Her Haughtynesses Decree

Showing posts with label Yuzen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yuzen. Show all posts

Sunday, March 3, 2024

くぼたと辻が花 | Kubota to Tsujigahana | Kubota and Tsujigahana | Patterns #23

This patternseries I would like to try something a little different, and discuss the process behind the revival of the pattern tsujigahana, by its revivalist, Itchiku Kubota (1917-2003) in 1937. Itchiku Kubota was the artisan or Komin who was behind the work of recreating the arguably lost art of creating Tsujigahana ( 辻が花 | Flowers at the Crossroad ), which became his lifes work.[1] Kubota was a great crasftman outside of this feat, but his work and what inspired I thought might be of interest to people into what motivates people to preserve, relish and continue creating these 'traditional' crafts.

Kubota was born in 1917. He was the son of an antique dealer that resided in the traditional part of his neighbourhood. This would have been during the Taisho era (1912-1926) when a burgeoning domestic and foreign set of markets had opened up to the Japanese industries and on the tail-end of adopting Western customs, manners and attires. which destroyed much of traditional Japanese Arts and Crafts.[1] It may not have escaped his inquisitive eyes that much of this was particularly disappearing around him as he grew into his teenage years into a family of artisanally inclined people. Many of his neighbours were dye workshops, and we can presumably assume that this was were he first began to mix his family social capital inheritance of old artforms with his neighbourhood ties.[1]

In 1931 Kubota began an apprenticeship to Kobayashi Kiyoshi, whose workshop was known for its handmade Yuzen dye work. There Kubota began learning how to paint, dye and the traditional and perhaps contemporary Japanese design aesthetics such as landscape painting, portraiture and other traditional Kimono painting techniques. By 1936 he was considered good enough to establish and build his own dye studio.[1]

Presumably by this time as an established Kimono Komin and Designer, and with his family background in antiques began to search out inspiration and influences from centuries gone by. This took him to the Tokyo National Musuem where he first witnessed the then considered lost technique of design, Tsujigahana which was extant from the Azuchi-Momoyama period (1568-1600).[1] At that time of 1937, Kubota was 20. This moment of witnessing such a beautiful moment frozen in time and interaction with the world external to the Museum inspired him to relaim the design into the modern day and age to be enjoyed once again, rather than to be locked away in a case as a lost relic of another time.

The design element of Tsujigahana was created in the time of the Muromachi period (1336-1573). The design of that time were heavily dependent on a kind of conservative tendency towards an almost Iki reading of Ashida-E, Onna-E types of artistic lineages of Art which were heavily image and symbol heavy. These resist dyes thus were able to evoke a heavy sense of narrative and storyworlds in their decoration and in a time which was heavily restrictive in literacy towards women and the lower classes, these textiles were lavishly and painstakingly created most likely by the affiliated workshops and Machi-Eshi Komin capable of working on these unique Tanmono wealthy families could afford, this being the wealthiest Sengoku Daimyo and the urban Chonin. By 1690 with the almost complete decline of Za guilds and the rise of Miyazaki Yuzen's moyo Tsujigahana fell into decline.

This is to my knowledge the most likely explanation as to why Tsujigahana fell out of favour by the later part of the Edo period and completely 'forgotten' by the Meiji (1868-1912). That being that the production of such a textile would have been a trade or workshop secret and therefore died out with its lineage creators, as otherwise a legacy form would still exist in the realm somewhere, in one form or another. This is pretty guaranteed due to the amount of decorative elements, a time-consuming and expensive dyes, metals and embroidery used in the creation of these garments which makes it unlikely that farmers would have been making and wearing these textiles to go rice farming in.[1] Almost as likely as wearing ballgowns to pick maize.

Returning to our protaganist, Kubota was fascinated the mystery of where and how this original technique had been lost. He was under its spell from that point on, making it his life's work to figure out the mystery of that lost technique.[1] Another layer to the fun, was that the silk to create the work was Nerinuki, an archaic textile no longer woven at the time. It would be this step to technique revival which would take decades of work for Kubota, presumably somewhat interrupted by the second world war. Evil Japanese officials ruined the progression of his work by drafting him, where he spent 3 years as POW from 1945-1948. Given the dates, it is most likely he was rather weak and unfit for military service, but at the time Japanese army officials were not particularly picky, sending children and the elderly to fight what was for them another rich mans war. Indeed, it was during this time that Japan's new Constitution declared Japan to be unable to go to war unless in self-defence resulting in the modern article 9 which 'renounced war forever'. 

However not one to let a stupid war stop him, he returned to Tokyo and set up shop once more, mostly in Yuzen kimono. By 1955 aged 38, he had decided to fully devote his down (presumably, the  early 1950s was a difficult time in Japan, especially Tokyo) time to Tsujigahana revival. In a bid to get it done within his lifetime, Nerinuki was released back to the misty, shrouded hills of Folklore Studies once more and modern silk was deemed good enough. Instead, the technique was the focus, a mix of resist-dyeing and hand painted ink painting.[1] Using chirimen as a base, Kubota dyed each bolt independently and stitched. This formed the basis of Kubota's technique. Whilst this may seem revolutionary for some and a copout for others, this work is symbolic of what an appreciation for the worlds before our own is. An understanding that what we see is but a fleeting (in this case) material remnant, which we build upon in transforming the work to modern needs. This is a more honest understanding of KTC and whilst not a literal remaking, it is indeed a revival of the vision of what a Daimyo or Chonin may have felt upon recieving the same material. A reboot if you will that saw in 1977, Kubota first exhibit his take on Tsujigahana.[1]

This is evident in the series Kubota created for 1979, which presented panoramic views of sunsets and landscapes for example. This was displayed that year, and included 80 painstakingly handmade Kimono. True to his artisanal and nitpicky roots, this series was developed and continued until Kubotas passing onto the next life. It is this spell however which is almost a translation of the glamour of times gone by, a fae tale which has been spun into the gold leaf covered T-shaped works of Art which wealthy patrons swanned around in, a world which archivists, librarians, curators, re-constructionists and art historians have in their everyday. It is the job of the modern designer to translate this to bring these facets of history to a wider audience and it is this message and elements which make us consider Kubota as an archival liberator, that is one who works with firsthand artefacts in the archives left to us to create magic.

