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    japanese art

    Explore " japanese art" with insightful episodes like "Juuri - Japanese Mural Artist & Influencer | Be Frank Podcast Ep.57", "Season 4 Recap", "EP 22: Heart to Heart with Pavithra Menon", "EP 21: Heart to Heart with Priya Jethani" and "Sculpture and Self Love with Eri Maeda" from podcasts like ""Be Frank Podcast", "Krewe of Japan", "Heart to Heart", "Heart to Heart" and "PIVOTAL SLICE: on writing & composing"" and more!

    Episodes (21)

    Juuri - Japanese Mural Artist & Influencer | Be Frank Podcast Ep.57

    Juuri - Japanese Mural Artist & Influencer | Be Frank Podcast Ep.57

    Welcome to the Be Frank Podcast, the show dedicated to helping you learn, inspire, and spread happiness through health and fitness. Engaging in unique conversations with a diverse range of guests with the aim of enhancing our physical, mental, and spiritual well-being. So, to be frank, get ready for an honest journey towards a healthier, happier you. JUURI is a prominent mural artist renowned for her Japanese-themed art spaces that transform plain walls into vibrant works of art. Her artistry draws inspiration from traditional Japanese themes, including folklore, kabuki, and historical figures, and her work is showcased across the US and internationally in Japan, Israel, and Canada. Join us today as Juuri and I reminisce on our experiences in Japan and the many differences we see in culture and art throughout the US. Be sure to tune in for next week’s episode and hit that subscribe button!

    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    1:38 Journey to USA
    2:41 Art Career
    3:14 First Mural
    4:29 Parents and Childhood
    8:09 Visiting Home
    9:49 Work Culture in Japan
    12:16 Work-Life Balance
    13:49 Fav Activities in Japan
    18:04 Being Japanese in USA
    19:08 Reconnecting to Roots
    20:12 Language Barriers
    29:35 Culture in College
    30:28 Finding Artistic Style
    32:02 Using AI for Art
    33:17 Traditional vs Modern
    35:08 Art as Profession
    38:21 Passion for Japanese Art
    40:10 Stretching before Painting
    41:24 Fitness and Health
    42:53 Japanese TV Shows
    46:29 Missing Home
    50:52 Art in Japan
    53:58 Appreciating American Lifestyle
    58:50 Outro

    This video includes…
    ✅  How to work-life balance
    ✅  Oklahoma mural art
    ✅  Japanese culture vs. USA culture

    CHECK OUT JURRI’S SOCIALS…
    @juuriart83
    https://www.juuriart.com/
    https://www.enu.app/creator/store/?screen_name=JUURI 

    #japaneseartist #worklifebalance #culturaldifferences 

    Support the show

    Season 4 Recap

    Season 4 Recap

    This week on Krewe of Japan Podcast... the end is here! Well, Season 4 anyway. Jenn, Doug, & Maddy sit down to talk about the best of Season 4, new & exciting milestones, upcoming plans for Season 5, & some listener feedback. Whether you've been along from the ride since the beginning of the season or just recently hopped on, you'll definitely enjoy catching some of the highlights and behind-the-scenes stories from this amazing season! Thank you so much for listening in to the Krewe of Japan Podcast for Season 4!!! 

    ------ About the Krewe ------

    The Krewe of Japan Podcast is a weekly episodic podcast sponsored by the Japan Society of New Orleans. Check them out every Friday afternoon around noon CST on Apple, Google, Spotify, Amazon, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.  Want to share your experiences with the Krewe? Or perhaps you have ideas for episodes, feedback, comments, or questions? Let the Krewe know by e-mail at kreweofjapanpodcast@gmail.com or on social media (Twitter: @kreweofjapan, Instagram: @kreweofjapanpodcast, Facebook: Krewe of Japan Podcast Page, TikTok: @kreweofjapanpodcast, LinkedIn: Krewe of Japan LinkedIn Page & the Krewe of Japan Youtube Channel). Until next time, enjoy!

    ------ Support the Krewe! Offer Links for Affiliates ------

    Use the referral links below & our promo code from the episode (timestamps [hh:mm:ss] where you can find the code)!

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    ------ Other Links/References in the Episode ------

    Walden's Language Journey YouTube

    Watch the Sumo World Championships 2023 in Tachikawa Streaming LIVE on YouTube!

    EP 22: Heart to Heart with Pavithra Menon

    EP 22: Heart to Heart with Pavithra Menon

    As the final episode for this season's Heart to Heart podcast, we are delighted to have a heart to heart chat with Pavithra Menon. Pavithra is a presenter on City FM, a TV presenter on Star Plus Middle East and she is also a fabulous singer! An episode filled lots of joy, happiness, giggles and ofcourse creative possibilities!

