Baren Digest Saturday, 19 October 2002 Volume 21 : Number 1999 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Mike Lyon Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 08:26:45 -0500 Subject: [Baren 19597] Re: Baren Digest V21 #1997 At 08:52 PM 10/17/2002 -0700, you wrote: >If you have three people in an ordinary Japanese print or a pillow print, >who is the third person? Is it the chaperone? The procurer? The pimp? >The person who takes the man out when the time he paid for is up? The >person who supplies the drugs? Who is the third person? I always thought >that was very bizarre because I certainly would not even think of bringing >my girlfriend along on a date, because she would almost certainly steal my >man if she could. Double dating was acceptable, but that was so many years >ago, I can hardly rememer it. > >Sorry this is off subject, but it needs to be communicated to someone. I'll >have to think about how I can put it into a print. > >Jean Dear Jean, Harunobu and others (Koryusai!) created images for a series of pillow books (shunga) to illustrate the adventures of Maneemon. Maneemon was a "normal" guy, but one day the teahouse beauties, Osen and Ofuji, gave him a magical potion which enabled him to shrink. So the miniature Maneemon would sneak into the brothels and watch what was going on (humorously described and pictured in the shunga)... Sometimes the third person is the husband, cuckholded as he sleeps. Sometimes it's that girlfriend of yours, hired to double the pleasure & even compete for the guy's attention. Sometimes it's another person spying or walking in on or interrupting the lovers. You know... just your run of the mill typical male fantasies in picture books... - -- Mike PS -- those lengthy 'off topic' parts do not belong here and should be sent to Baren-After-5 at baren-after5#ml.asahi-net.or.jp ... OK? Mike Lyon mailto:mikelyon#mlyon.com http://www.mlyon.com ------------------------------ From: Charles Morgan Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 09:46:04 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19598] Re: show of Japanese wood block prints Mike, and other interested parties, At 01:16 PM 10/17/02 -0500, you wrote: >I sincerely doubt that those hairs were printed using more than a single >block... Of course, I can't see the print as you did, but often hair was >printed using several blocks to under print gray and black tones which >were finally overprinted with the keyblock containing those finely printed >lines! Traditional Japanese technique allow faithful reproduction >of tiny marks, and (although they did tend to fill with hardened >pigment over time, and fine lines do eventually break down, there were a >LOT of prints pulled with very fine impressions) I bet you were just >admiring the pedestrian skill of people who did this work all day every >day for most of their lives. Pretty amazing level was achieved, eh? You may well be right, for all I know ... but those hairs were incredibly fine and VERY close together. It is all speculation on my part about how a more fumble fingered carver and printer might achieve it !!! >I've heard that 'sex education manual' explanation many times, but I just >don't buy it! Courtesans and prostitutes were more expensive than books >of shunga (just as today, I imagine). I think that the shunga you saw >most likely played a very similar role (and at a similar relative cost) as >today's "men's magazines" -- Playboy, Penthouse, Hustler, and a thousand >others. And I think men used them in a similar way, too. As far as >eroticism goes, I have some pretty damned erotic shunga (well, erotic to >me, at least) and homosexual erotica was very common as well -- I have a >terrific print depicting an older monk with a very young boy -- totally >inappropriate in today's puritan western climate, I think... but oh, so >very beautiful a print! Again, you may well be right about the parallel between Playboy and shunga ... I was simply quoting the lecture about the use of the books. As for the erotic quality, I suppose that is in the eye of the beholder. In our culture, we are constantly inundated with very realistic depictions of sex ... photos on the covers of men's and women's magazines, not to mention the material inside many of them ... and sex and full nudity in movies is very common now. Given our desensitization, a wood block print just does not seem to have the zing it might have had 100 or 200 years ago. To my eye, they seemed more humorous than erotic. In fact one of the prints was Cats In A Bath House, and it depicted cats dressed in kimonos, etc. So surely some of it was intended to be humorous and not erotic. My comments about the heterosexual character of the prints refers just to the collection on display at the Art Gallery here. I have no idea about themes depicted in other collections. >Because it was more or less produced and traded "underneath" official >censorship and regulation, lots of shunga was printed using the MOST >fabulous and flashy techniques -- lots of metallics, mica, embossing, RICH >color -- incredible prints! Did you notice that in the >exhibition? Shunga was frequently produced with the same sort of "deluxe" >printing technique as surimono -- really incredible! Actually, the local shunga collection seemed to me to be not of the same quality as the other prints on display. They were competently done, better than I could do ... but there