Bibliography

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itchiku_Kubota

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Sunday, March 27, 2022

茶屋辻 | Chayatsuji | Waterside Indigo | Patterns #12T

Chayatsuji is a pattern which traditionally depicted waterside scenes in summer kimono which are dyed in indigo and complemented by orange-yellows. The term Chaya, refers to Chaya-zome (Chaya dyed) after its origins from the Chaya family (active circa 1575) member Chaya Munekiyo (1593-1627).[4][5] It is guesstimated that this process of going from a dye to design process, helped to inspire Miyazaki Yuzen (1654-1736) in the creation of his fan paintings on Kosode.[1]

Chaya-zome dye with Indigo designs (c1986, CC4.0) Wikimedia Commons 

The Chaya family were an influential Daimyo family in the late Sengoku Jidai (1568-1600).[5] During the early Sengoku Jidai, they adopted a wandering Ronin (  浪人 | clan-less warrior ) from the Nakajima family whom they designated as Chaya Shirojiro ( しろじろきよのぶ | 1545-1596 ) I. Shirojiro I became a Komin, setting up a shop in Kyoto selling fabric to his wealthy friends who introduced him to more Komin pursuits like lacquerware and making tea ceremony paraphenalia.[4] During this time, he befriended people like Honnami Koetsu ( 本阿弥 光悦 | 1558-1637)[4] and Matsudaira Hirotada ( 松平 広忠 |1526-1549).[6] This proved useful later when Matsudaira's son, Tokugawa Ieyasu ( (徳川家康 | 1543-1616) needed a squire for which Shirojiro I, sent Shirjiro II to fill the job vacancy.[6]

In this way, Shirojiro I became very wealthy very quickly, becoming what is known as a Fudai ( 譜代 | Insider of the Tokugawa circle ) samurai by 1573 making all of Ieyasu's clothes and being a spy for the Tokugawa family. They even went to war together! Shirojiro I first acquired a Shuinjo ( 朱印船 | Foreign Traders Licence ) during Hideyoshi's rule by the 1580s, trading silks with South Vietnam. This carried on until his death, when his son Kiyotada (1584-1603) took over the family workshop and fought at the battle of Sekigahara (1600). In 1603, the business was taken over by Kiyotsugu (1584-1622) who began a silk trade monopoly and overseeing the Nagasaki trade port to prevent Christianisation in Japan. In 1612 the Chaya workshop was issued a Shuinjo for Vietnam again resuming their monopoly officially in the new Tokugawa administration.[6]

During this golden period for the Chaya business, Kiyotsugu's successors Kagayoshi and Munekiyo (active 1630-1639) opened two new branches under the silk monopoly income. However, it was during this time that the Bakufu established Sakoku trade policies to enforce the ban on foreign elements gaining ground with the Heimin, plummeting Chaya's profit margins.[6] During this decade (1630-1640), the Komin Chaya Munekiyo (1593-1627) invented the Chaya-zome technique of using indigo dyes to decorate Katabira by the second half of the 1630s.[4] 

It is likely these designs made use of easily accessed indigo in light of the rising cost of importing other fabrics and dyestuffs by 1635. It is perhaps likely influenced by the avant garde aesthetic world of the Kyoto elites and Komin who resided there at the time, who sought out 'Wamono' in their work to get around the new Sumptuary Laws and used new techniques like direct painting which Machi-Eshi in their untraditional splendour were apt to take up to make sales. It was this 'Shari' ( Witty design ) environment forged by Sengoku Jidai Daimyo excess from the 1590s - 1610s and patriotic Machi-Shu Wamono Yamato-E Shari culture from 1620-1660 which came before the Ukiyo world of the Kambun era.[4][7] This shift from Daimyou to Chonin patronage may be the catalyst for the switch to indigo designs, eventually being the source of fame for the Chaya wholesaler, who became popular with the masses for their Chaya-zome Katabira by 1640.

The origins of the Chaya-tsuji motif comes from the Kambun era (1661-1673) when the design was first printed on Hemp Katabira (帷子) Kimono. Katabira being the predeccessor of Hitoe Kimono and Yukata. The first text appearance of the motif is in the On-Hiinakata (first Kosode pattern book; 1667) which uses the dye Chaya-zome as a ground colour for the Kosode. It is thought the Chaya wholesale store made popular Kosode with waterside motifs using indigo dye, which is how the Chayatsuji motif came to be born at least by the beginning of the Enpo period (1673-1681), during which time this referred to a graduated dye pattern of indigo and light oranges or yellow-greens worn by women.[1][4] By the Genroku period (1688-1704) a technique called Noribosen (two sided resist paste stencil) was created. After this time the stencil depicted delicate patterns, often related to water or fans, and Chayatsuji was born.[1] 