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pavithramenon/

    Hosted by Leena Kewlani from www.artezaar.com

    Podcast produced by MangoJam Studios, Dubai. http://www.mangojam.ae/

    Follow us on:
    Website: www.artezaar.com
    Instagram: @artezaar https://www.instagram.com/artezaar/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/artezaar
    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/artezaar

    EP 21: Heart to Heart with Priya Jethani

    EP 21: Heart to Heart with Priya Jethani

    A heart to heart chat with Priya Jethani. Priya is an Actor, an Anchor, a Digital Creator and also A presenter on Zee TV! Priya has also hosted the ICCT20 Cricket World Cup & IPL 2022! She chats candidly about how she jumped from a corporate job to hosting and becoming an anchor.

    Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/priyajethani/

    Hosted by Leena Kewlani from www.artezaar.com

    Podcast produced by MangoJam Studios, Dubai. http://www.mangojam.ae/



    Follow us on:
    Website: www.artezaar.com
    Instagram: @artezaar https://www.instagram.com/artezaar/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/artezaar
    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/artezaar

    Sculpture and Self Love with Eri Maeda

    Sculpture and Self Love with Eri Maeda

    Jade talks to Eri Maeda, a Japanese 'Self-Love Artist' based in Paris. Eri creates sculpture, ceramics and homeware based on inclusive representations of human bodies and sexuality. Jade and Eri discuss the message of her work - "Everyone is different and everyone is beautiful" and talk about how she started to create art to fight against the beauty standards and social pressure with which she grew up.

    Find out more about Eri and purchase her products:

    Website
    Instagram
    TikTok

    Music and production by David Mackenzie

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    Follow your hosts, Jade Green and David Mackenzie

    Ep 8: Heart to Heart with Nour Al Hassan

    Ep 8: Heart to Heart with Nour Al Hassan

    A heart to heart chat with Nour Al Hassan about the Japanese art of Kinsugi.

    Nour, the founder of InnerStrength Coaching, is a passionate strength-based coach, PCC, specializing in coaching executive leaders and clients on increasing their personal and professional performance and empowering them with practical performance tools that enable them to understand their own patterns and behaviors and become their own self-managers towards achieving outcomes and unleashing their full potential. Nour’s passion for creative arts inspired her to combine her profession with arts as means to facilitate and inspire sustainable positive change.
    Get to know more: https://www.instagram.com/kintsugi_dubai/

    Hosted by Leena Kewlani from www.artezaar.com

    Podcast produced by MangoJam Studios, Dubai. http://www.mangojam.ae/

    Follow us on:
    Website: www.artezaar.com
    Instagram: @artezaar https://www.instagram.com/artezaar/
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/artezaar
    Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/artezaar

    Uemura Shōen

    Uemura Shōen

    In this episode we discuss the career of Meiji era Japanese artist Uemura Shōen (1875 –1949) born in Kyoto she pursued artistic training from the age of 12, partly due to the support of her mother. From there she would have a highly successful career and became known for her paintings of beautiful women and her illustrations of scenes from Noh Plays. However, Uemura lived an unconventional life and did not adhere to the strict gender roles of Japanese society, even causing a stir when she had two children out of wedlock, the father of which was suspected to be her teacher. This is an interesting story about how one incredibly driven and creative woman was able to overcome social stigma to achieve immense respect in her chosen field, which equalled that of her male counterparts. 
    I hope you enjoy this episode and apologise for my ropey voice, which is still not quite back to normal after recent thyroid surgery.

    Images
    Instagram @themuseumoffemininty 

    Sources
    https://artsandculture.google.com/story/the-inspiring-story-of-uemura-sh%C5%8Den/mwXxZujHMzKwGw?hl=en
    https://www.domestika.org/en/blog/8672-uemura-shoen-the-inspiring-story-of-japan-s-first-female-professional-painter
    Japanese art by Joan Stanley-Baker
    https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2019/05/28/arts/openings-outside-tokyo/bijin-ga-world-fine-feminine-beauty/
    https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/829412

    The Spirit of Shizen: The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons, with Robert Weis

    The Spirit of Shizen: The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons, with Robert Weis

    Podcast host Amy Chavez talks to Robert Weis, curator of the Luxembourg Natural History Museum's upcoming exhibit, “Spirit of Shizen – The Nature of Japan through 72 Seasons,” running from July 1 to August 31, 2022. 

    An accompanying catalogue, in the form of an anthology, will be published featuring essays by prominent writers on Japan's seasons.

    Amy starts off the show asking  Weis, a paleontologist, how he ended up curating the exhibition “Spirit of Shizen” Weis explains his childhood fascination with fossils, his work at the museum, and his love for Japan. He says Mark Horvane, a Kyoto-based garden designer, was an adviser to the exhibition.

    Amy expounds upon the meaning of "72-microseasons" as outlined in Mark Horvane's essay of the same title included in the museum catalogue/anthology.

    While some Japanese arts and activities have obvious links to nature, such as  Ikebana flower arrangement, bonsai, gardens or cherry-blossom viewing, Weis notes that other links may not be so obvious, such as those in haiku poetry, Japanese sweets, or even the passing of time. These tie-ins to the seasons will brought into focus via workshops, demonstrations, and a publication that focuses on Japanese culture and nature.

