Monday, February 21, 2022

Hina Doll Museum in Hita

Hina

This is claimed to be the largest tiered display of Hina Dolls in Japan.


It is part of the Hina Doll Museum in the historic town of Hita in Oita.


Ten rooms display more than 4,000 Hina dolls, that have been collected by a local soy sauce magnate. The museum also sells plenty of his companies wares.


Many of the dolls onj display are from the Edo period, the time that Hina dolls took on the form and function they have nowadays.


Examples of unique styles of Hina dolls from different parts of Japan are also on display.


Entry is only 300 yen, so if you are in the area it is worth a visit. If you have a particular interest in Hina dolls then it would be worth making a trip to Hita.


The Nagashibina Doll Museum in Tottori delves into the origin of the Hina dolls.


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Saturday, February 19, 2022

Il Palazzo Fukuoka

Fukuoka 福岡


Hotel Il Palazzo in Fukuoka was built in 1989 and designed by Italian architect Aldo Rossi.


Palazzo means "palace" but it also refers to an architectural style of the 19th and 20th centuries based on renaissance palaces


It is built out of brick and the windowless facade is faced in Iranian travertine with exposed steel beams.


The contrast of the green steel and salmon pink stone works well.


The proportions are also quite pleasing.


However, being windowless it does tend to look like a love hotel, of which there are many nearby.


I must admit to not knowing Rossi's work, although he was the first Italian architect to win the Pritzker Prize.


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Thursday, February 17, 2022

Surreal & Psychedelic Shisa of Ishigaki Island

石垣島


Just across the road from Yonehara Beach in central Ishigaki Island, Okinawa, is the Yoneko Yaki craft centre where you can see and buy, among other things,  examples of traditional Okinawan shisa.


However, outside you can see a wide variety of large, colorful statues that seem to be based on shisa.


Their shaes seem alien and surreal, and their color schemes are very vibrant and somewhat psychadelic. 

They are sray-painted so also have the feel of graffiti art.


We were there in the off-season and the lace was closed so were unable to find out about the origin and history of them.


However, they were whimsical without being kawaii, the Japanese cultural style that seems to be growing into a dominant format, that also seems to be very popular. I personally find kawaii somewhat offensive, but then I don't enjoy Marvel superhero movies , so what do I know.


Ishigaki Sea Salt

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Hita Gion Matsuri Museum

Hita Gion Matsuri Museum

Hita Gion Matsuri Museum.

Hita, the historic town in the mountains of Oita, is one of many towns throughout Japan with their own Gion Matsuri, the festival that originated in Gion, Kyoto.

Hita Gion Matsuri Museum.

The festival takes place at the end of July, but for those who visit at other times there is a museum that displays the large festival floats throughout the year.

Exhibit.

Like many matsuri, the Gion Matsuri involves a series of floats, and they are called Yamaboko because of how tall they are.

Float.

Hita has six different yamaboko, each one pulled by a different district of the town, and they are 8 meters tall and very colorfully decorated.


As well as the floats the museum also displays other things from the festival culture,  like masks


I arrived at the museum just after it closed but a gentleman from city hall nagged the old lady in charge to let me in for my own private viewing.


Sunday, February 13, 2022

Canal City Hakata

Canal City Hakata, 博多


A couple of months ago I took advantage of a lull in the pandemic and went on a trip to north Kyushu. This involved my first visit to a city in over 2 years.


In my quest to visit ,what were for me, the exotic and unusual, I revisited Canal City in Hakata, a "Cathedral of Consumption".


Japanese shopping malls are for the most part architecturally bland, usually resembling industrial scale warehousing, but a few are not.


The interior of CanalCity is a meandering "canyon" with a water feature running along its base. It is also quite colorful.


Canal City was designed by American architect Jon Jerde, and the architecture is somewhat inspired by the canyon country of the American southwest. He also designed another colorful complex called Riverwalk in Kokura.


Like a methadone clinic or a pachinko parlor, people were lining up to enter before the doors opened.


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Friday, February 11, 2022

Hitotsumatsu Residence in Kitsuki

Hitotsumatsu Residence in Kitsuki

Hitotsumatsu Residence in Kitsuki.

Sadayoshi Hitotsumatsu was a Japanese politician who served as a cabinet minister in several of the first post-war cabinets of the government.


In 1929 he built a mansion in the castle town of Kitsuki in Oita. It was built in a combination of traditional and western styles.


While mostly appearing traditional, it does have a lot of glass which enable great views of the castle and sea as well as back over the old town.


It's built on the high point of the southern escarpment, of the two pieces of high ground that were occupied by the samurai, with the lower classes sandwiched between on the low ground.


Being a little closer to the castle, Minami-dai was the district for the highest-ranked samurai. Nearby is the former Nakane residence and garden, as well as the towns museum.


The other samurai quarter retains more of the original samurai residences and many are open to the public


Kitsuki is one of my favorite towns and is less visited by tourists, mainly due to the closest station being some distance from the town. A few more of my Kitsuki posts....

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Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Myo-o-ji Temple 95 on the Kyushu Pilgrimage

Myo-o-ji Temple 95

Alsoknown as Tansofudosonmyoo Temple, Myo-o-ji is number 95 on the Kyushu ilgrimage and the reason I was in Hita on the 53rd day of my walk.


It was established here in the 1890's after being transferred from Nakatsu. A local priest had walked the Shikoku pilgrimage and was inspired to set up a temple, but at that time it was illegal to establish a new Buddhist temple.


The solution was to transfer an existing temple from somewhere else. It is not clear if any actual structure was transferred, or even if the honzon was transferred. Sometimes just the name of a temple was transferred.


The honzon is a Fudo Myo-o and therefore they conduct goma rituals here.


In the second photo is a shrine to Mizuko Kuyo, primarilydevoted to prayers for aborted children.


There was a great painting of what I believe is not Fudo, but a different Myo-o. Not sure ecxactly which of the Wisdom Kings it is as they appear in many forms, but it may well be Gozanze, though it could be Godari.


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