With the introduction and popularity of Yuzen-zome, the fad of Chaya-zome and Chayatsuji waned as Yuzen designs took over by 1705.[1] These were changes driven by the wealthier Chonin classes though as: 

when the Sankin Kotai was enacted [...] from 1635 [this lead to] the rise of the new Chonin class. This changed [...] by 1685 in reaction from the Bakufu by their growing rich people disgust of the merchant classes spending said money. This came in the form of the sumptuary laws, and saw the rise of more covert expenditure, and eventually this meant the start of hierarchical fashion laws (and their cultural reaction of 'Iki') [...] in a bid to curb the outragerous spending habits of Osaka merchants and Edo Chonin in the creation of GKTC (1688-1704).[2]
During this bout of sumptuary laws, one of these such initiatives to keep the Bakufu afloat and I quote 'Yoshimune found it necessary to shelve certain Confucian principles that were hampering his reform process.'[3] In other words, he threw out centuries old principles because he was cash strapped, but is still ordering his subjects to go without and lecturing them on their spending habits. Some things never do change do they? Either way, Yoshimune enacted the Kyoho reforms ( 享保の改革 |1736 sumptuary and rice-as-money restructuring reforms), and Chaya-zome Kosode, which was an expensive Kosode to own and have made, were dropped by the Chonin inline with more Iki styles. Samurai ladies though had other ideas and began wearing them, and down the years the patterns became smaller and smaller until it was accepted by the cultural elites as a motif rather than a whole design by 1711.[1] 

By 1850, the design was considered so bourgeois that it was part of the domestic court dress of Edo castle for the ladies in waiting to wear. It was at this point, that the motif became fixed as it is known today. Today the pattern is worn mostly on Houmongi (formalwear Kimono) and Tomesode (black formalwear Kimono).[1]

Bibliography

[1] https://www.japanese-wiki-corpus.org/culture/Chayatsuji.html 

[2] See A man of Yoshiwara in Bijin #12

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ky%C5%8Dh%C5%8D_Reforms#Purpose_of_the_reforms

[4] Japanese Art, Aesthetics, and a European Discourse: Unraveling Sharawadgi, Wybe Kuitert, 2014, No.27, p.86, Japan Review

[5] Japan Encyclopedia, Louis Frederic, 2002, p.109

[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaya_Shir%C5%8Djir%C5%8D

[7] See The Town Painter in Bijin #15

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Sunday, February 27, 2022

羊毛 | Youmou | Wool | Fabrics #12

Wool has been used in KTC as technically Tsumugi, Kasuri Ikat and Pongee weaves for over 100 years at least and was initially considered to be a luxury fabric in Japan, worn by the military and other elites.[2][5] A lot of made-in-Japan Youmou comes currently from around 20,000+ Suffolk Sheep, with the bulk of Japanese wool being imported from Australia.[2][4][6] The advent of wool in the late 19th century saw the rise of a new sleeker winter silhouette for Kimono, and new Inverness style capes being added into KTC and designs which remain popular today among Kimono revival vintage collectors and designers alike as a fashionable 'Kawaii' accessory, mostly in Merino and Muslin wools.[11]

Young Boys Jinbaori (c1799, CC1.0) Meturoporitan


Wool is made as in most places by taking the yarns from mammals such as sheep, alpacas and llamas and turning the yarns into threads, dependent on the density and fibres of the yarns. These yarns are now processed by mechanical means, but before industry had reached Japan were sorted for dying and weaving. Wool is first sheared, scoured and then put through a carding machine to be spun into yarns via the worsted or woollen systems. Most of the wool we encounter in Kimono is worsted for its dense nature, but some lighter fluffier fabrics use the Woollen production system for wools like Cashmere. These yarns are wrapped around Bobbins and woven into the worsted plain weave or the woollen twill weave. Crabbing and Decating may also occur to tighten the fibers of these weaves so that they do not shrink or loosen. A Wools Crimp describes how heavy it is basically and as British worsted wool is best, is still used in futon making today for its lightweight feel which retains heat.[6][9]

Historically, Broadcloth, Grofgrain and Raxa Wool was first imported by Europeans during the Nanbanjin trade between 1613-1639. It was considered a luxury import item at the time and used as a trim of sorts for elites to make Obi and eyecatching red Jinbaori.[10][11] Raxa also became used as a fire-retardant material worn to put out fires. Worsted Serge was also used to make Kappa ( raincoat capes | 合羽). Raxa became Raseita, and Grofgrain became Gorofukurin during this time. Even Hakama were found made with Grofgrain, often in red or violet and were more costly than silk. Between 1800-1804, the Bakufu negotiated with the Dutch and Chinese to import sheep to make a local Wool industry but with all attempts unfruitful.[11] 

Kabuki actor as a Firefighter (1860, PD) Utagawa Yoshitsuya

Wool was first imported en masse for the production of western military garments after 1850, when local Raseita and Goro Wools were used.[5][10][11] European Wool farming in Japan is first said to have begun in the Meiji Period (1868-1912) with the advent of the push for Westernisation and was based on the British industrial revolution model in Yorkshire mills.[4][6] Wool outfits were first adopted by the Imperial Japanese family to receive the visiting Duke of Edinburgh in 1869, which promoted Westernisation, prominently British and Prussian dress due to the perception that Wafuku was effiminate and Yofuku (Western dress) as masculine. Chirimen-goro, or French Muslin Wool, was introduced in 1872 and was popular as a cheap alternative to Chirimen silks and was used primarily for Juban ( Underrobe | 襦袢).[11] Inoue Shozo introduced worsted production to Japan in 1878 creating the Senjuu Mill based on German manufacturing models.[10] This included the adoption of western military attire, which at the time, used a lot of stiff and hard woollen fabrics and textiles.[4]

