Friday, November 28, 2014
Izumo 33 Kannon Pilgrimage Day 10 Iya to Higashi Matsue
Monday, November 24, 2014
Minimal Geometric Abstract 2
I'm off walking for a while with minimal internet availability so I will not be able to post, so I leave with a photographic interlude.
Last time I posted similar pictures I received some compliments, but no way am I vain enough to respond to flattery :)
Yin-Yang, positive-negative, and diagonals are basic and elementary design motifs, as are curves. My photography is very simple.
Thanks for taking the time to check my humble blog, and thanks to those who comment.
"So then always that knowledge is worthiest which considereth the simple forms or differences of things, which are few in number, and the degrees and coordinations whereof make of all this variety."
Francis Bacon,
Saturday, November 22, 2014
The Kojin Altars at Iya Shrine
Like the Kojins at Adakaya Shrine, which I will be revisiting on the next day of this pilgrimage walk, these kojin have quite large heads. In the above photo you can see the tongue sticking out.
Thursday, November 20, 2014
Iya Inari Shrine
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Iya Shrine
Iya Jinja
There are some secondary shrines in the grounds including two Ebisu shrines and a Tenmangu, but the most interesting is the Karakuni shrine. Karakuni means "Korea", and there are quite a few of them in the Izumo area, and they enshrine Susano and his son Isotake. According to Izumo mythology they both came to Izumo from the Korean Penisula and also made visits back there, something that is widely ignored by the nationalists here.
There is also an altar to Kojin and an Inari shrine, but I will post on them next.
Labels:
ebisu,
engi shiki,
futsunushi,
isotake,
izanami,
Izumo Fudoki,
izumo33,
karakuni,
kotoshironushi,
okuninushi,
Shrine,
sukunahikona,
Susano,
takeminakata,
tenmangu
Friday, November 14, 2014
Inside Diamond City
Diamond City are a chain of "cathedrals to consumption" located across Japan. This one in Hiroshima is named Diamond City Soleil.
It was built on the site of the former Kirin Brewery and elements from the old brewery can be found inside and outside.
I personally find such places rather bizarre, not only because shopping is among my least favorite activities, but they remind me so much of the settings of so many SF movies from my youth that are set in such gleaming, sterile, environments.
However, such places do offer me the opportunity to take the kind of photographs I like best, minimal, and geometric....
Labels:
Architecture,
hiroshima
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Chikuyo Shrine
Labels:
akiba,
Amaterasu,
hayatsumuji,
inari,
Izumo Fudoki,
izumo33,
konpira,
kotoshironushi,
munetada,
Shrine,
sumiyoshi,
tenjin
Monday, November 10, 2014
Shikoku 88 Temple Pilgrimage Temple 26 Kongocho-ji
The Nio are particularly impressive and seem to have been carved out of a single piece of wood.
The temple was founded by Kukai. The main deity is Yakushi Nyorai. It belonbgs to Shingon.
In the temple grounds is a small museum of whaling artifacts and the temple also owns many objects reputed to belong to Kukai, though these are not usually accessible to visitors.
Monday, November 3, 2014
Sacred Grove
I had known that nearby northern Hiroshima had a similar representation of the land kami, but I was really surprised last week as I was walking the back roads of southern Hiroshima to find a tree with a rope snake wrapped around it.....
All across Japan, from Kyushu to Tohoku, rope serpents are representative of the land kami. Why is it so unknown?
Saturday, November 1, 2014
Autumn Matsuri 2014 part 3
The next ceremony was a much grander affair with taiko and flute accompaniment. The village elders set offering upon the elder and norito were read, Once again there was purification. At the end of the ceremony the kami was transfered into the mikoshi which had been brought into the shrine.
When I first moved to the village I asked about the mikoshi and was told that there were not enough men nowadays to be able to carry the mikoshi. A recent survey of villagers showed that the villagers wanted the mikoshi procession to be revived. This was the first time in 14 years.
The mikoshi was really heavy as we carefully manhandled it down the steep steps. From the shrine it was then carried around the village. The roads where we passed were lined with a simple shimenawa. In the middle of the village another short ceremony was performed. The priests and musicians followed along.
Many of the older people who came out of their houses as the mikoshi passed were really pleased to see the mikoshi again. Once acrried back up the shrine steps and deposited back in the shrine we all shared some more omiki.
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