- See Also
-
Links
- “Noise in the Landscape: Disputing the Visibility of Mundane Technological Objects”, Fukushima 2020
- “Dorodango, the Japanese Art of Making Mud Balls: Dorodango Author Bruce Gardner Shares the Story of How He Discovered the Japanese Art of Hikaru Dorodango”, Gardner 2019
- “Issho: Designed by Dutchscot, London”, Designed 2018
- “When Modern War Met an Antique Art”, Greer 2015
- “The Beauty of Human Decomposition in Japanese Watercolor”, Remains 2015
- “"Body of a Courtesan in 9 Stages": A 19th Century Study of Decomposition”, Remains 2014
- “How Japan Copied American Culture and Made It Better: If You’re Looking for Some of America’s Best Bourbon, Denim and Burgers, Go to Japan, Where Designers Are Re-Engineering Our Culture in Loving Detail”, Downey 2014
- “Ukiyo-E Search”, Resig 2013
- “Shiny Balls of Mud: William Gibson Looks at Japanese Pursuits of Perfection”, Gibson 2012
- “History of Combinatorial Generation (The Art of Computer Programming: Volume 4: Pre-Fascicle 4B: §7.2.1.7) § Pg22”, Knuth 2005 (page 22)
- “Behind the Sensationalism: Images of a Decaying Corpse in Japanese Buddhist Art”, Kanda 2005
- “Toshio Okada on the Otaku, Anime History, and Japanese Culture: Luncheon Talk”, Izawa 2003
- Tokyo: A Certain Style, Tsuzuki 1997
- “Tokyo Style (book Review)”, Thornburg 1994
- “Japan Sings Along With Beethoven”, Weisman 1990
- “The Artist Yoshitoshi, Whose Usual Specialty Was Serious Depictions of Historic Warriors, Has Envisioned the Eternal War between Cats and Mice As a Grand Epic of Battling Samurai Clans in 6 Small, Humorous Vignettes. The Mice Often Defeat the Cats by Such Means As Frightening Them With a Large Toy Dog, Trapping Them in Paper Snack Bags, or Stealing Food While the Cat on Watch Dozes Off.”
- “A Young Oregonian Believes That He Can Create a Uniquely American Form of the Japanese Bonsai Tree. And He Is Literally Betting the Farm on the Idea That If He Builds It, They Will Come.”
- “From the Collection: The Complete Commercial Artist (現代商業美術全集): A Rare Set of Japanese Trade Publications Serves a Visual Feast of Modern Graphics and Lettering, as well as a Study of Early-20th-Century Interactions between Japan and the West”
- “リバーシブルジャケット USXL—ツルピカワークスGALLERY [Indigo Kakishibu Jackets]”
- “Part Two: The Implosion of Cultural Markets”
- “Part Three: Mainstream Consumers vs. Marginal Subcultures”
- “Part Four: The Rise of Marginal Subcultures”
- “Part Five: The Difficulty of Exporting Marginal Subcultures”
- “Buzz Rickson’s”
- “Downsized Dwellings: Inside Tokyo’s Tiny Living Spaces”
- “Japan’s Love-Hate Relationship With Cats”
- “Fabricating Dreams: How an Unknown Publisher in Edo Japan Enticed the World”
- Sort By Magic
- Wikipedia
- Miscellaneous
- Bibliography
See Also
Links
“Noise in the Landscape: Disputing the Visibility of Mundane Technological Objects”, Fukushima 2020
Noise in the landscape: Disputing the visibility of mundane technological objects
“Dorodango, the Japanese Art of Making Mud Balls: Dorodango Author Bruce Gardner Shares the Story of How He Discovered the Japanese Art of Hikaru Dorodango”, Gardner 2019
“Issho: Designed by Dutchscot, London”, Designed 2018
“When Modern War Met an Antique Art”, Greer 2015
“The Beauty of Human Decomposition in Japanese Watercolor”, Remains 2015
“"Body of a Courtesan in 9 Stages": A 19th Century Study of Decomposition”, Remains 2014
"Body of a courtesan in 9 stages": A 19th century study of decomposition
“How Japan Copied American Culture and Made It Better: If You’re Looking for Some of America’s Best Bourbon, Denim and Burgers, Go to Japan, Where Designers Are Re-Engineering Our Culture in Loving Detail”, Downey 2014
“Ukiyo-E Search”, Resig 2013
“Shiny Balls of Mud: William Gibson Looks at Japanese Pursuits of Perfection”, Gibson 2012