Saigo Takamori in Yofuku Worsted Military Uniform (1877, PD) Yoshu Chikanobu

With the 1868 reinstatement of the Emperor the prior sumptuary laws (put in place from 1604-1685), fell away opening the door to bright bold and fantastical designs in the 1870s.[11] Imported wool become a popular alternative for Kimono again beginning in the 1880s, particularly Red shawls for women.[10] Designers like Kimura Otokichi created ways to put popular Yuzen designs (Yuzen-moyo) onto Mosurin, or Hirose Jisuke who designed Yuzen Katagami (Stencils).[11] In 1881, Okajima Chiyozo developed a printing technique to print Japanese designs onto Mosurin which became known as Yuzen Muslins, after our Genroku friend Miyazaki Yuzen (1654-1736) and replaced Silk Crepe Chirimen Muslin.[11] In 1889, Australian wools began to be sourced by the Kanematsu Fusajiro Store to meet this growing demand for Mosurin wools.[11] By 1896 these imported luxury Muslin Wool materials accounted for 40% of the Wool Market and part of daily Japanese KTC.[10] These Yuzen designs and bright dyes also imported from the Occident created a new craze we still feel today.[11]

Seeing as these garments were made from Wool, it replaced the need to layer multiple garments over other Kimono as had previously been done and changed the winter silhouette for a time. Japan Wool Textile Co., Ltd was an early introducer of Wool as part of KTC when it began production in 1896.[1] It was in this time when the importation of Wool was particularly high, with most imports coming from England and Germany in 1898.[5] The suppliers of Wool of at this time came mostly from Western Mills, such as the A W Hainsworth Mill (est.1793), which in 1899 recieved an order for 'Black serge' wool to be delivered to Yokohama. This saw the introduction of new types of overcoats and capes such as the Tombi, Nijuumawashi, and Azumakouto.[5][10] 

Tombi Coat (1903, PD) 衣服改良会, Benichan
Wool Azumakouto cover (1910, PD) Jukichi Inoue

By 1900 department stores such as Takashimaya and Mitsukoshi began to stock Mosurin ( Wool Muslin | モスリン) or thin plain weave worsted muslin wools for purchase. At the time these were often red and overtook cotton muslin in popularity among Children and Young Adults for their Kimono. Worsted was bought from Tokyo, and domestic Goro Mosurin from Osaka & Kobe. By the middle of the decade, Mosurin designs would be readily available at Depato and many aimed at the new market of young women consumers as they were more cheaply priced than silk kimono. Mosurin Kimono specifically were pushed to these Young Bright Things through posters and magazines and at events held annually at the Depato themselves. The Gofukuten ( Big Kimono Stores | 呉服店 ) like Mitsukoshi (三越), Takashimaya (高島屋) and Daimaru (大丸) who would set the trends each year. Taisho Mosurin was big business certainly among teenagers and started the emergence of Miss Haikara-san (Ms.High Collar | はいからさん ) which referred to the 'Smartly' dressed young women who adopted western fashions, and displayed a kinship with the Occidental New Woman phenonmenon.[11] This was the sort of It girl Chic of 1910-1920, with short hair, Hakama, textbooks, western boots, Mosurin western motiffed Kimono and a Bow atop the hair, was the Haikara-san charicature of the New Japan. Motifs included Roses, Chrysanthemums and Sunflowers and all in fast bright and bold synthetic dyes.[11]

Female student in Hakama (c1912, PD) Agesa

Wool worsted began to be associated as an English fabric due to its use in the British suit, and Wool was sold in imitation of the English model at stores like Selfridges, Kendals and Harrods besides the railways of Osacca and Tokio for the established gentleman.[6][10] Working class Japanese citizens may have also first come into contact with Wool when their uniforms and issued blankets were made from Wool for the 1904 invasion of the Dalian Peninsula.[6] The process became even more commonplace when the process of printing on Woolen Muslin became mechanized in 1907 by Inahata Katsutaro in Osaka leading to a domestic boom in Wool Mills for these soft lightweight and cheerful fabrics.[10]

With all of the popularity, demand and reliance on foreign imports of woolen goods, factories and due to this whole WWI thing going on, in 1917, the Agricultural and Farming Ministry declared Japan would begin to become self-sufficient in the production of Wool. This was implemented by the building of the Daidoh Wool Kaisha in 1918.[7] This ended by 1920 however as dense wool demand declined in the domestic Japanese market.[3] The Kanto Earthquake (1923) brought all this domestic Wool producting industry to a halt, until it revitalised by the 1930s.

By 1932, Mosurin peaked at it heights of popularity, as Japan turned away from Western inspired motifs like Art Deco, Expressionism and Modernism and with this came the Society of Kyōto Muslin designers and the Ōsaka Designers Union had recently formed.[11] Depato often held contests to design Yuzen inspired Mosurin Katagami designs, and the art of designing onto soft Worsted Mosurin Wool had become a respectable Nihongo art venture. Something that with the expanding Greater Co Prosperity Sphere had turned into fervent passion for militarism and by 1936, the Wool Industry had returned chiefly active in Nagoya, Aichi and Osaka and Ichinomiya, albeit still reliant on imported resources from at first Australia, but China by this time.[10?] Wool Kimono instead began its militarist phase depicting Childrens Kimono with motifs about Japanese warplanes, military prowess and softpower acts like their 'Benevolence' towards Ethiopia as depicted below. By the 1940s, Japan dominated the global wool industry.[6]

Mussolini in Ethiopia Detail on Mosurin (c1935[2015], CC4.0) Sam Perkins

After the Pacific War, the Japan-Australia Commerce Agreement (1957) saw the reinstatement of Australian resources being used to make Japanese wool textiles. After the resolution of the Anglo-Japanese Commerce Treaty (1962), by 1964 there was also seen in an uptick of Japanese department stores stocking soft Wool fabrics and some Kimono also being made from them. Up until the 1980s, it was still said that many in the know consumers still bought British sourced wools in Japan to make textiles and goods.[6] A great number of these Taisho Yofuku-Wamono and Depato Mosurin Kimono are also greatly credited in more recent literature as the start of 'Kawaii' culture as well, and certainly play a large role in helping to popularise modern and global KTC due to their bright appearance.[11] Furifu most recently issued a series of Wool Capes in their 2020 Autumn/Winter Season Collection for example, showing the enduring popularity of Wool within JKTC Kitsuke.[8]