    Workshops include a Miksang contemporary photography workshop with John Einarsen, a calligraphy session by Japanese artist Rie Takeda, an exploration into the tea ceremony by Bruce Hamana, and a workshop on the seasons as related to Zen, presented by French Buddhist nun and author Kankyo Tannier. A movie, produced by Felicity Tillack especially for the exhibition, will delve into the seasons of Kyoto, and a gastronomic event coordinated with a local Japanese restaurant will look at the role of the seasons in Japanese cuisine. Visitors can enjoy a mock tea-house with tatami mats or enjoy tea in the museum's garden.

    "Spirit of Shizen" (shizen means "nature" in Japanese), also offers an accompanying catalog/anthology of essays penned by prominent writers on Japan. The publication will be available in the Museum Store and as an online purchase.

    Following is the contents of the publication, which is divided into four parts, with Pico Iyer penning an introductory essay for each section/season.

    "Spirit of Shizen" Anthology

    Table of Contents

    AUTUMN – Radiant Wistfulness, by Pico Iyer

    • Momiji-gari - Tracking Down the Colored Leaves, by Rebecca Otowa
    • A Late Autumn Walk in Nara, by Robert Weis
    • Naturally Attuned to the Seasons, by Edward Levinson
    • The Japanese 72 Micro-seasons, by Mark Hovane

    WINTER – Blue Invigoration, by Pico Iyer

    • First Winter in Ohara, by Patrick Colgan
    • Ontakesan - Seasonal Elements of a Sacred Japanese Mountain, by Jann Williams
    • Kigo: Seasonal Words and Seasonality in Haiku, by Kawaharada Mayumi
    • Nature is Culture, by Sébastien Raizer

    SPRING – Pink-and-white Flutter, by Pico Iyer

    • Petals on a Wet Black Bough, by Amanda Huggins
    • Sakura, by Naoko Abe
    • Seasons of the Seto Inland Sea, by Amy Chavez
    • The Beauty of Japanese Gardens, by Yuri Ugayaya

    SUMMER – Festivals in the Sultry Nights, by Pico Iyer

    • The Message in the Garden, by Marc Peter Keane
    • Awareness of the Seasons in the Tea Ceremony (Chanoyu), by Bruce Hamana
    • Mosses for the Ages, by Karen Lee Tawarayama
    • Notes on Ikebana, by Mark Hovane
    • Tsuyu – Between the Sheets, by Edward J. Taylor

    Weis advises that there are no coronavirus restrictions right now for visiting Luxembourg or the museum.

    At the end of the show, Amy asks Weis to name his favorite books on Japan:

    The Lady and the Monk: Four Seasons in Kyoto, by Pico Iyer

    South of the Border, West of the Sun, by Haruki Murakami

    The Japanese Chronicles, by Nicolas Bouvier

    About Robert Weis

    Robert Weis is the author of over thirty scientific publications about Jurassic fossils. He has nourished a deep interest in Eastern Asian cultures, and especially Japan, since his childhood. He practices Zen meditation and the art of Bonsai and is especially interested in Japanese garden culture. Accounts on his Japanese travels can be found on his blog theroutetokyoto.com. He is the curator of the exhibition “Spirit of Shizen – The Nature of Japan through 72 seasons,” to be held at the Luxembourg Natural History Museum during summer 2022. He is also a travel writer for Luxembourg’s travel magazine "DIARIES OF." His book Rocklines: A Geopoetic Journey across the Minett Unesco Biosphere, co-authored with Italian geopoet Davide S. Sapienza, will be on release in July 2022.

    The Books on Asia Podcast is sponsored by Stone Bridge Press. Check out their books on Japan at www.stonebridge.com.

    Your podcast host is Amy Chavez, author of Amy’s Guide to Best Behavior in Japan, and The Widow, the Priest and the Octopus Hunter: Discovering a Lost Way of Life on a Secluded Japanese Island.

    Don’t miss out on upcoming episodes with Asia's best authors and translators by subscribing to the Books on Asia podcast.

    John Stevens, a lifetime of publishing

    John Stevens, a lifetime of publishing

    This week author and translator John Stevens joins us from Hawaii. Stevens has penned many books over his long career, mainly dealing with Japanese martial arts, poetry, and biography.

    A book should be enlightening for the writer, and for the people reading it.” —John Stevens

    Amy starts off the show mentioning the books of Stevens that she has read: The Marathon Monks of Mt. Hiei; The Essence of Aikido: Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba; Dew Drops on a Lotus Leaf: Zen Poems of Ryokan; and Mountain Tasting: Haiku and Journals of Santoka Taneda. Yet that is only a fraction of the works that Stevens has produced over his life.

    He explains his translation style and how he manages to capture the essence of haiku in his translations. He names Arthur Waley as an exemplar of the craft.

