August 07, 2005:

[achtung! kunst] Taipei: Taiwan International Performance Art Festival - Tokyo: Bathhouse murals
 
     
 


Taipei Times, Jul 28, 2005
An extreme form of performance art has a look at itself
By Susan Kendzulak

Performance art is in a category of its own. Often using the body, the performance artist can make bold, political, personal or transgressive statements that use nudity, public protests, bodily functions and other rebellious modes of expression to get across an urgent message.

The Taiwan International Performance Art Festival TIPAF started yesterday and runs until Sunday, so you still have time to see an overview of various performance art from around the world, including 26 artists from 13 countries.

Organized by Taiwanese performance artist Ahlien Z.H. (鄭荷) and titled Reach Outlying 2005 the festival includes several sections: Artists from Eastern Europe, Asia and Taiwan who will give live performances; a seminar with notable speakers on various topics such as extreme aesthetics; and a video section showing some extremes in performance art.

For Eastern Europe, the rich history of performance art includes artists who have lived under repressive regimes and developed covert ways to get their messages out.

The artists who will perform for the festival are Hungarians Szirtes Janos and Samu Bence, Poles Janusz Baldyga and Slovakian Jozef Cseres. The section on Asia includes artists from Indonesia, Thailand, Singapore, China, the Philippines, Myanmar, Vietnam, Japan, and South Korea. There are also seven artists from Taiwan scheduled to perform including experimental sound artist Lin Chi-wei (林其蔚).

Performances are scheduled for Friday and Saturday, at the Taipei Artist Village, 7, Beiping E Rd, Taipei (台北市北平東路7號) and Nanhai Gallery, 3, Ln 19, Chongqing Road, Sec 2, Taipei (台北市中 正區重慶南路二段1 9巷3 號). It's from 3:30pm to 10pm, with breaks so the audience can meet and chat with the different artists.

The event is co-sponsored by TESMotion, an organization that encourages the artistic program aimed at the reformation of individual bodies.

Its main function lies in fos-tering activities such as art festivals while focusing on establishing the facility for cultural introspection and on promoting its potential strength in the Asia-Pacific region.

You can see more Taiwanese performance art at the Taipei MOMA gallery, 3F, 19, Ln 252, Dunhua S Rd, Sec 1, Taipei (台北市大安區敦化南路一段252 巷19號3樓), with a summer series titled Carefree-Taiwan Performance Art Relay. It runs until Sept. 17 and is curated by prominent artist, curator, writer Yao Jui-Chung (姚瑞中), who recently published Performance Art in Taiwan 1978-2004, an informative look at Taiwan's provocative art scene, with great photos and text in Chinese.

Now, having had a taste of media-inspired performance art, you will want to check out the artist-run space Shin Leh Yuan for the joint exhibition of artists Ho Hsin's (何佳) Writing Imagery Father Jai and Mimicry by Kuo Hui-chan (郭慧禪). Both artists use memories to explore the present. Kuo's digitally altered photos are haunting and shows absence and presence in the rapidly changing face of an Asian city. Shin Leh Yuan Art Space is at 15-2, Zhongshan N Road, Ln 11, Sec 2, Taipei (台北市中山 北路二段11巷15-2號1樓). The exhbition is until Aug. 14.

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2005/07/28/2003265414


***************************

Daily Yomiuri, Jul. 21, 2005
Bathhouse murals fading fast in Tokyo
Wataru Doi / Special to The Daily Yomiuri
[image] Daikokuyu in Adachi Ward, Tokyo, is decorated with Mt. Fuji painting and tile pictures on the partition.

Huge wall paintings of Mt. Fuji are a traditional fixture at Japanese bathhouses. People love to bathe at the foot of the famous mountain or with other well-known landmarks surrounding them.

These paintings, named penki-e after the Japanese word for the industrial paints artists use to create the huge murals, have been around for more than 90 years and have survived wars and depressions. An important part of Japanese pop art history, they are now in danger of disappearing.

During their heyday, more than 2,000 sentos, or public bathhouses, existed in Tokyo, and many of them had penki-e paintings on their walls. But now that most homes have their own bathtubs, the number of sentos has decreased to about 1,100, and penki-e are on the verge of disappearing.