Bibliography

[1] https://www.woolmark.com/industry/use-wool/wool-processing/japan-wool-textile-company/ 

[2] https://sumono.design/japanese-fabric-bolts/wool-kasuri-ikat-woven-full-bolt-japanese-fabric

[3] https://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0007887290

[4] http://www.fragmentsmag.com/en/2014/06/ami-tsumuli-4/ 

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_clothing_during_the_Meiji_period 

[6] Britain & Japan : biographical portraits Vol X, Hugh Cortazzi, 2016, pp.481-487

[7] https://www.daidoh-limited.com/english/company/history.html 

[8] https://furifu.com/en/news/en-items/2199/ 

[9] https://www.masterclass.com/articles/guide-to-wool-fabric#9-different-types-of-wool 

[10] The Dying Case of the Kimono:The Influence of Changing Fashions on the Development of the Japanese Woolen Industry, Keiichirō Nakagawa, Henry Rosovsky, 1963, Vol.37, No.2, pp.59-80, The Business History Review | Available online at https://www.jstor.org/stable/3112093, Accessed 26/02/2022

[11] Woolen Cloths and the Boom of Fancy Kimono: Worsted Muslin and the Development of 'Kawaii' Designs in Japan from Fashion Identity and Power in Modern Asia, Sugimoto Seiko, 2018, Chapter 11, pp.259-284

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Sunday, December 12, 2021

宮崎友禅 | Miyazaki Yuzen as Genroku Komin and Wamono Bijin | 1688-1736 | Bijin #10

This post will be slightly different, more of an essay than Bijin post only due to the nature of the difference in thought between Western and European Art. The post endeavours to explore the fluid relationship between Japanese mediums, across different formats and styles of Japanese Fans. Also how the Human Figure came into this crossroads in Japanese Art and Miyazaki's lasting influence on KTC.

Miyazaki (1654-1736) was a prolific fan painter and creator of the Yuzen dying technique. His painting style was immensely popular and featured on a number of Kosode from the Genroku, Hoei, Shotoku and Kyohu periods (1688-1736). Miyazaki's fan designs or Yuzen-zome designs directly onto the surface of Kosode were popular with Kyoto Chonin by 1690.[1][2] This design process is now a staple design motif found on Kimono today. 

Miyazaki's popularised Fan motifs (1717) Nakamura Senya

Fans

The concept of the fan originates in Ancient Egypt 4000 years ago. Eventually these became widespread in China which in turn influenced Japanese fans. The first known use of Japanese fans ( Sensu | Fan | 扇子) comes from 600 CE, being greatly influenced by Chinese flat hand fans at the time made of feathers or paper in a flat oval shape, inspiring Uchiwa fans. In 800 CE, Japan invented the first folding fan, the Akomeogi ( 衵扇 ), named after the courtly attire of Akome ( Cover-over Layer | 袙 ).[3] The oldest existing Hi-ogi dating from 877 CE, which at the time was used by Shinto priests and male courtiers.[7] According to Chinese lore, the Japanese monk Chōnen ( ちょう然/奝然 | 938-1016) offered Hi-ogi ( 20 Hinoki strip folding fans | 桧扇) and 2 Kawahori-ogi ( Paper fans | 蝙蝠扇) to the Song emperor Zhao Jiong (939-997) in 988. In the 10th century, Folding fans were once again taken by Korean envoys to the Chinese to use to pay tribute to the Middle Kingdom. 

By this time, Sokutai and Junihitoe had become the fashionable Wamono dress style in the Japanese court, and Heian women popularised the painted folded fan as Akomeogi by taking the name from their skirts 4th dress layer.[7] Eventually by the late Heian and Kamakura period in Japan, folding fans were regulated by sumptuary legislation much like later Tokugawa sumptuary legislation on fabric imports, until by the 15th century when they became used by the Japanese public.[4][7] During the 1400's, Japan began to export Folding fans due to their popularity on the asian mainland, and presumably further afield with the arrival of Portuguese traders during the Nanbanjin trading period from the 1560's onwards.[6] Edo period (1600-1868) fans were made by one Komin, and decorated on one-side, mass market fans included both sides.[7] By the Meiji period, folding fans were a staple global fashion accessory and the height of European fashion between the Tudor and Victorian periods in the English courts to own one, with a particular resurgence amongst the Victorian middle classes after Japan opened up from Sakoku in the 1860's. In the modern day, it can take up to 87 craftspeople to make a single fan.[7]

The earliest folding fans or Hiogi, were made by combining together 5-20 multiple thin strips of Hinoki wood at 30 cm long called Mokkan ( [orig.] Wood Recording Tablets | 木簡 ) with tightly bound silk string, afixed to a paper background.[4][7] Highly decorative fans included many layers of decoration such as fans made by Komin and adorned with tassels. The flat design was often made by artist for a specific purpose or to reference a literary text for example onto paper and layered onto the wooden sticks. Some fans in the Heian era though were made to convey Waka poetry, as seen in the Tale of Genji, and was regarded as something of a feminine artform. According to legend, the shape was inspired by a Heimin who saw a bat unfurl its wings.[5]

Fans held many uses, including to show taste, send messages to other courtiers, signal warfare in battle, as weapons, toys, decorative art and to engage in court ritual. Shinto priests still use folding fans today in their ceremonies, and many performing arts such as Geisha and Kabuki still use folding fans as part of traditional ritual dances, using ivory, bone, mica, mother of pearl, sandalwood, or tortoise shell.[4] Folding fans are today considered a traditional Japanese handicraft by the goverment, such as the Hyakudate ( 100 Bamboo stick Fan ) made by Aiba of Kyoto, who have made their Uchiwa fans for 300 years.[6]

Figures in Fans

Human figures appeared on Fans in Japan in the same way as they appeared on Screens, Lacquerware and other decorative items, due to the backdrop gargantuan shifting financial geo-social politics of the Edo period, and the Japanese understanding of Art in contrast to its Western Counterpart.