Shiny balls of Mud: William Gibson Looks at Japanese Pursuits of Perfection
“History of Combinatorial Generation (The Art of Computer Programming: Volume 4: Pre-Fascicle 4B: §7.2.1.7) § Pg22”, Knuth 2005 (page 22)
“Behind the Sensationalism: Images of a Decaying Corpse in Japanese Buddhist Art”, Kanda 2005
Behind the Sensationalism: Images of a Decaying Corpse in Japanese Buddhist Art
“Toshio Okada on the Otaku, Anime History, and Japanese Culture: Luncheon Talk”, Izawa 2003
Toshio Okada on the Otaku, Anime History, and Japanese Culture: Luncheon Talk
Tokyo: A Certain Style, Tsuzuki 1997
“Tokyo Style (book Review)”, Thornburg 1994
“Japan Sings Along With Beethoven”, Weisman 1990
“The Artist Yoshitoshi, Whose Usual Specialty Was Serious Depictions of Historic Warriors, Has Envisioned the Eternal War between Cats and Mice As a Grand Epic of Battling Samurai Clans in 6 Small, Humorous Vignettes. The Mice Often Defeat the Cats by Such Means As Frightening Them With a Large Toy Dog, Trapping Them in Paper Snack Bags, or Stealing Food While the Cat on Watch Dozes Off.”
“A Young Oregonian Believes That He Can Create a Uniquely American Form of the Japanese Bonsai Tree. And He Is Literally Betting the Farm on the Idea That If He Builds It, They Will Come.”
“From the Collection: The Complete Commercial Artist (現代商業美術全集): A Rare Set of Japanese Trade Publications Serves a Visual Feast of Modern Graphics and Lettering, as well as a Study of Early-20th-Century Interactions between Japan and the West”
“リバーシブルジャケット USXL—ツルピカワークスGALLERY [Indigo Kakishibu Jackets]”
“Part Two: The Implosion of Cultural Markets”
“Part Three: Mainstream Consumers vs. Marginal Subcultures”
“Part Four: The Rise of Marginal Subcultures”
“Part Five: The Difficulty of Exporting Marginal Subcultures”
Part Five: The Difficulty of Exporting Marginal Subcultures:
“Buzz Rickson’s”
“Downsized Dwellings: Inside Tokyo’s Tiny Living Spaces”
“Japan’s Love-Hate Relationship With Cats”
“Fabricating Dreams: How an Unknown Publisher in Edo Japan Enticed the World”
Fabricating Dreams: How an Unknown Publisher in Edo Japan Enticed the World:
Sort By Magic
Annotations sorted by machine learning into inferred 'tags'. This provides an alternative way to browse: instead of by date order, one can browse in topic order. The 'sorted' list has been automatically clustered into multiple sections & auto-labeled for easier browsing.
Beginning with the newest annotation, it uses the embedding of each annotation to attempt to create a list of nearest-neighbor annotations, creating a progression of topics. For more details, see the link.
decomposition-art japanese-watercolor japanese-music ukiyo-e antique-art decomposition-art
tokyo-style
mudball-art
Wikipedia
Miscellaneous
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/doc/japan/art/2011-rassieur.pdf
:View PDF:
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https://grantland.com/features/sumo-wrestling-tokyo-japan-hakuho-yukio-mishima-novelist-seppuku/
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https://illustrationchronicles.com/Obsessed-with-Cats-The-Ukiyo-e-Prints-of-Utagawa-Kuniyoshi
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https://neojaponisme.com/2011/11/28/the-great-shift-in-japanese-pop-culture-part-one/
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https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/earthquakes-in-japanese-woodblock-prints/
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https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/selection-of-whisk-ferns/
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https://www.fccj.or.jp/index.php/number-1-shimbun-article/messy-succession
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https://www.spoon-tamago.com/japan-kei-tora-mini-truck-gardening-contest/