"I hate to say this, but this art is destined to disappear. Nobody can prevent it," says professional penki-e painter Kiyoto Maruyama. "All I can do is paint as many works as possible for the rest of my life."

Maruyama has devoted 50 years of his life to painting the murals, and he is the most senior among the three remaining penki-e painters in Tokyo today.

Penki-e was born at Kikai-yu, a sento in Kanda Sarugakucho, Chiyoda Ward. When the owner built an annex in 1912, he wanted something fun for children so he commissioned an artist to decorate the wall with a painting. Previously, it had been usual for advertising agencies to sponsor paintings on sento walls in return for free advertising space.

Other famous sightseeing places featured in murals include the Inland Sea between Shikoku and Honshu, Onuma Park in Hokkaido, and Matsushima in Miyagi Prefecture. In the past, Japanese were not rich enough to travel, but bathers could be transported to faraway places by looking at the paintings. There was even one bathhouse with Mt. Everest on its wall.

What makes the penki-e painting method stand out from other painting methods is that the artists have to work under severe conditions. They start work early in the morning and have to finish before the bathhouse opens, usually at 5 p.m. So the painter only has about eight hours to complete a large painting, usually about 13 meters wide. Not only do the painters have to work fast, they also have to work in extremely hot and humid conditions.

"It looks easy, but you need special techniques to do penki-e," Maruyama explained. "First of all, fabric is laminated onto the wall where the mural is to be painted. Then we smooth the surface with glue, and seal the undercoating and paint over it. Finally we paint a picture, and dry it."

Most of the time is spent preparing the area and drying the painting. Only two or three hours are actually spent painting.

"This is one of the terrific things about penki-e painting," emphasized Shinobu Machida, a researcher of popular culture and pioneer of sento research. "No other art can create such a big picture in such a short time."

In 2002, Machida organized a penki-e exhibition at the Mitaka City Arts Center. During the exhibition, the three surviving painters--Toshimitsu Hayakawa, Morio Nakajima and Maruyama--all created murals in front of the visitors.

"They finished large paintings in 2-1/2 hours in front of an audience of 200 people. It was amazing," Machida said.

The conditions in which the painters create their murals are sometimes dangerous.

"I once accidentally fell from the ladder into a bathtub filled with boiling water. Sentos usually have boiling water that is cooled right before they open. I was severely burned," Maruyama remembered.

Maruyama says penki-e painters must have a strong sense of color and design, as well as proficient technique.

"We usually choose light colors because it makes people happy. Sentos are a place to relax. Bright green, the color of May or June, is appropriate. Winter colors are not suitable because they depress people. Water is a must in any form--sea, lake, or river--because blue gives brightness to the picture," he said.

Though there is variety in the composition of penki-e, most of the paintings make Mt. Fuji their center. Machida visited 3,000 public bathhouses around the country and found that more than 90 percent of penki-e chose Mt. Fuji as their subject because customers liked it.

Formerly, painters used brushes to paint the sky, but Nakajima started using a roller and found it shortened the time it took to do the paintings.

Machida stresses that penki-e is important in terms of art history.

"It adopted Western techniques, which were introduced in the late Edo period. It used light and shade to give contrast," he said.

The technique is called shadow method, which the versatile and multitalented Hiraga Gennai (1728-1779) introduced into Japan.

Shadow method gives the painting various shades of color and makes it three dimensional, in contrast to the traditional Japanese method in which the painter drew an outline and then filled it in with color.

"Before that [shadow method], pictures were flat. The technique was necessary because people viewed the painting through the steam of the bathtub. It needed to look rough up close, but clear from a distance," Machida explained.

According to Machida, the shadow method was adopted in other forms of pop art, such as traditional Japanese picture-card shows and brochures for circus sideshows.

"The circus sideshow brochures in particular used a beautiful, specialized technique. In the past there were a few good painters in Kokura, Fukuoka Prefecture, but they passed away and nobody can duplicate the technique today. Penki-e painters follow their technique and have preserved it up until now," Machida said.

===

Tough to become penki-e painter

Maruyama says becoming a penki-e painter is not easy.