"[A]rt and crafts are one in the same process, unlike in the West when during the Renaissance [Art & Craft] split under secularisation during the Enlightenment period through the rationalism (in the art world, nature) vs empiricism (mechanised) debates into Art (divine works of nature) and the lesser crafts (mechanical and hand labour work) in the Occident."[8]

In the century before Miyazaki, the human figure underwent vast changes in Japanese Art, including being included in public Japanese art full stop. This was mostly down to the fact that Japan went from being a Rice-Economy, to a Currency Economy from 1590-1660. As such, most art in the late Sengoku period was made for wealthy Kyoto Kuge who had different tastes, desires and needs than the Heimin who consumed Bijin-ga in the 1670s would have, the Kuge wanted devout Tosa depictions of good Buddhist figures, the Heimin of the 1590s to feed their children, so very little Azuchi-Momoyami art even carried human figures in them. This came from Classical Buddhist notions of beauty imported from the Asian mainland, which held that portraiture was a vain venture, such as idolatry in some Christian and Muslim traditions.[12] However Bijin-ga can be held to a be a classical Chinese genre begun in the 6th century by Chinese painters depicting women who wrote love poetry.[13]

Back to Japan, between 1598-1615, Tokugawa Ieyasu craftily devises his Stabilisation Policies to bring an end to the Sengoku Jidai, using stability to consolidate control over the patchwork fiefs and warlords of Japan and ensuring its continuation by creating a stable Japanese society and economy. This changed the nature of power structures in Japan. Suddenly, Kyoto was no longer the aspiring culture everybody looked up, but instead, Edo culture was the new rising popular culture. One such policy being Sankin Kotai (1635) which saw warlords uproot to Edo, Ieyasu's new defacto capital for 6 months annually, bringing all their money and retinue with them, which turned Edo from a fishing port into a wealthy city.[11]

Setting the stage for Bijin-ga (1624-1673)

Tagasode Byobu (c.1573-1615) Anonymous

Southern Barbarians Screen (c1600) Kano Naisen
By the 1620's, the warlords had become bored without any Hanazuka ( Nose Mounds | 鼻塚 ) to pile up. So instead, the bored Ronin took to handicrafts, becoming Machi-Eshi, who patronised the new artform Kabuki, and fraternised with the new religion, Christianity. With this, came a shift in the use of the human figure in Japanese art by the Kanei era (1624-1644) from dukkha-vessel to sentient two dimensional being.[14] This came at first in Byobu, with first the Tagasode and then Hikone Byobu, inspired in part by the Kano school's depictions drawn from the wealthy Nanbanjin trades.[9][10] Figures of the 1630s reflected the changing times with the growing middle Chonin classes buying art in which they appeared. Figures then shifted after Sakoku in 1639; as Japan reverted to its pre-contact identity and 'unique' national psyche when it closed its borders; with the Bakufu more keen to promote Wamono than Nanbanjin affairs both to prevent further Kirishitan conversions and to reenergize the domestic Japanese economy. 'Japanese' Beauty in the arts became more valuable than Korean or Portuguese forms, and instead the rise of the conservative Buddhist Tosa figure which used the figure as was found in Yamato-E Fuzokuga became more socially acceptable, in lieu of the flashy Kano school depictions which drew on the Nanbanjin trade for their inspiration.[14]
[14]
Image taken from the Hikone Byobu (c1624-1639) Anonymous
 ta

The Four Earthly Pleasures (c1624-1644) Iwasa Matabei

During the Shoho era (1644-1648), the human figure underwent an appraisal under the guiding hand of Iwasa Matabei, who drawing on the Beauties Genre of Tang Chinese figure painting and the Kano school, but using the Tosa Yamato-E figure as a vehicle, created early Japanese high art using human figures.[14] Matabei's portraiture marked a shift in this appreciation of worldly forms from Buddhist Genre Painting into the figure as High or courtly art, and was depicted on Byobu as such.[13] By the late 1650s, Kakemono depicted early Bijin, prominently in Shikomi-e or images of young half-dressed androgynous figures.[14] It was the push for Japanese Bijin which saw the growth of the pleasure quarters and patronage of these by Chonin and Heimin. In 1666 with the publishing of Asai Ryoi's Ukiyo Monogatari, the Ukiyo genre or worldly pleasures genre mostly enacted by the new Chonin middle classes came into vogue. Ukiyo-e being the brainchild of the Komin-Chonin relationship, producing newly publicly available hedonistic and androgynous Shikomi-e Bijin-ga and later Yakusha-E prints. 

Matsuura Byobu (c.1630-1650) Unknown
Kambun Bijin (1661-1673) Anonymous
BeautyLooking Back (c1672-1686) Hishikawa Moronobu


By the Kambun period, early Bijin-ga as it is known had become an acceptable format to paint the human figure in, as Shikomi-E were deemed Ga ( Refined ) icons of Dancing Artisans (Geisha). Most production done for and by Chonin who increasingly merged High Brow Art (The Iwasa family, Tang China, Tosa, Kano) with Low Brow Content (Vanity Pictures), under the permissive nature of the times ; Shunga had begun to become explicit and was widely read for example.[14] These were simple Kosode which carried usually 2-3 colours max, and were displayed in the S-Shape Silhouette, often holding Mai-Ogi ( Dancers Fans ). The 1670's saw the widespread acceptance of Bijin-ga, extolled by Komin like Hishikawa Moronobu and Sugimura Jihei and their wealthy Chonin patrons who bought and commissioned these prints, paintings and Ogi designs commerating these beauties.

