Japan web wanderings redux

More random Japan-context web findings:

Nobuyoshi Araki Poloroids from AssemblyLanguage, a guide to the the contemporary avant-garde art scene in Tokyo. Not sure how I feel about Araki, I admire his prolificacy but can’t deny his predilection for bound and gagged female subjects strikes me as simply part and parcel rather than any sustained critique.

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Panorama photographs of Tokyo from Tsutomu Kuriyama, who’s been uploading photos taken with his Noblex 135 since 1996. Some wonderful cityscapes here that will have you fetishizing for one of these cameras.

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Photos of Tokyo using the irrepressible LOMO from Naomi. Tokyo photos with other cameras as well.

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A nice assortment of photo exhibits by Japanese photographer Tadayuki (?). Looking at them I feel I’m outside taking a walk and not sitting in front of my computer. (I have the distinct feeling my web wanderings on the other side of the language barrier are hitting on the tip of the iceberg as far as Japanese photography sites go).

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Strange products from the Japanese consumer landscape, courtesy of Tokyo architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein of Klein-Dytham. See also their collection of strange Japanese drink can designs.

MY fetish object du jour: a Sushi Lamp.

Random re: Japan finds

Some random finds, all Japan-related:

Japanese all-women punk band Gito Gito Hustler. MP3 or Real Audio files here. Found via Yakitori!, itself a new find. As best I can make out Yakitori! is a blog originating from somewhere in Tokyo. Mainly just links.

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George, a fan of my photo diary, alerted me to another site of Tokyo photos, TOMATOCOW, by Koichi Morita. Some nice stuff therein. I particularly enjoyed the series of shots of Shibuya at night. He also has a blog of sorts (see the “Scribble” link).

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A wonderful post from always-erudite Jonathon Delacour on the art of asking questions to Japanese.

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My brother Kimo alerted me to Ruin-Japan a few weeks ago, a collection of photographs and online exhibits (including always-engaging Quicktime VR’s) of various abandoned Japanese hotels and buildings. See their links page for more sites of this type (most of them Japanese). This site I found particularly haunting.

(This reminds me, I need to ride my bike over to the “love hotel” nearby and do some photography there. It isn’t abandoned (yet?!) but sure looks like it, especially in the daytime when it sticks out like a sore thumb among the tiny rice fields surrounding it and its porthole-style architecture makes it look like it belongs at the Salton Sea.)

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Speaking of architecture that hasn’t been ruined yet, view a fascinating display of the tallest buildings in Tokyo courtesy of SkyscraperPage.com (found via What Do I Know). I was amused that No. 40 on this list, measuring in at 120 meters tall, is not a building at all, but rather the Ushiku Buddha statue in Ibaraki prefecture, which I visited during my trip last year.

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On the urban topography theme, Mid-Tokyo Maps is a fascinating site from the Mori Building Co.. These maps however are not your usual guidebook variety, but rather a collection of sociological maps “illustrating the problems and potential of re-making Tokyo into a thriving, attractive and internationally competitive city”.

Other views from Japan Part 1

There are a surprising (to me anyway) number of blogs or diary sites originating from Japan. Not that I had any illusions that I was the only one (I long ago learned that on the Internet, if you think you’re on to something new and unique, chances are there are at least 10 other sites out there doing the same thing). However, before I moved here there were only a couple I was familiar with (kristen’s Japan and Justin’s Links). Since getting involved in writing this blog I’ve made a conscious effort to seek others out, and have been quite amazed at the variety and creativity I’ve found. Interestingly enough, many of the blogs feature photography, which has been inspiring to me as I continue on my photo blog.

Because a few of these sites have been nice enough to point some users my way, I thought I would go a bit further than my “other views from Japan” link list and do a rundown of some of the Japan-originated sites I check out daily or every other day, in alphabetical order. Here’s part one:

Antipixel

Antipixel is a nicely-designed Movable Type site of the “dotted ant” variety (as an aside, one wonders when these seemingly de rigeur dotted ants will become the left-hand nav bar of web design) by one Jeremy Hedley who is an Australian living in Tokyo. Hedley has been uploading his blog thoughts since last October (though judging from some of the dates on his photographs he’s been in Japan for much longer), and is fairly consistent with posts (a lot more consistent that I’ve been recently, that’s for sure). He’s a passionate Mac user, and has a fair amount of postings on computer-related topics, although it’s not a “tech blog”. There is a photography section called Antipicture with some very nice photographs (see #3 On the streeet, as well as his photography category, for photos taken in Japan). And I must admit I’m very jealous that he recently toured Studio Ghilbi and met Miyazaki Hayao of Princess Mononoke fame.

consumptive.org

James Luckett has been in Tokyo since last November, although his blog pre-dates that by a year or so. A simple but clean design using Blogger, and I love the way his list o’ links cascade down the right-hand side of the page. Speaking of links, I think I could spend my entire net life just thumbing through James’ blog archives and following the links found therein, really an amazing assortment of mostly art and photography-related sites that are usually well off the beaten path. (Two random finds courtesy of James: Nagasaki University Old Picture Database; and this documentation of someone’s Southeast Asia trip using the Lomo camera). Elsewhere in his domain you’ll find of James’ various photographic projects (he works with a lot of found material, and in general his work is very textural), including photos from previous visits to Japan. Recently James has launched a new collaborative blog with a Mr. Cieciel called Spitting Image, which is about “all images all the time – the latest news, thoughts, anecdotes, and imagery of note – plus copious links to archives of vernacular, scientific and artistic interest.”

gmtPlus9

Andrew Abb’s 3-plus year old blog features the tagline “a daily weblog from Osaka”, but that might be the most Japanese thing about it in its current incarnation, at first glance anyway. Which frankly suits this reader just fine, for like consumptive.org, gmtPlus9’s mainly art-related links hold a treasure trove of unexplored web places that are like a needed dose of art history. It’s not unusual for Abb to have a John Heartfield day, for example (scroll down to June 3rd), or to point the user towards sites containing works by Malevich, or Orozco, or Moholy-Nagy, as he has in the last month. With respect to its Japan quotient, once you dig below the surface there’s a lot of Japan-related links. Abb is clearly much more advanced at reading Japanese than I am, and therefore I’ve been turned on to some great Japanese sites that would have otherwise remained behind the great Kanji wall (here’s one, for example, of Japanese chewing gum papers that I pulled from Abb’s archives).