to the play Hana no Sho (2004). His interests extend beyond Zen Buddhism and philosophy: as an avid fan of classical music, Kanamori has also released a series of artworks dedicated to the prolific eighteenth century composer Mozart.

Kanamori says of his art, "the reason I started drawing was to visually express Zen philosophies. What motivated me the most was my admiration for the way a drawing sympathises with poetry and calligraphy on one piece of paper. I felt that traditional Zen art had fallen victim to tradition and lost some of its spiritual message. To put Zen back on front stage I have used contrasts of thick and thin brush strokes, adding gold and silver colours, radically departing from the more delicate style of Buddhist paintings in the traditional Southern School of art in China."

Approximately fifty pieces of Kanamori's Zen-inspired work will be on display at the Japan Foundation Gallery during the two-week exhibition. More of Kanamori's paintings will be displayed at Books Kinokuniya in Sydney from 2–15 January. There is also a permanent display for viewing at the Zen Art Gallery in Chatswood.

More information and examples of Kanamori's work can be seen on his website (in Japanese): www.ichigai.com.

 
The Philosophy of Ichigai
Date:   30 Jan – 15 Feb 2008
Hours:  10.30 am – 4.30 pm, Mon–Fri
11.00 am – 4.00 pm, Sat–Sun (closed 9 Feb)
Venue: Japan Foundation Gallery
Admission:  Free
*Please supply your membership number, full name and telephone number.
 
Books Kinokuniya
Display from 2–15 January 2008
The Galeries Victoria
Level 2, 500 George Street SYDNEY NSW 2000
Tel. (02) 9262 7996
 

Zen Art Gallery
Suite 5, Level 1 19 Spring Street CHATSWOOD NSW 2067
Tel. (02) 9411 3647

 
 
 
Next Omusubi

The next print issue of Omusubi (Summer 2008) will be published in late January.

 
 
ISSUE 1
Issued: January 2008
In this issue: Happy New Year Kijyu Fukuda: World of Embroidery
Ichigai Kanamori: Zen Art
The Japan Foundation, Sydney
Shop 23, Level 1 Chifley Plaza
2 Chifley Square
SYDNEY NSW 2000
Art & Culture Dept.
Phone: (02) 8239 0055
Fax: (02) 9222 2168
Japanese Studies & Intellectual Exchange Dept.
Phone: (02) 8239 0055
Fax: (02) 9222 2168
Japanese Language Dept.
Phone: (02) 8239 0077
Fax: (02) 9222 2169
Library
Phone: (02) 8239 0011
Fax: (02) 9222 2164
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