Fans on figures

View of Kyoto (c.1580-1585) Kano Motohide

TLiezi on a Cloud (1590-1599) Kano school

Fans operated themselves in these religious, aesthetical and then within Bijin-ga boundaries as well, as part of GKTC. This mostly reflects the main schools of though derived from Chinese aesthetical traditions, which in Japan were for the most part reflected in the Kano school by painters like Kano Motohide, and Kiyohara Yukinobu who painted human figures on fans in the early 17th century. Related to the huma figure which developed thus:

The religious figure had existed therefore for a longer time than pop culture iconography depicting human figures. This figure accompanied Buddhist texts as a pastime for the monks and writers who created Buddhist scriptures and texts and to allow the reader deeper connection with the subject material by placing human figures in the narrative. Over time, it became acceptable to have human figure Kakemono displayed in wealthy peoples homes as a sign of their devout faith by the early 17th century. [... T]he depiction of Heimin came in with the Tosa School and their Yamato-E Fuzokuga [... and in] Kyoto scenes depicting harmonious scenes of nature, Chinese philosophers and a whole lot of gold were more the Kano aesthetic in this pre-Sankin Kotai world. Pop culture as print media, simply did not have the demand required to profligate the idea of an established common beauty until the 1650s, as all demand was in the hands of the elite who required and expected different outcomes in their commissioned art pieces [of which the majority were E-maki]".[11]

"[After popular culture moved to Edo under] the enforcement of Sankin Kotai a brand new Japanese society with new expectations had formed as younger generations had more leisure time and greater stability than their elders."[11]

This popular culture is similar to Fans becuase fans were originally held by the Kano school to be venerable art objects. They went alongside the development of Bijin-ga as they were considered refined art objects, so from the Kanei-era they added credence to the Refined nature of the Wa Bijin ideal. For Heimin, Yamato-E allowed an 'in' for their presence and worlds to be depicted on fans as socially acceptable, as many Heimin although certainly aware of Confucius if they did well in Terakoya ( Heimin School | 寺子屋), were not themselves Chinese philosophers. The development of fans from the Kano school, who used Classical Chinese lore, may be considered due to the fact that a common motif of the Pining Chinese Beauties was to be found holding a hand fan, such as in Du Fu's (712-770) Ballad of the Beauty.[12][14]

Edo period Terakoya (1844-1848) Issunshi Hanasato

"This meant that classical, conservative and traditional appraoches to how beauty, vanity and inevitable human behaviour were codified to meet social and class structures of their day saw to it that the human figure in early 17th century western Kano depictions, whether on fans, screens or lacquer, were rare."[11]

As such, this was the world of fans which depicted Beauty and Beauties, before 1650. After 1650, fans had begun to made by the lower class Komin, again due to the shift in popular culture from Kyoto to Edo and with it the power of the Samurai-Komin relationship to the Chonin-Komin relationship to dictate popular culture on art.[11] This shift by 1661 was towards the Chonin world of worldly pleasures and we can pair this with the overall development of the Bijin from there directly to the Shikomi-E, which used fans as a way to bring the High Brow, to the Low Brow.[14]

Komin Codifying the Genroku Wamono Bijin

When in the Jokyo and Genroku era (1684-1704) Miyazaki contributed his Yuzen-zome technique, he often did this by painting on a number of fan designs as well, just the paper component though. This was done under the widespread acceptance and proliferation of wholly Komin Wamono that spread due to necessity under Sakoku which celebrated Japanese domestic art manufactures and handicrafts by the 18th century.[15] When Miyazaki began to add fan designs to his Kosode designs, including in his 1688 Yuzen Hinagata book on Kosode design, he popularised the Ogi in both ode to past aesthetical ideals and towards the tolerant and exciting new climate around him which Kosode design was undergoing. Whilst fans in particular had been used before Miyazaki, he popularized the trend for fan designs on Kosode after 1690, which after 1639 had taken on on the overtones of Sakoku necessity to redefine 'Japaneseness' or by undergoing a Wamono reappraisal.[15]

Miyazaki therefore whilst not depicting the Bijin, contributed to Bijin-ga and KTC by creating the clothes which Beauties were seen in. His High-Brow-Low-Brow Harkening was a major component of Komin practice, which realistically was more Yamato-E than the Kuge could ever hope to be in their ivory and gold castles, for they repersented trends felt and worn by the Heimin and Chonin, or commonfolk and townspeople themselves as products of the new Tokugawa Japan.[2][11][14][15] Thus Miyazaki codifies JKTC fashion in a more succinct way, as the Machi-Eshi did in the early 17th century before him, codifying what it meant to be a Wamono Bijin instead of the Chinese derived equivalent pushed by the Kano school, or the Classcial Heian depictions of the Tosa.[14][15] In context therefore, we see how as cultural markers, Komin like Miyazaki Yuzen contributed more to the 'Japaneseness' of the Wamono Bijin, than most courtiers of his time ever did among the masses.