    “A good translation has to be good literature, fine literature."

    Stevens talks about his first book, One Robe, One Bowl (Tuttle Publishing).

    His second book was Mountain Tasting: Haiku and Journals of Santoka Taneda (White Pine Press). Of his books on aikido, he says the most popular has been The Art of Peace: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (Shambhala), which has over 2,300 ratings on Amazon and has been further translated into over 20 languages.

    Amy reads a poem from Dew Drops on a Lotus Leaf (Shambhala), which prompts Stevens to talk about his passion for poetry and translation:

    "If you don’t feel the passion and the poignancy, then it’s not a translation.”

    When talking about the writing process:

    "Writing a book should be enlightening, for both you writing it and for the people reading it," says Stevens. "My writing was an extension of my [Aikido] practice.”

    Other popular books by Stevens are The Essence of Aikido: Spiritual Teachings of Morihei Ueshiba (Kodansha International), and The Marathon Monks of Mt. Hiei (Echo Point Books & Media).

    Stevens tells a story of going to Sendai to meet a master Aikido teacher, Shirata-sensei, in Yamagata. "I’d arrive at the dojo, no one was there. He was there. He was never not there. And he was sitting, meditating. I learned something: that if you’re a teacher, you’ve got to be there all the time.”

    The author and translator also talks about his book Lust for Enlightenment (Shambhala) and why it was controversial, as well as Tantra of Tachikawa Ryu: Secret Sex Teachings of the Buddha (Stone Bridge Press).

    More recently, Stevens has been working with art exhibitions and writing exhibition catalogues. He is currently working on a display in Spain centered around the Kyoto poet and Buddhist nun Rengetsu at the Gothic Monastery of Pedralbes in Barcelona until May 27, 2022. If you need a primer before you go, get a copy of Stevens's Rengetsu: Life & Poetry of Lotus Moon (Echo Point Books & Media). The Barcelona exhibit, which has been open to the public since November 2021 and is titled "La lluna de Lotus" in Spanish, includes 36 ceramic pieces and 30 paintings and calligraphy by the female artist. 

    Lastly, Amy asks Stevens what his favorite books on Japan are:

    Poetry and Zen: Letters and Uncollected writings of R.H. Blyth by R.H. Blyth and Norman Waddell
    Zen and Japanese Culture by Daisetzu T. Suzuki
    The Unknown Craftsman: A Japanese Insight into Beauty by Soetsu Yanagi and Bernard Leach

    Don't miss John Stevens next book The Art of Budoh: Painting and Calligraphy by Japanese Masters (Shambhala, Dec 2022).

    More Books by John Stevens:

    Seeing Zen (Floating World Editions)
    Sacred Calligraphy of the East (Echo Point Books & Media)
    Extraordinary Zen Masters; A Maverick, A Master of Masters, and a Wondering Poet (Echo Point Books & Media)
    Budo: Teachings of the Founder of Aikido (Kodansha USA)
    The Secret Teachings of Aikido (Kodansha USA)
    The Heart of Aikido; The Philosophy of Takemusu Aiki (Kodansha International)
    Wild Ways: Ikkyu (White Pine Press)

    Philosophy of Aikido (Echo Point Books & Media)

    And many, many more!

    Abby Denson talks Japan via Comics

    Abby Denson talks Japan via Comics

    Abby Denson is the award-winning author of Cool Japan Guide: Fun in the Land of Manga, Lucky Cats and Ramen, Cool Tokyo Guide: Adventures in the City of Kawaii Fashion, Train Sushi and Godzilla and the Kitty Sweet Tooth series (with Utomaru). 

    Her most recent book, which we’re going to talk about today, is Uniquely Japan: A Comic Book Artist Shares Her Personal Faves - Discover What Makes Japan The Coolest Place on Earth!

    Abby has scripted comics for Amazing Spider-Man Family, Powerpuff Girls comics, Simpsons comics, Sabrina The Teenage Witch, Josie and the Pussycats, Disney Adventures, and many others.

    We start  off the show with Abby helping define for our listeners the difference between Japanese manga, graphic novels, superhero comics, and American style comics.

    Amy talks about how she used to read Japanese manga to study Japanese language, and tells what she thinks distinguishes manga from other types of comics including Abby’s. She gives some of the features of Abby's books that make them stand out from others.

    Abby talks about the role of color in her comic-drawing and names Keith Haring as one of her inspirations. She especially loves drawing desserts and all kinds of foods!

    Abby talks about some of the challenges of putting together her two Japan guides and her latest, Uniquely Japan, which was much more of a multimedia effort.

    Amy mentions she especially likes the tips in the book, such as suggesting people order the teishoku daily special (set menu) when people go to a restaurant to get the chance to sample as many amazing Japanese foods as possible.

    Abby says the book aims to provide a fun way to learn about different Japanese topics. Parfaits for example! “You can see gorgeous parfait displays everywhere,” she says, referring to the plastic food models in the display window of many restaurants and cafes in Japan. "I find them so dazzling,” Abby says. This launches into a discussion of Japan being a very visual culture.

