火鉢
As generators of heat in Japan's cold winter months, hibachi are now little more than curiosities. These antique charcoal braziers are usually ceramic and lined with metal. Hibachi were (and occasionally still are) used to boil a kettle and also as an outsize ashtray as smokers would light their bamboo kiseru pipes on the charcoal and then empty them into the ash by tapping the bowls on the metal rim.
Hibachi can still be bought in antique shops and flea markets such as those at Kitano Tenmangu Shrine and Toji Temple in Kyoto. Hibachi can make for garden ornaments either as fish ponds or plant vases. They are also attractive as interior decorations.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan Winter
hibachi
Kyoto
kiseru
Japanese Antiques
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Monday, January 9, 2012
Mount Fuji View
Japan's iconic mountain Fuji is visible in the distance.
Late 2011 was warm, so snow only crowns the peak of the mountain.
Normally, the entire mountain would be blanketed in white.
Climbing season when many climbers go to see sunrise on from the summit of Mt Fuji is long over, but still it was unseasonably warm.
The Pacific Ocean spreads out from Yaezu, in Shizuoka Prefecture, with the Izu Peninsula in the distance.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan
Tokyo
Kyoto
Mount Fuji
Japanese
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Kyoto Tourist Information Center
京都総合観光案内所,京なび
As befits its position as one of the most visited cities in Japan, Kyoto has one of Japan's largest and best-equipped Tourist Information Centers.
Located on the second floor of Kyoto Station Kyo Navi (京なび) is a spacious, high-tech plaza offering tourist information not just on Kyoto city and Kyoto Prefecture but on other Japanese cities as well.
The multi-lingual staff can offer travel advice in English, Chinese, Korean and some other languages and visitors are free to surf the computers in the center to find the specific information they require as well as choose from a wealth of travel brochures in a variety of languages.
The welcoming staff can offer help on booking hotel accommodation in Kyoto and tips on how to spend your time in Japan's ancient capital from festival frolics to Zen meditation.
Free copies of the monthly English magazine Kyoto Visitors' Guide are also available. The old Kyoto Tourist Information Center before the new Hiroshi Hara-designed Kyoto Station was opened was located next to the old Kintetsu Department Store, which is now Yodobashi.
Kyoto Tourist Information Center (Kyo Navi)
Tel: 075 343 0548
Hours: 8.30am-7pm daily
Further tourist information on Kyoto can be found at the Kyoto City Tourism Association Visitor Information building (Tel: 075 752 0227; 9am-5pm) opposite Heian Shrine in the Okazaki district.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Tags
Japan Stations
Tourist Information
Kyoto
Kyoto Station
Hiroshi Hara
As befits its position as one of the most visited cities in Japan, Kyoto has one of Japan's largest and best-equipped Tourist Information Centers.
Located on the second floor of Kyoto Station Kyo Navi (京なび) is a spacious, high-tech plaza offering tourist information not just on Kyoto city and Kyoto Prefecture but on other Japanese cities as well.
The multi-lingual staff can offer travel advice in English, Chinese, Korean and some other languages and visitors are free to surf the computers in the center to find the specific information they require as well as choose from a wealth of travel brochures in a variety of languages.
The welcoming staff can offer help on booking hotel accommodation in Kyoto and tips on how to spend your time in Japan's ancient capital from festival frolics to Zen meditation.
Free copies of the monthly English magazine Kyoto Visitors' Guide are also available. The old Kyoto Tourist Information Center before the new Hiroshi Hara-designed Kyoto Station was opened was located next to the old Kintetsu Department Store, which is now Yodobashi.
Kyoto Tourist Information Center (Kyo Navi)
Tel: 075 343 0548
Hours: 8.30am-7pm daily
Further tourist information on Kyoto can be found at the Kyoto City Tourism Association Visitor Information building (Tel: 075 752 0227; 9am-5pm) opposite Heian Shrine in the Okazaki district.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Tags
Japan Stations
Tourist Information
Kyoto
Kyoto Station
Hiroshi Hara
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Japan News This Week 8 January 2012
今週の日本
The Myth of Japan’s Failure
New York Times
Top sumo wrestler ushers in the New Year
BBC
Yakuza gangs face fight for survival as Japan cracks down on organised crime
Guardian
Nuke regulators get teeth via bills
Japan Times
La industria baja los humos al coche eléctrico
El Pais
The Flowers of War, Christian Bale et les travers du cinéma chinois
Rue 89
消息称日本三井住友拟收购中邮基金20%股权
Caijing
Science with a Skew: The Nuclear Power Industry After Chernobyl and Fukushima
Japan Focus
Japan striker Lee looks to join Southampton
Yahoo Sports
Last Week's News
Statistics
The number of new adults - 20 years old is the legal age of adulthood in Japan - was 1.22 million on New Year's Day. That is half the peak number, in 1970, when there were 2.46 million.