Bibliography

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miyazaki_Y%C5%ABzen

[2] See Essay #8

[3] For the Akome Layer see https://www.iz2.or.jp/english/fukusyoku/wayou/index.htm

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hand_fan#Japanese_hand_fan

[5] https://japan-avenue.com/blogs/japan/japanese-folding-fans-history

[6] https://japanobjects.com/features/japanese-fans

[7] https://becos.tsunagujapan.com/en/kyo-sensu-fans/

[8] See The Artisans in Essay #8

[9] See Essay #9

[10] See 17th century in Appreciation Timeline

[11] See Bijin #8

[12] See The Changing Japanese Figure in Bijin #6

[13] See Bijin #7

[14] See Bijin #1

[15] See Phases of popularity in Essay #9 and Essay #8

Bijin Series Timeline

8th century

- Introduction of Chinese Tang Dynasty clothing (710)

- Sumizuri-e (710)

- Classical Chinese Art ; Zhou Fang (active 766-805) ; Qiyun Bijin

15th century 

- Fuzokuga Painting schools; Kano (1450-1868) and Tosa (1330-1690)

16 century 

- Nanbanjin Art (1550-1630)

- Byobu Screens (1580-1670)

 - End of Sengoku Jidai brings Stabilisation policy (1590-1615)  

17th century  

- Land to Currency based Economy Shift (1601-1655)

- Early Kabuki Culture (1603-1673) ; Yakusha-e or Actor Prints

- Sumptuary legislation in reaction to the wealth of the merchant classes (1604-1685) 

- Regulation of export and imports of foreign trade in silk and cotton (1615-1685)  

Iwasa Matabei (active 1617-1650) ; Yamato-e Bijin  

- Sankin-Kotai (1635-1642) creates mass Urbanisation  

- Popular culture and print media production moves from Kyoto to Edo (1635-1650); Kiyohara Yukinobu (1650-1682) ; Manji Classical Beauty

- Shikomi-e (1650-1670) and Kakemono-e which promote Androgynous Beauties;

 Iwasa Katsushige (active 1650-1673) ; Kojin Bijin

- Mass Urbanisation instigates the rise of Chonin Cottage Industry Printing (1660-1690) ; rise of the Kabunakama Guilds and decline of the Samurai

- Kanazoshi Books (1660-1700); Koshokubon Genre (1659?-1661)

- Shunga (1660-1722); Abuna-e

Kanbun Master/School (active during 1661-1673) ; Maiko Bijin 

- Hinagata Bon (1666 - 1850)

Yoshida Hanbei (active 1664-1689) ; Toned-Down Bijin

- Asobi/Suijin Dress Manuals (1660-1700)

- Ukiyo-e Art (1670-1900)

Hishikawa Moronobu (active 1672-1694) ; Wakashu Bijin

- The transit point from Kosode to modern Kimono (1680); Furisode, Wider Obi 

- The Genroku Osaka Bijin (1680 - 1700) ; Yuezen Hiinakata

Sugimura Jihei (active 1681-1703) ; Technicolour Bijin 

Miyazaki Yuzen (active 1688-1736) ; Genroku Komin and Wamono Bijin 

Torii Kiyonobu (active 1688 - 1729) [Coming Soon]

Nishikawa Sukenobu (active 1700-1750) [Coming Soon]

Kaigetsudo Ando (active 1700-1736) [Coming Soon]

Kaigetsudo Doshin (active 1704-1716) [Coming Soon]

Baioken Eishun (active 1710-1755) [Coming Soon]

Kaigetsudo Anchi (active 1714-1716) [Coming Soon]

Miyagawa Choshun (active 1718-1753) [Coming Soon]

Miyagawa Issho (active 1718-1780) [Coming Soon]

Nishimura Shigenaga (active 1719-1756) [Coming Soon]

Matsuno Chikanobu (active 1720-1729) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonobu II (active 1725-1760) [Coming Soon]

Kawamata Tsuneyuki (active 1736-1744) [Coming Soon]

Miyagawa Shunsui (active from 1740-1769) [Coming Soon]

Ishikawa Toyonobu (active 1745-1785) [Coming Soon]

Tsukioka Settei (active 1753-1787) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonaga (active 1756-1787) [Coming Soon]

Shunsho Katsukawa (active 1760-1793) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Toyoharu (active 1763-1814) [Coming Soon]

Suzuki Harunobu (active 1764-1770) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonaga (active 1765-1815) [Coming Soon]

Kitao Shigemasa (active 1765-1820) [Coming Soon]

Kitagawa Utamaro (active 1770-1806) [Coming Soon]

Kubo Shunman (active 1774-1820) [Coming Soon]

Tsutaya Juzaburo (active 1774-1797) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunimasa (active from 1780-1810) [Coming Soon]

Tanehiko Takitei (active 1783-1842) [Coming Soon]

Katsukawa Shuncho (active 1783-1795) [Coming Soon]

Choubunsai Eishi (active 1784-1829) [Coming Soon]

Eishosai Choki (active 1786-1808) [Coming Soon]

Chokosai Eisho (active 1792-1799) [Coming Soon]

Kunimaru Utagawa (active 1794-1829) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Toyokuni II (active 1794 - 1835) [Coming Soon]

Teisai Hokuba (active 1800-1844) [Coming Soon]

Totoya Hokkei (active 1800-1850) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunisada Toyokuni III (active 1800-1865) [Coming Soon]

Urakusai Nagahide (active from 1804) [Coming Soon]

Kitagawa Tsukimaro (active 1804 - 1836)

Kikukawa Eizan (active 1806-1867) [Coming Soon]

Keisai Eisen (active 1808-1848) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (active 1810-1861) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Hiroshige (active 1811-1858) [Coming Soon]

Yanagawa Shigenobu (active 1818-1832) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunisada II (active 1844-1880) [Coming Soon]

Toyohara Kunichika (active 1847-1900) [Coming Soon]

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (active 1850-1892) [Coming Soon]

Toyohara Chikanobu (active 1875-1912) [Coming Soon]

Goyo Hashiguchi (active 1899-1921) [Coming Soon]

Yumeji Takehisa (active 1905-1934) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kotondo (active 1915-1976) [Coming Soon]

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