    Abby says Uniquely Japan is different from her previous books because Cool Japan and Cool Tokyo were conceived as guidebooks. They have travel tips and information helpful for tourists planning their first trip to Japan. Uniquely Japan can be read just to learn about Japanese culture.

    Abby elaborates on the reception of her books in Japan and some surprising feedback she received from Japanese readers of the book.

    She also elaborates on the “Street Sites” chapter in her book that highlights decorative manhole covers, police boxes, and the specific design motifs of each town you can discover. "As a visual artist, it really makes you feel validated to see all this amazing graphic design everywhere. I feel like it's used so much more aesthetically, and in a more visually pleasurable manner in Japan than other in other places. The little accents and the motifs come together for a visually pleasurable experience.”

    Amy mentions Abby’s use of stamps in Uniquely Japan, referring to the rubber stamps at every railway station that you can press into your diary or journal. The stamp features a graphic of the place you visited along with that town’s motif. This leads to a discussion of “stamp rallies” (and where to find them) and also collecting the beautifully brushed goshuin stamps from temples.

    When Amy asks Abby for an interesting backstory to one of her books, Abby tells the story of writing Kitty Sweet Tooth, a collaboration that started with a random meeting of an artist in a bar. The first book, Kitty Sweet Tooth, was published last year and the next book, Kitty Sweet Tooth Makes a Movie, will be published this fall.

    Lastly, Abby reveals her 3 favorite books on Japan and why:

    1. Manga! Manga!: The World of Japanese Comics by Frederik L. Schodt

    2. Tokyo on Foot: Travels in the City's Most Colorful Neighborhoods by Florent Chavouet

    3 Himawari House, a fictional graphic novel by Harmony Becker

    Amy ends the podcast by suggesting what Abby’s next book should be to which Abby responds that her husband keeps telling her the same thing. So maybe, just maybe …

    You can find Abby Denson on social media and at the following places:
    Instagram @abbydenson
    Twitter @abbydenson
    website: abbydenson.com

    Exploring Artistry and Identity: Espi Frazier's Journey in Wood Graphics and Beyond

    Exploring Artistry and Identity: Espi Frazier's Journey in Wood Graphics and Beyond

    Begin your experience with 'The Truth in This Art' podcast, presented by the one and only Rob Lee. Today we have a special guest: Espi Frazier, a renowned Visual Artist, Art Instructor, and Fiber Artist, who calls Baltimore, Maryland her creative home. With roots in Chicago, Illinois, and a Baltimore resident since 1993, Frazier's artistic journey flourished at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she pursued fashion design before discovering her true calling in drawing. Her artistic prowess was further refined under the guidance of Professor Grace Hartigan at the Maryland Institute College of Art, where she earned her MFA. Notably, Frazier has been a dedicated instructor at Friends School of Baltimore since 1993. Fueled by her foster mother's early influence, Frazier's distinctive wood graphics technique intertwines fashion illustration and figure drawing, resulting in captivating creations. Her art is an eloquent homage to African, Caribbean, Egyptian, and Japanese artistic traditions, passionately weaving a tapestry that honors the dignity and beauty of black individuals.


    In this session, we take a closer look at:

    • The formative role Frazier's foster mother played in nurturing her artistic spirit and encouraging her early love for art, shaping the trajectory of her creative journey.
    • The pivotal moment when Frazier's path shifted from fashion design to the world of drawing, exploring the experiences and influences that led her to embrace her true passion.
    • Tune in to discover the captivating technique of wood graphics, a fusion of fashion illustration and figure drawing, as we explore the evolution of Frazier's innovative approach and the artistic depths it plumbs.
    • Join us for an inspiring discussion as we explore the rich tapestry of influences that infuse Frazier's art, ranging from African, Caribbean, and Egyptian, to Japanese traditions, and how she weaves these diverse elements into her compelling creations.
    • Embark on a journey through Frazier's artistry in this episode, where we unravel the threads of her deep-seated love for drawing and her profound commitment to portraying the beauty and dignity of the black community, offering an intimate look into her creative expression and its powerful message.


    Get ready to be inspired! as Espi shares her journey and creative process in this episode. Growing up in Chicago, Frazier was inspired by her foster mother, who was a talented artist herself. She attended the School of the Art Institute and initially pursued fashion design before realizing her true passion was drawing. Frazier developed her own unique technique called wood graphics, which combines elements of fashion illustration and figure drawing. She draws inspiration from various art forms, including African, Caribbean, Egyptian, and Japanese art. Frazier's work is a reflection of her love for drawing and her desire to express the beauty and dignity of black people.


    Mentioned in this episode
    Espi's website


    🎧🌟 Don't forget to rate and review this episode to support the best in podcasting! 🌟🎧


    This program is supported (in part) by a grant from the Robert W. Deutsch Foundation.