Source: Kyodo News
© JapanVisitor
Book a hotel in Japan with Bookings
Japanese Fiction
Happi Coats
Tags
Japan News Japan Statistics politics

New York Times
Top sumo wrestler ushers in the New Year
BBC
Yakuza gangs face fight for survival as Japan cracks down on organised crime
Guardian
Nuke regulators get teeth via bills
Japan Times
La industria baja los humos al coche eléctrico
El Pais
The Flowers of War, Christian Bale et les travers du cinéma chinois
Rue 89
消息称日本三井住友拟收购中邮基金20%股权
Caijing
Science with a Skew: The Nuclear Power Industry After Chernobyl and Fukushima
Japan Focus
Japan striker Lee looks to join Southampton
Yahoo Sports
Last Week's News
Statistics
The number of new adults - 20 years old is the legal age of adulthood in Japan - was 1.22 million on New Year's Day. That is half the peak number, in 1970, when there were 2.46 million.
Source: Kyodo News
© JapanVisitor
Book a hotel in Japan with Bookings
Japanese Fiction
Happi Coats
Tags
Japan News Japan Statistics politics
Friday, January 6, 2012
Biwa
琵琶
A biwa is a Japanese traditional instrument usually translated into English as a "short-necked lute" with four strings and played with a plectrum.
The biwa can be made from a variety of wood including rosewood, cherry, mulberry and zelkova.
The biwa is related to the Persian oud and probably came to Japan via China sometime before the Nara Period (710-794).
The biwa is usually held upwards from the lap while the players sits in seza (a kneeling position) and plucked with the large triangular-shaped plectrum.
The biwa became associated with court music (gagaku) in the Heian Period (794-1192). Many of the later players were blind and sang narrative songs to the accompaniment of the biwa, often about the battles of the Heike and Genji clans from the classic Tale of the Heike (平家物語).
The biwa remained a popular instrument in Japan until the end of the Edo Period and the coming of western instruments and music from the 1870s onward.
Later variations of the instrument originated in Kyushu and are called Chikuzen biwa and Satsuma biwa, the later style popular with the region's samurai to encourage their martial values listening to tales of past heroism and derring-do.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan
instrument
Japanese instrument
Biwa
Japanese music
A biwa is a Japanese traditional instrument usually translated into English as a "short-necked lute" with four strings and played with a plectrum.
The biwa can be made from a variety of wood including rosewood, cherry, mulberry and zelkova.
The biwa is related to the Persian oud and probably came to Japan via China sometime before the Nara Period (710-794).
The biwa is usually held upwards from the lap while the players sits in seza (a kneeling position) and plucked with the large triangular-shaped plectrum.
The biwa became associated with court music (gagaku) in the Heian Period (794-1192). Many of the later players were blind and sang narrative songs to the accompaniment of the biwa, often about the battles of the Heike and Genji clans from the classic Tale of the Heike (平家物語).
The biwa remained a popular instrument in Japan until the end of the Edo Period and the coming of western instruments and music from the 1870s onward.
Later variations of the instrument originated in Kyushu and are called Chikuzen biwa and Satsuma biwa, the later style popular with the region's samurai to encourage their martial values listening to tales of past heroism and derring-do.
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan
instrument
Japanese instrument
Biwa
Japanese music
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Aomori Contemporary Art Center
国際芸術センター青森(ACAC)
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center (ACAC) south of Aomori city is located on the grounds of Aomori Public College.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center was designed by self-trained architect Tadao Ando, whose prolific CV includes the Suntory Museum in Osaka, Omotesando Hills in Tokyo and the Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum on Naoshima Island in the Inland Sea.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center's circular exhibition hall is surrounded by a graceful water feature and set in a pleasant natural environment. There are also various studios and workshops for woodwork, printing, AV and photography on site, plus a residential hall and lounge.
ACAC showcases both contemporary Japanese and foreign art and includes an Artist in Residence Program (AIR) for both Japanese and foreign artists.
2011's summer exhibition "Re-Modernologio" included works by Tomii Motohiro, Niwa Yoshinori, Asakai Yoko and Romanian visual artist Pal Peter.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center can be reached in 40 minutes by a JR bus or Aomori city bus from Aomori Station.
Aomori Contemporary Art Center
152-6 Yamazaki Goshizawa
Aomori
Tel: 017 764 5200
Hours: 9am-7pm daily
Admission: Free
Aomori Contemporary Art Center map
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan Museum
Museum
Tadao Ando
Aomori
Japanese Museum
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center (ACAC) south of Aomori city is located on the grounds of Aomori Public College.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center was designed by self-trained architect Tadao Ando, whose prolific CV includes the Suntory Museum in Osaka, Omotesando Hills in Tokyo and the Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum on Naoshima Island in the Inland Sea.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center's circular exhibition hall is surrounded by a graceful water feature and set in a pleasant natural environment. There are also various studios and workshops for woodwork, printing, AV and photography on site, plus a residential hall and lounge.
ACAC showcases both contemporary Japanese and foreign art and includes an Artist in Residence Program (AIR) for both Japanese and foreign artists.
2011's summer exhibition "Re-Modernologio" included works by Tomii Motohiro, Niwa Yoshinori, Asakai Yoko and Romanian visual artist Pal Peter.
