Shohekiga Exhibition
The Shohekiga Exhibition was held from 28 February to 14 March 2024 in Takehara Townscape Preservation District, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. The three artists were inspired by nature and culture of Takehara and created these shohekiga paintings that were displayed in the historical buildings located in the District. The artists connected the past with the present, and enlivened the spaces.
Dates: 28 February (Wed) - 14 March (Thu) 2024
Venues: Matsusaka House and Kamiyoshii House in Takehara Townscape Preservation District (Honcho 3, Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan 725-0022)
Matsusaka House (byōbu-é by Taiki Arita and Kazuko Matsumoto), Admission 300 Yen, Admission free for persons under 18 years old
Kamiyoshii House (fusuma-é by Yukari Ohira), Admission free
This exhibition was also open to the visitors from 21 February to 26 February 2024 as a pre-open event.
Takehara Waves
Taiki Arita
Watercolors, acrylics, foil, sake brewing water, Takehara salt, bamboo charcoal, resin, found items on the beaches in Takehara
2024
The theme of this work is the waves of the Seto Inland Sea, which Takehara City faces.
During the history of Takehara, salt production and shipping trades prospered thanks to the blessings of the sea. I explored the current state of Takehara's sea and its relationship with humans through a sense of sight and hearing.
The rough drawing of a folding screen painting was created at four locations along the Seto Inland Sea coast, from east to west of Takehara City (Tadanoumi Tokoura, Tadanoumi Nagahama, Takehara Nagatoba, and Yoshina Town). The time from sunrise to sunset was divided into four periods to capture changes of the ocean depending on the time of day. The symbolic materials of Takehara, such as salt produced in Takehara, sake brewing water, and bamboo charcoal, were used to create the painting. As paintbrushes, I used bamboo brushes, shells, and plastic pieces found on the beaches.
Below the folding screen, I set up objects made of shells, driftwood, sea glass, ocean plastic, etc. collected from each beach, hardened with resin, and molded from plastic containers that were my own garbage. In addition, the sound of bare feet walking along the shore of the beach from one end to the other, and the onomatopoeia of waves made by bamboo leaves, were played when the painting was displayed.
Takehara Guardian Dieties
Yukari Ohira
Pigments, foil, and Takehara salt on Japanese washi paper
2024
This work was inspired by the Shinmeisai Festival, which began in various parts of Takehara City around mid-January 2024, when the residency began. Shinmei Festival is a fire festival held around the Lunar New Year in various locations in Takehara City to pray for a rich harvest, family safety, and good health. ‘Shinmei-san’, a bamboo or pine tree frame decorated gorgeously with colored papers and straws, are made every year at gatherings, neighborhood association meetings, school events, and others. The decorations vary depending on the regions and years, and each of those is an original Shinmei. The festival is passed down from generation to generation, and Shinmei is often affectionately called ‘Shinmei-san’. Suddenly, Shinmei appeared in the middle of towns, towered over me, and disappeared in an instant. Shinmei-san felt like a guardian deity protecting the land.
This town, protected by Shinmei, has a culture and scenery that have been passed down from generation to generation. The nature of the seamount, the history of salt production flourishing here, Fumeikaku, a building that symbolizes the town of Takehara that can be seen from anywhere in the town, and the historic townscape, all of which make it seem like various time axes have been folded together like geological strata. I created this work with the hope that people would walk through the town feeling the mysterious flow of time.
The Blessing Road
Kazuko Matsumoto
Plaster and pigments on board folding screen, buon fresco technique
2024
Although it is a technique that is not very familiar in Japan, I created this painting using a fresco technique, which has been called ‘eternal paintings’ in the West since ancient times. Fresco is a painting method that has been used to depict prayers and wishes on the walls of churches and castles.
During this residency, I felt that Takehara's rivers, temples, and bamboo forests are connected to the scenery of Kyoto, where I live. Among them, the old frosted window glass in the Matsusaka House in Takehara Townscape Preservation District left an impression on me. When I created this work, I imagined that the people involved in salt production in the past might feel the bright light of the Seto Inland Sea that reached through the frosted glass. The parts of the glass pattern that look like bird feathers and waves reminded me of ‘blessings’. I also felt that the sea ‘road’ on which Kitamae ships once passed along the Kamo River and delivered salt to other regions via the Seto Inland Sea might be connected to the children’s place: so I named this work ‘Blessing Road’. It would be a great pleasure if the head of the Matsusakas at the time, who was deeply knowledgeable about calligraphy, painting and Confucianism, was able to see this unique frescoed folding screen.
Kazuko Matsumoto Official Website
Venues
Matsusaka House
(Important Cultural Property of Takehara City)
This is the residence of a wealthy merchant family who ran a wholesale firewood and coal business, which were used as fuel in facilities for boiling salt water. The building is characterized by its large undulating roof and carved diamond-shaped latticework. The main building was built during the Bunsei era (1818-1830) of the Edo period, and the house was rebuilt to its current appearance in 1879. The head of the house at the time, Shoji Matsusaka, was a cultural figure familiar with calligraphy, painting and Confucianism, and his tastes are reflected in the Chinese-style decorations of the building.
(Reference: ‘Takehara Guide‘ by Takehara City Board of Education)
Kamiyoshii House
(Especially open to the public during the exhibition period)
The Kamiyoshiis was established as a branch of the Yoshiis during the Edo period, and was engaged in salt farm management and the sake brewing industry. The current building was built in 1871, became the Shimoichi Post Office in 1874, and the first Takehara Post Office in 1885.
(Reference: Takehara City 2015 flyer)
Access to Takehara Townscape Preservation District
- 25 minutes by car from Hiroshima Airport
- 1 hour and 10 minutes ride by express bus ‘Kaguyahime-go 「かぐや姫号」’ from JR Hiroshima Station (get off at ‘Michinoeki Takehara 「道の駅竹原」’)
- 15-minute walk from JR Kure Line (呉線) ‘Takehara(竹原)’ station
- 20 minutes by car from Sanyo Expressway Kawachi IC
- 10-minute walk from Shinkobashi (新港橋) bus stop
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