    If you have a story about art, culture, or community, share it with us at rob@thetruthinthisart.com for a chance to be featured on 'The Truth In This Art' podcast.

    Follow The Truth In This Art on Twitter, Threads, IG, and Facebook @truthinthisart

    Original music by Daniel Alexis Music with additional music from Chipzard.

    Episode illustration by Alley Kid Art.

    About "The Truth In This Art"


    "The Truth In This Art," hosted by Rob Lee, is a podcast that explores the essence of creativity and its community impact, amplifying artists' voices and their profound stories.

    Connect with me:

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    How to Watch Anime: Subbed vs. Dubbed ft. Dan Woren

    How to Watch Anime: Subbed vs. Dubbed ft. Dan Woren

    In this Week's episode, the Krewe take on the age old subbed vs dubbed anime debate. In addition to sharing their perspectives on the debate, they sit down with voice acting veteran, Dan Woren (Bleach, Naruto, Fate/Zero and so much more), who shares his journey into voice acting, the process of voice acting in anime and video games, and his take on the subbed versus dubbed debate. Along the way, Dan and the Krewe talk breaking toes, anime conventions, and even Star Trek?!? This is an episode you won't want to miss!

    For more on Dan Woren:

    Be sure to catch him at the Pasadena Comic Con on January 23, 2021! 

    and check out his extensive body of work:

    https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0199965/

     

    For more on the Japan Society  of New Orleans:

    https://japansocietyofneworleans.wildapricot.org/

     

    Art of Scars with Kathy Hagler

    Art of Scars with Kathy Hagler

    Kathy Hagler, PhD referred to as a “corporate healer,” works with organizations to transform their operating environments and leadership. She says that organizations are similar to human beings - both have wounds.

    Like people, organizations break and can heal. She uses the Japanese art of Kintsugi as a metaphor for healing scars with both people and organizations. Kintsugi means "gold joinery.” It’s an ancient Japanese art that invites to repair a broken object by emphasizing its scars with gold powder. She’s the author of Art of Scars available here: Art Of Scars 

    Learn more about Kathy at KathyHagler.com

    Gilded Wounds, Co-Mingled Tears: The Gratuity of God in Art and Faith / Makoto Fujimura & Miroslav Volf

    Gilded Wounds, Co-Mingled Tears: The Gratuity of God in Art and Faith / Makoto Fujimura & Miroslav Volf

    "Jesus is the great kintsugi master." 

    "Something that's broken is already more valuable than when it's whole." 

    "The imagination creates, through the fractures, a river of gold, a mountain of gold." 

    Makoto Fujimura joins Miroslav Volf to discuss Art & Faith: A Theology of Making. Fujimura is a painter who practices the Japanese art of nihonga, or slow art. His abstract expressionist pieces are composed of fine minerals he grinds himself and paints onto several dozens of layers, which take time and close attention both to make and to appreciate.

    Mako and Miroslav discuss the theology and spirituality that inspires Mako's work, the creative act of God mirrored in the practice of art, the unique ways of seeing and being that artists offer the world, which is, in Mako's words "dangerously close to life and death." They reflect on the meaning of Christ's humanity and his wounds, the gratuity of God in both creation from nothing and the artistic response in the celebration of everything.

    Show Notes

    • Makoto Fujimura's Art & Faith: A Theology of Making
    • Illuminated Bible by Makoto Fujimura
    • Mary, Martha, & Lazarus
    • Genesis Creation Narrative
    • Art follows in the footsteps of the creator
    • The reasons for God's creation
    • Why would an all-sufficient God create anything?
    • God as "a grand artist with no ego and no need to create."
    • Communicating about art and theology outside the boundaries of the institutional church
    • Reconciliation between art and faith
    • God's gratuitous creation doesn't need a utilitarian purpose
    • Creating vs making
    • In artistic creation, something new does seem to emerge
    • "God is the only artist"
    • The scandal of God's incarnation: In becoming incarnate, God's utter independence is flipped to utter dependence.
    • Psalmist's cry to God
    • How art breaks the ordinary
    • The artist's way of seeing and being
    • Seeing as survival
    • Seeing with the eyes of your heart
    • "Artists stay dangerously close to death and life"
    • Getting beyond the rational way of seeing
    • Letting the senses become part of our prayer
    • William James on conversion: everything becomes new for the converted
    • Seeing with a new frame of beauty
    • Faith and the authenticity of seeing with the eyes of an artist
    • Emily Dickenson on the "tender pioneer" of Jesus
    • Hartmut Rosa on resonance—in modernity, the world becomes dead for us, and fails to speak with us, but we need a sense of resonance
    • Kandinsky and Rothko—artists' intuitive sense of resonance that has escaped the church in the wake of mid-century destruction
    • Mary's wedding nard oil and the gratuitous cost of art
    • The non-utilitarian nature of art
    • Using precious materials in art
    • Tear jars
    • Miroslav's mother regularly weeping and crying: "I wonder why God gave us tears? Only humans are the animals who cry."
    • Helmut Plessner's Laughing and Crying: Weeping as relinquishing self-possession and merging the self with the flesh (as opposed to reason/ratio or technique/techne)
    • N.T. Wright—the greatest miracle is that Jesus chose to stay human.
    • Jesus's remaining wounds
    • Co-mingling our tears with Christ's tears
    • Kintsugi and Japanese Slow Art
    • Accentuating the fracture
    • "The imagination creates, through the fractures, a river of gold, a mountain of gold."
    • This is the best example of new creation.
    • "What would happen to our scars? That's a question with no answer."
    • Through his wounds, our wounds would look different
    • Jesus is the great kintsugi master, leading a path of gold along the fractures of life
    • The permanence of scars
    • Is it possible to be in the good and be truly joyous?
    • "God is not the source of beauty. God is beauty."
    • Fundamental "new newness": So new that it evades understanding
    • Goodness, truth, and beauty
    • God loved the world so much, it wasn't enough to merely admire it—he had to join it.
    • What is a life worthy of our humanity?
    • Fujimura's practice of art as an attempt to answer that question.
    • "Our lives as the artwork of God, especially as a collaborative community in the Body of Christ."