The Aomori Contemporary Art Center can be reached in 40 minutes by a JR bus or Aomori city bus from Aomori Station.
Aomori Contemporary Art Center
152-6 Yamazaki Goshizawa
Aomori
Tel: 017 764 5200
Hours: 9am-7pm daily
Admission: Free
Aomori Contemporary Art Center map
![]() |
Anamorphosis 3, the sculpture you walk on by Pal Peter |
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan Museum
Museum
Tadao Ando
Aomori
Japanese Museum
Location:
Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Japan
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum
青森県立郷土館
Prefectural museums in Japan are not always guaranteed to excite but the Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum in Aomori is an exception and well worth a visit for its broad sweep of Tohoku culture from the Jomon Period to the present day.
The Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is housed in a grand 1930s building that was previously a bank. The museum itself opened in 1973 and its several floors have exhibition rooms dedicated to a variety of subjects as well as occasional special exhibitions - such as the comic cut-outs of people sleeping off too much sake at cherry blossom time (see image below).
The Archeology Exhibit has some fantastic earthenware and clay figures from the Jomon Period sites around Sannai-Maruyama, just west of Aomori city and the Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is an important reference for anyone interested in this early period of Japanese history.
Aomori's nature is covered with dioramas and taxidermy exhibits and the nature Exhibit includes a model of the Aomori Elephant or Naumann Elephant, named after the fiery German geologist Heinrich Edmund Naumann (1854-1927), who spent a decade teaching and researching in Japan in the 1870s and 1880s.
The History Exhibit covers Aomori's history from the Nara Period onward including the history of the powerful Edo era Tsugaru and Nanbu clans, the Hakkoda-san Incident of 1902 and World War II. Original photographs, uniforms and newspapers help recreate 1940s Aomori, which was heavily bombed by the US air force.
The Folk Customs Exhibit displays agricultural implements, clothes and a number of oshira - pillar like household gods unique to the Tohoku area.
Other exhibits include an Apple Exhibit dedicated to Aomori's agricultural mainstay - apples, a Personal Experience Room, very much with school children in mind, where visitors can play with various exhibits, the Pioneers of Aomori Exhibit dedicated to such Aomori alumni as writer Osamu Dazai (1909-1948), Pulitzer Prize-winning war photographer Kyouichi Sawada (1936-1970) and singer Noriko Awaya (1907-1999) and the "Refined" Collection Exhibit, over 11,000 pieces donated by a local doctor.
The Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is one block south of Yatai Mura and about a 15 minute walk from Aomori Station.
Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum
Honmachi 2-8-14
Aomori
030-0802
Tel: 017 777 1585
Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum map
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan Museum
Museum
Tsugaru
Aomori
Japanese Museum
Prefectural museums in Japan are not always guaranteed to excite but the Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum in Aomori is an exception and well worth a visit for its broad sweep of Tohoku culture from the Jomon Period to the present day.
The Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is housed in a grand 1930s building that was previously a bank. The museum itself opened in 1973 and its several floors have exhibition rooms dedicated to a variety of subjects as well as occasional special exhibitions - such as the comic cut-outs of people sleeping off too much sake at cherry blossom time (see image below).
The Archeology Exhibit has some fantastic earthenware and clay figures from the Jomon Period sites around Sannai-Maruyama, just west of Aomori city and the Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is an important reference for anyone interested in this early period of Japanese history.
Aomori's nature is covered with dioramas and taxidermy exhibits and the nature Exhibit includes a model of the Aomori Elephant or Naumann Elephant, named after the fiery German geologist Heinrich Edmund Naumann (1854-1927), who spent a decade teaching and researching in Japan in the 1870s and 1880s.
The History Exhibit covers Aomori's history from the Nara Period onward including the history of the powerful Edo era Tsugaru and Nanbu clans, the Hakkoda-san Incident of 1902 and World War II. Original photographs, uniforms and newspapers help recreate 1940s Aomori, which was heavily bombed by the US air force.
The Folk Customs Exhibit displays agricultural implements, clothes and a number of oshira - pillar like household gods unique to the Tohoku area.
Other exhibits include an Apple Exhibit dedicated to Aomori's agricultural mainstay - apples, a Personal Experience Room, very much with school children in mind, where visitors can play with various exhibits, the Pioneers of Aomori Exhibit dedicated to such Aomori alumni as writer Osamu Dazai (1909-1948), Pulitzer Prize-winning war photographer Kyouichi Sawada (1936-1970) and singer Noriko Awaya (1907-1999) and the "Refined" Collection Exhibit, over 11,000 pieces donated by a local doctor.
The Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum is one block south of Yatai Mura and about a 15 minute walk from Aomori Station.
Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum
Honmachi 2-8-14
Aomori
030-0802
Tel: 017 777 1585
Aomori Prefectural Folk Museum map
© JapanVisitor.com
Like this blog? Sign up for the JapanVisitor newsletter
Books on Japan
Tags
Japan Museum
Museum
Tsugaru
Aomori
Japanese Museum
Location:
Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Japan
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)