was not the richness of many of the other prints. Cheers ..... Charles ------------------------------ From: Charles Morgan Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 10:01:20 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19599] Re: Baren Digest V21 #1995 Marilynn, I was sure I did one on line. Check, and if it is not there, I will do it again. I may well have screwed it up some how. Cheers ..... Charles At 01:49 PM 10/17/02 -0700, you wrote: >I have recieved prints from the following 14a participants, but not their >colophon information. >Sharen Linder >Charles Morgan >Julio Rodriquez >Minna Sora >Barbara Patera >Sylvia Taylor >Jean Eger Womack >Please visit the baren site and submit your info: >http://www.barenforum.org/exchange/exchange_14/aexchangedetails.html >As you have read I would like to get this in the mail early in November >because of other obligations. >These are wonderful prints everyone so get your stuff to me so you can get >yours back in the mail. >Marilynn Smith in beautiful Nahcotta Washington > ------------------------------ From: Charles Morgan Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 10:11:39 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19600] Re: Baren Digest V21 #1997 Some of the prints show groups of men in a salon with groups of women, which I take to be typical of the entry areas of the bordellos of the time. Some of the prints show a couple having sex and being observed by others. In one very humorous print, the "voyeur" is an obviously older man using a telescope from outside the building to observe a younger couple. Some of the prints illustrate group sex. There was no portrayal of drugs or drug paraphernalia that I recall. Cheers ... Charles At 08:52 PM 10/17/02 -0700, you wrote: >If you have three people in an ordinary Japanese print or a pillow print, >who is the third person? Is it the chaperone? The procurer? The pimp? >The person who takes the man out when the time he paid for is up? The >person who supplies the drugs? Who is the third person? ------------------------------ From: Mike Lyon Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 12:20:03 -0500 Subject: [Baren 19601] Re: Baren Digest V21 #1995 Yes, Charles -- I see where you posted it... I'll forward it to Marilynn and check to see if I have copies of any others at the same time. Thanks for mentioning this! Mike At 10:01 AM 10/18/2002 -0700, you wrote: >Marilynn, >I was sure I did one on line. Check, and if it is not there, I will do it >again. I may well have screwed it up some how. >Cheers ..... Charles >At 01:49 PM 10/17/02 -0700, you wrote: >>I have recieved prints from the following 14a participants, but not their >>colophon information. >>Sharen Linder >>Charles Morgan >>Julio Rodriquez >>Minna Sora >>Barbara Patera >>Sylvia Taylor >>Jean Eger Womack >>Please visit the baren site and submit your info: >>http://www.barenforum.org/exchange/exchange_14/aexchangedetails.html Mike Lyon mailto:mikelyon#mlyon.com http://www.mlyon.com ------------------------------ From: "jarvis" Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2002 03:04:11 +0900 Subject: [Baren 19602] chop seal inkan hanko All this talk about 'chops' and making them out of everything from old bolts to obscure plastics.... Actually, making the real thing should be a little closer to home. Here in Japan where a 'chop' or 'hanko' as they are mostly called here are a part of daily life and serve the same purpose as a signature does in daily contracts and transactions, the real workhorses among them are actually end-grain wood engravings. Most of the 'chop's which function as the official signature of corporations, schools, and organizations are carved from end-grain 'tsuge' which is the same as the 'boxwood' which is the high-end material for wood engravers. The real name of all these 'chop's is 'inshou' which includes the everyday 'hanko' as well as the seals used by artists and literati to 'sign' their work. The standard low-end material is boxwood. I have seen some of these used for numerous impressions daily for over twenty years with no apparent ill effect. If you go to one of the shops where they make these things you will be offered: boxwood(tsuge)- rich brown - low-end SE Asian water-buffalo horn -black ' Holland' water-buffalo horn - like tortoise-shell Chinese sheep-horn- semitransparent cream Ivory - high-end (traditionally the best ones were ivory but restrictions on ivory trade show their influence here, the ivory now used has seals from a government agency to guarantee that it is not from poached or smuggled sources. Recently there also has been a bit of Siberian Mammoth ivory around it seems) also some non-traditional materials such as Titanium - metallic-grey Dyed Horn - Bright candy-colors for the young girls. The 'chop' is placed up-side down (printing-face up) in a kind of simple vice using wooden wedges which is about 4in x 4in x 6in so you don't have to worry about how to hold it. Then it is gone after with tools much the same as the rest of us are using to carve our blocks. (Though there are also now also programmable mini-routers that will carve a perfect copy of your camera ready 'art') The soapstone seals that you can get in Chinatown are even easier to carve. Though considered a branch of the same art, these are usually referred to as 'Tenkoku'. they are carved usually in the same vise but usually with a special tool that is a 1/4in