Gearing up for Honbasho

Koyanagi versus Arauma, circa 1844-1850: click for larger

It’s the start of the Aki (Fall) Sumo tournament here in Tokyo and after more or less taking the last basho off, I can feel myself getting back into the swing of things, and look forward to making it down to the Kokugikan for at least one if not two days of action this basho. Of course, the other days I will be glued to the nightly highlights show broadcast on NHK. (The basho runs from September 12 – 26.)

There are many compelling stories this basho, starting first and foremost with whether or not Yokozuna Asashoryu can win his fifth consecutive tournament and continue his quest to be the first rikishi in history to win all six bashos in a single calendar year. He is also attempting to break the record for the most bout victories in a year.

His 19 year old Mongolian countryman Hakuho is slowly but surely being touted as perhaps the next Yokozuna, and is coming off consecutive double-digit win tourneys. At Maegashira #3, Hakuho is now ranked high enough that he is virtually guaranteed to meet the Yokozuna for the first time on the doyho — in short, a most anticipated bout. Ozeki Tochiazuma seems to be finally fully healthy, and in my book is the leading contender to upset Asashoryu’s record-setting plans. Further down the banzuke, there are several newcomers to the top division that folks will be following, namely the Bulgarian Kotooshu who has already become a fan favorite due to his kawaii looks (the dreaded “David Beckham of Sumo” has been uttered more than a few times already).

The above ukiyo-e print is of a special exhibition bout between Koyonagi on the left (in the middle panel) and Arauma on the right, from sometime in the middle of the 19th century. Both rikishi had long, distinguished careers: Koyanagi was active from Tenpo 6 (1835) to Ansei 3 (1856), reaching as high as the Ozeki rank, while Arauma’s career spanned from Tenpo 3 (1832) to Kaei 7 (1854), his highest ranking being that of Sekiwake. (This was in an era which saw only two tournaments per year, with these being only 10 bouts long (in contrast to today’s 6 yearly tournaments of 15 bouts duration each).)

Interestingly enough, both rikishi hailed from the same part of Chiba prefecture east of Tokyo, and apparently this helped give rise to a spirited rivalry between the two which made them two of the most popular rikishi at the time. In fact, the pair were so popular that they were immortalized in the lyrics to a famous children’s song of the time. It is said that along with Ozeki Tsurugisan, who is one of the off-dohyo rikishi depicted in the far right panel of this print, the three were lauded as the preeminent rikishi of that time. (Tsurugisan sounds like he’s worthy of his own post: at one point in his career, he turned down a chance to become Yokozuna, claiming that his dohyo form wasn’t good enough. That didn’t stop him however from wrestling until the ripe age of 48!)

The above print triptych was done by Kunisada (Toyokuni III) sometime between the years 1844 to 1850 (based on the seal/signature analysis found on this page). Click on the above image for larger versions of the triptych.

No ghosts here

Bodie State Historic Park, California, September 18, 1999: click for gallery

Bodie State Historic Park, California, September 18, 1999.

More from the California archives 🙂 . Bodie State Historic Park is the remnants of a once thriving mining town northeast of Yosemite near the Nevada border. Having been in the California park system some 40 years, it has a slightly sanitized feel to it, though to be fair it seems like more sensible heads have prevailed and one certainly can’t accuse it of being Disney-fied. (For starters, the road there from the Interstate is one of the rougher roads I’ve driven on in the States.)

Naoko and I made the trek here during a weekend trip to Yosemite in September of 1999, a trip I still look fondly back on, even if 5 years hence the photo remnants are a bit hard to get excited about.

Contributing to the vexed life of our time

Frank Lloyd Wright's Hollyhock House, Los Angeles: click for gallery

Hollyhock House (Frank Lloyd Wright), Los Angeles, November, 1999.

Cleaning out the hard drive, came across some scans of a roll or two I shot at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House in Los Angeles, back in 1999. Naoko and I were ostensibly visiting my brother, but for the most part it was an architectural tour of various famed L.A. homes and buildings. In addtion to Hollyhock, we also saw Wright’s Ennis-Brown, Storer, and Freeman homes (of these, only the Ennis-Brown is open to the public). We also visited other famous architectural landmarks like Schindler’s Studio-Residence, the Bradbury Building, as well as seeing from afar some of the Case Study Houses like the Eames House. Thinking back on it, quite a strange trip, lots of driving in and out of the various Los Angeles hills, book and map in hand. Naoko must’ve thought I was pretty messed up (and of course, she’d be right!).

Anyway, ironically enough, much of the Hollyhock’s construction was left to Wright’s son and Schindler to manage, as the elder Wright was occupied with the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo.

Click on the above photo for a small gallery. Be forewarned, the photos are fairly pedestrian.