    About Makoto Fujimura

    Makoto Fujimura is a leading contemporary artist whose process driven, refractive “slow art” has been described by David Brooks of New York Times as “a small rebellion against the quickening of time”. Robert Kushner, in the mid 90’s, written on Fujimura’s art in Art in America this way: “The idea of forging a new kind of art, about hope, healing, redemption, refuge, while maintaining visual sophistication and intellectual integrity is a growing movement, one which finds Makoto Fujimura’s work at the vanguard.”

    Fujimura’s art has been featured widely in galleries and museums around the world, and is collected by notable collections including The Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, The Huntington Library as well as Tikotin Museum in Israel. His art is represented by Artrue International in Asia and has been exhibited at various venues including Dillon Gallery, Waterfall Mansion, Morpeth Contemporary,  Sato Museum in Tokyo, Tokyo University of Fine Arts Museum, Bentley Gallery in Phoenix, Gallery Exit and Oxford House at Taikoo Place in Hong Kong, Vienna’s Belvedere Museum, Shusaku Endo Museum in Nagasaki and Jundt Museum at Gonzaga University. He is one of the first artists to paint live on stage at New York City’s legendary Carnegie Hall as part of an ongoing collaboration with composer and percussionist, Susie Ibarra.  Their collaborative album "Walking on Water" is released by Innova Records. 

    As well as being a leading contemporary painter, Fujimura is also an arts advocate, writer, and speaker who is recognized worldwide as a cultural influencer. A Presidential appointee to the National Council on the Arts from 2003-2009, Fujimura served as an international advocate for the arts, speaking with decision makers and advising governmental policies on the arts. His book “Refractions” (NavPress) and “Culture Care” (IVPress) reflects many of his thesis on arts advocacy written during that time. His books have won numerous awards including the Aldersgate Prize for “Silence and Beauty” (IVPress). In 2014, the American Academy of Religion named Fujimura as its 2014 “Religion and the Arts” award recipient. This award is presented annually to professional artists who have made significant contributions to the relationship of art and religion, both for the academy and a broader public. Previous recipients of the award include Meredith Monk, Holland Cotter, Gary Snyder, Betye & Alison Saar and Bill Viola. Fujimura's highly anticipated book "Art+Faith: A Theology of Making" (Yale Press, with foreword by N.T. Wright, 2021) has been described by poet Christian Wiman as "a real tonic for our atomized time".

    Fujimura founded the International Arts Movement in 1992, now IAMCultureCare, which over sees Fujimura Institute. In 2011 the Fujimura Institute was established and launched the Four Qu4rtets, a collaboration between Fujimura, painter Bruce Herman, Duke theologian/pianist Jeremy Begbie, and Yale composer Christopher Theofanidis, based on T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets. The exhibition has travelled to Baylor, Duke, and Yale Universities, Cambridge University, Hiroshima City University and other institutions around the globe.

    Bucknell University honored him with the Outstanding Alumni Award in 2012.

    Fujimura is a recipient of four Doctor of Arts Honorary Degrees; from Belhaven University in 2011, Biola University in 2012, Cairn University in 2014 and Roanoke College, in February 2015. His Commencement addresses has received notable attention, being selected by NPR as one of the “Best Commencement Addresses Ever”. His recent 2019 Commencement Address at Judson University, was called “Kintsugi Generation”, laying out his cultural vision for the next generation.