wide square-ended chisel. One usually gouges the stone with a corner of this tool and the resulting rusticity is considered desirable. Many artists and calligraphers here carve their own, and blank unengraved seals are available at every art supply shop. I've seen these artist- made seals made from cherry, knots from red pine, and even bamboo. Sharen suggested Aiko's in Chicago as a source for blank seals. I haven't been there for about 25 years but I'd guess they might have the other tools as well. I guess what I'm trying to say is that these 'chops' are in fact simply mini-relief blocks, and not something this group should find at all intimidating. G.Jarvis ------------------------------ From: "Lee and Barbara Mason" Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 14:02:49 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19603] teaching Hanga Well friends, I survived my first ever experience teaching Hanga...I am a comparative novice, but the word is comparative. I know lots more than the beginners and it was a good class. I had 12 women, some which are not so sure they want to go forward after seeing the demonstration. Others were so excited. I printed a small block and it turned out perfectly, almost. So I was not horribly embarassed. I have encouraged the ladies to do simple imagery so that they can get the feel for caving. I think they will all stay for the first series of classes. One woman speaks Japanese but does not read it...too bad! I have some great magazines (almost like soft cover books) with hundreds of prints in them and I would love to know what they say. I think they cost about $20, so they really are more like books and each has several "prints" that could be removed and mounted. They are offset reproductons, of course. Too bad. Alex Prentice from McClain's came and brought lots of merchandise for them to look over and purchase. Plus her new catalog. So all in all it was a positive experience for the students and myself. I am a good printmaking teacher and eventually I may be a good moku hanga teacher! It could happen, quit laughing Wanda....and I will encourge them to buy from the baren mall in the future as well as McClains. I just couldn't resist the offer of all that hanga stuff showing up in the middle of the class....it was so impressive. I admit I spent a little money myself...what can I say, I am a weak person where tools and books are concerned. She has a new one written in Japanese with a translation for the parts where actual printing is being done. I haven't looked it over yet, but will report on it in a few days. I plan to do #15 in the class, so I will kill two birds with one stone, or in this case, one block. We are going to print the same image on about a dozen papers to see the difference, this should be interesting. I plan to keep good notes. That 5x15" size will be good for this as it will be easy to see them side by side. Best to all, Barbara ------------------------------ From: Wanda Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 15:09:01 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19604] Re: teaching Hanga Well, I'm not laughing - I know that you will make a good moku-hanga teacher. You certainly have plenty of experience teaching other types of print-making. And you know how to do it. You taught me to cut mats & frame stuff, so that was a great money & time-saving thing for me. You bought more tools? Folks, you should see this woman's carving tools. :-) Sorry, Barbara, couldn't resist. Off to feed my animals & carve on my woodblocks. I *love* carving wood! Wanda Lee and Barbara Mason wrote: > positive experience for the students and myself. I am a good printmaking > teacher and eventually I may be a good moku hanga teacher! It could happen, > quit laughing Wanda....and I will encourge them to buy from the baren mall ------------------------------ From: "Lee and Barbara Mason" Date: Fri, 18 Oct 2002 17:07:17 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19605] tools > You bought more tools? Folks, you should see this woman's carving tools. :-) Wanda Wanda, I don't think mine hold a candle to Maria's.....She had tools that have tools. Actually I did not get any carving tools, I got a piece of leather and some honing rouge...of course this is assuming I keep those tools sharpened so I can use it. I do admit to having a lot of stuff...what can I say, it's my nature. I am thinking of renting storage and putting eveything we haven't used in a year there...if another year goes by, I will just call the good will people to clear it out. Seems like it would work...no art supplies though, I only want to put Lee's stuff in storage. Remember that chunk of white stuff that came in that sharpening stone set? It is chalk to use on top of the stone to make a slurry....surprise! If we could read Japanese we would have known this. best to all, Barbara ------------------------------ From: baren_member#barenforum.org (Jean Eger Womack) Date: 19 Oct 2002 08:07:19 -0000 Subject: [Baren 19607] Meeting Maria in San Francisco I went to the Art and Food show in San Francisco today and met Maria Arango. She is REAL! I hope she has a lot of success with her print show. There were a lot of good art works at this show, which costs $8.50 to enter. I bought one of Maria's landscape engravings on Corian. Jean Eger Womack ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V21 #1999 *****************************