"During the first three years, apprentices are allowed to paint only the sky blue. Many of them quit at this point. Apprentices watch the process of painting and learn from the master. Then, they are allowed to paint sides, clouds and, eventually, the whole picture. Usually, it takes six years to get to that point."

Maruyama began his career when he was 18. At that time, every penki-e painter belonged to an advertising agency. Maruyama loved art and joined Haikei Kokoku-sha, an advertising agency that his uncle, Kikuo Maruyama, managed. The uncle was a legendary penki-e painter, and the young Maruyama became his assistant.
[image] Painting of Mt. Fuji by Kiyoto Maruyama at Myojin-yu bathhouse in Ota Ward (Photo by Wataru Doi)

"I learned a lot from him," Maruyama reminisced. "For instance, bathhouse mural painters usually did not draw rivers, because rivers are narrow and winding, and don't express a good mood and brightness. But my uncle was very good at drawing rivers."

Maruyama started painting on his own when he was 24.

Sento paintings have to be replaced once a year, because they wear off quickly in the hot steam and humidity. But the original painting is not stripped away from the wall, rather a new one is painted over it.

"First, we produce drawings with chalk. Then we make rough coloring, blue for the sky, brown for rock, and green for grass. In the end, we draw the details and finalize it," Maruyama explained.

Maruyama said the days after the Tokyo Olympics were the best time to be a penki-e painter. He worked six days a week and sometimes worked at two bathhouses in the same day. The economy was good and sentos renewed their paintings every year. There were dozens of painters working in Tokyo at the time.

Now sentos cannot afford to renew the paintings annually, and Maruyama has only four or five jobs a month. He sometimes gets a job in a private house or more recently spas, but not so often.

"My son asked me how to become a penki-e painter, but I don't want to encourage him because he won't be able to make a living. Today is a difficult time to be a penki-e painter," Maruyama said sadly.

As a sento afficionado, Machida is trying to preserve the art.

"It was a question from an Australian friend of mine that took me to thousands of sentos. I had tried to introduce him to something traditionally Japanese, and took him to a sento. He asked me why it looked like a temple, but I couldn't answer. Then I realized many sentos were dilapidated and decided to do some research.

"I sometimes plan sento tours to look at penki-e. I arranged one in June."

Machida will take Setagaya Art Museum curator interns on a sento tour in July. He says he wants them to learn about architecture and penki-e paintings. Machida also has a private collection of penki-e.

According to Machida, on average 40 public bathhouses close every year.

"Many of them have penki-e. I assume there are fewer than 200 public bathhouses that display penki-e. Some of them do not get new ones for seven or eight years because they cannot afford it," he said.

Machida recommends Daikoku-yu in Kitasenju, Adachi Ward, and Myojin-yu in Yukigaya, Ota Ward, for the best paintings.

"But please remember that the condition of penki-e change rapidly and they may not be in the same, good condition in the future."

The painting at Myojin-yu is by Maruyama, painted last July. It shows Mt. Fuji viewed from Nishi-Izu, Shizuoka Prefecture. He painted this during the Bon festival and had longer than usual to complete it.

"He worked until 8 in the evening, and put a lot of effort into this painting," an employee at Myojin-yu said.

Hayakawa has also done a painting for Myojin-yu, of a violent wave breaking against a huge rock. In contrast to Hayakawa, Maruyama's work is gentle and has depth and expanse of space. As its customers age, Myojin-yu chooses Maruyama's work because it is more relaxing for the elderly.

On sunny days, Mt. Fuji was once a common view from every hilltop in Tokyo. Now, it is usually hidden in smog or behind soaring skyscrapers. Penki-e of Mt. Fuji are also disappearing from neighborhood sentos, but hopefully they will live on in people's memories.

http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/arts/20050721TDY13001.htm

 

 

__________________

with kind regards,

Matthias Arnold
(Art-Eastasia list)


http://www.chinaresource.org
http://www.fluktor.de


__________________________________________

An archive of this list as well as an subscribe/unsubscribe facility is
available at:
http://listserv.uni-heidelberg.de/archives/art-eastasia.html
For postings earlier than 2005-02-23 please go to:
http://www.fluktor.de/study/office/newsletter.htm