    Production Notes

    • This podcast featured artist Makoto Fujimura and theologian Miroslav Volf
    • Edited and Produced by Evan Rosa
    • Hosted by Evan Rosa
    • Production Assistance by Martin Chan & Nathan Jowers
    • A Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/about
    • Support For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give

    Poetic Presents and Picture Puzzles

    Poetic Presents and Picture Puzzles

    In this episode, Clare Pollard, the Curator of Japanese Art, and researcher Kiyoko Hanaoka introduce us to surimono prints, which combined poems and picture puzzles in beautiful objects designed to be exchanged as gifts by members of Japanese poetry clubs. Join them as they decode the clues in these complex and beautiful prints.

    The priest Sōjō Henjō, who fell – a woodblock print by Utagawa Kuniyasu (1794–1832)
    View this online

    Ono no Tōfu – a woodblock print by Totoya Hokkei (1780 - 1850)
    View this online

    If you want to take a closer look at the objects mentioned in this episode, you can view them at the links above. Visit the podcast page on the Ashmolean website: ashmolean.org/objects-out-loud

    Hosted by Lucie Dawkins, with Clare Pollard and Kiyoko Hanaoka.
    The producer is Lucie Dawkins.

    About Objects Out Loud: From a magician who inspired Shakespeare, and poems woven into Japanese prints, to manuscripts illuminated with the ancient love story of Layla and Majnun, this new podcast series will delve into the poetry and literature hidden in the collections at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.

    The Love Letter

    The Love Letter

    In this romance themed art analysis mini episode we will be discussing three pictures which feature a lady reading or concealing a love letter.
    The Love Letter by Jean Honoré Fragonard 1773
    The Love Letter by Johannes Vermeer 1670
    Woman readi
    ng a letter, Kitagawa Utamaro, 18th century

    These three images are reflective of three very different cultures and time periods, but all highlight the intensity and mystery of the love letter. In this episode we will analyse the history of the paintings as well as their symbolism.

    Visual References
    Instagram @themuseumoffemininity

    Sources
    https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/436322
    https://lifetakeslemons.wordpress.com/2010/08/09/the-love-letter-jean-honore-fragonard/
    the Definitive Art Book
    http://www.essentialvermeer.com/cat_about/love.html
    Utamaro Revealed A Guide to Subject, Themes and Motifs by Gina Colia-Suzuki

    Hilarious! Early modern Japanese porno-artistic paintings “Shunga”

    Hilarious! Early modern Japanese porno-artistic paintings “Shunga”

    "Japanese culture, once upon a time, encouraged and celebrated sex openly. Now we do so secretly."

    Shungas are windows to the sexually liberal lives of 17th to 19th century Japanese people, and a vital hint to solving the mysterious gap between the clean, polite and disciplined image of Japan and the fact that the keywords "Japanese" and "Hentai" became No. 1 and 2 (respectively) search words on Pornhub in 2019.

    Show host Kyota Ko presents to you a hilarious explanation of Japanese people's little historical secrets.

    Check out The Metro-classic Japanese Blog and Instagram for more fun content on Japanese culture.

    Support the show

    Geisha

    Geisha

    Welcome back to the Museum of Femininty!
    In this episode Charlotte Appleyard will be discussing the fascinating origins and history of the Geisha, a beautiful accomplished woman, who has devoted her life to the arts and is recognisable through her sumptuously patterned kimono, painted face and lavishly adorned hair. Charlotte will also explore misconceptions about Geisha and how these views have been formed.

    Sources

    Geisha by Liza Dalby
    Geisha of Gion by Iwasaki Mineko
    toki.tokyo/blogt/2016/8/2/the-history-of-geisha-in-japanese-culture
    vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/kimono-kyoto-to-catwalk

    Visual references and to follow the Museum of Femininity
    Instagram @themuseumoffemininity 

    Episode 6: Mischief, Myth & Cat Tattoos (feat. Candie Bolton)

    Episode 6: Mischief, Myth & Cat Tattoos (feat. Candie Bolton)
    In this episode of the podcast, Jason Killingsworth speaks with painter and toy designer Candie Bolton about what prompted her to start drawing naughty pictures on bulletin boards in the video game Animal Crossing. They discuss the enjoyment that comes with trying to master unfamiliar creative tools, perfectionism, the challenges of working in non-digital media where mistakes can't be solved by an "undo" keyboard shortcut, and how she made the transition into working as an artist full-time. For more info, visit: www.jason-killingsworth.com

    Ep. 42 - Katsushika Hokusai's The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1829–1831)

    Ep. 42 - Katsushika Hokusai's The Great Wave off Kanagawa (1829–1831)

    Sure, you've seen it a million times in a million memes, but when was the last time you actually stopped to contemplate the incredible power of this Japanese ukiyo-e print? Or for that matter, the incredible power of a wave itself?

    See the images:
    www.thelonelypalette.com/episodes/202…awa-18301831

    Music used:
    The Andrews Sisters, "Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen"
    The Blue Dot Sessions, “Falaal,” “Dirty Wallpaper,” “Ghost Byzantine,” “Moon Bicycle Theme,” “Eleven,” “Clouds at the Gap”
    Charles Trenet, “La Mer”

    Support the show:
    www.patreon.com/lonelypalette

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