Wednesday, October 6, 2010

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Local Beat: Ode to the Silent Film era.


Find more photos like this on VII VISIONAIRES

Last Thursday the Kankakee Valley Theater held an event paying homage to the silent film era.  Actors dressed as 20s flappers, aviators, Charlie Chaplin, Dorothy and Al Capone mingled with supporters of the event.  The old Kankakee Paramount theater ran old silent films for a packed house.  The mock red carpet affair was a success. 

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

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Home is where the light is.

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(A carnival rides spin in Manteno, IL for Oktoberfest, Saturday September 25th, 2010.)

After spending several years in Japan coming home has been a challenge and a blessing.  I have found myself chasing light and jobs as the days grow colder.  Several small town festivals have popped up in recent years as some the Midwest small towns have experienced a bit of a population boom. 

No town in the Midwest has grown as fast as Manteno.  Manteno’s recent Oktoberfest was entertaining and was larger than what I would have expected from this community.  They have taken small town pride to new heights with their Oktoberfest festivities.  Manteno’s down town is well kept and quaint.  It is the picture-perfect image of a Midwestern Illinois town. 

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(Raining day for the Harvest Days festival in Dwight,IL September, 18th 2010)

Dwight is another small Midwestern Town that has grown in recent years.  The Harvest days festivities were filled with food and fun.  The day got off to a raining start, but soon became a wonderful day. 

The Downtown area of Dwight has an Amtrak station and small shops that line the streets.  This train station only has couple of regular stops a day in stark contrast to a Japanese train station, with multiple stops a minute.  Japanese small towns aren’t that small these days, but in the US small towns are either growing or dying.   Luckily these two small towns are thriving.   

Friday, September 3, 2010

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The Dark side of an Omiya night

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(The nights are long and certain sins and dangers lurk on the narrow side streets.)

Japan during the day is beautiful as it is pure, at night the polar opposite occurs.  When the beer flows and the daily stresses are shaking loose, a change is felt throughout the city.  Although the city is safe in comparison to many cities throughout the states, the Omiya night has its own dangers and sins.  JNI00141

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Anger flares and a light shatters, police officers calmly deal with the night.)

Lights are busted and small skirmishes amongst drinkers breakout amongst sins mingling in the dark. Omiya nights offer an avenue to every sin.  On the Omiya streets the seven deadly sins fill the night.    

Thursday, May 13, 2010

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Golden Week Photos: Kamakura

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I went to Kamakura during Golden week.  The crowds were huge and the trains were packed, but the company was great. 

Kamakura is an old area that is famous for the Big Buddha statue, shrines and temples on the  grounds of the old Hojo  stronghold, during the Kamakura era. 

 

(A man pulls a rickshaw through the streets of Kamakura.)

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The big Buddha statue located in Kamakura.  It is worth seeing, the statue is empty inside as you would expect.  

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

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Under the Suicide Lights

IMG_2010_03_30_1569 Tightly wound, casting doubt about one’s worth in life, you see the Tokyo bound train barreling towards you.  You tightly clench your coat to await your final ride on the Hanzomon-sen . 
Your legs quiver, your mood is dark, you're feeling blue.  You prepare to jump on your last train, but a blue light stops and lifts you out of your darkened state. 
The light that matches your mood saves you from your momentary drive towards your final destination. 
Somehow these blue lights prevent suicide, exactly how they perform their function isn’t exactlyIMG_2010_03_30_1573 clear or well known.  Nevertheless,  these blue lights definitely shed light on the subject of suicide in Japan.  However, blue lights seem to work.      
I have witnessed one person stepping in front of a Tokyo bound train before.  This was before the installation of the blue lights at many stations.  Yet, can these blue lights actually prevent people from jumping in front of a train.  
Mood enhancement by use of certain lights isn’t a new concept. In the treatment of certain mood disorders such as seasonal affective disorder certain lights seem to boost the mood of those affected. 
Blue lights as a suicide prevention may turn out to be one of the first ways we begin to prevent all sorts of social problems.  Use of such lighting in public spaces may become a part of future urban planning.  The blue lights are lit, let’s see if the lights stop other lights from prematurely going out.

Friday, April 9, 2010

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Japan: Spring Preview

April-10006 Near my apartment in Kasukabe, Japan there is a small pond with ducks, geese, and a single black swan. 

This swan happens not to like most the geese and spends its day chasing the geese ‘round and ‘round. 

The high speed paddling filled chase goes on for most the day.  The park never ceases to be eventful. 

This swan was quite peaceful this particular day.  It didn’t chase much of anything, but all the geese stayed clear of it, as the swan patrolled its waters.

 

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A few ducks pass underneath a hanging cherry tree branch nearing full bloom. 

Spring seemed to arrive abruptly, yet a cold breezy day crops up here and there.

The Japanese saying “ three days of cold, four days of warmth” proves itself.

 

 

A single church stands out as the cherry blossoms near full bloom in the foreground.  The drizzle and mist made for an interesting day. 

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Thursday, April 8, 2010

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Circuitry: A study of lighting

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I’ve decided to play with lighting.  The shadows and glares created by the lighting creates an interesting effect on the circuit board.
This circuit board was an old USB hub in which I broke open to shoot.  I no longer have the power cord for it and I never really used it.  I also only paid 100 yen for it, so I’m not out any money.  In fact, I probably have gotten more use out of it by shooting it than I ever would by using it. 
IMG_2010_04_04_1930 In the future I’ll find other old electronics to break open and photograph. For now this is all I had laying around doing nothing.   

Thursday, April 1, 2010

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Japanese Flowers

IMG_2010_03_27_1557 Japan is home to some of the most unique flowers I have ever seen.  They seem to bloom all year round and at any given time, on any give corner and in any given city you are bound to see flowers that will simply astound you. 

The Japanese seem to have a love affair with flowers.  They give them as gifts on birthdays, graduations, and any ceremony.  Flowers to the Japanese must have a special meaning to them. 

Japanese indigenous flowers are quite beautiful and odd in many ways.  I don’t really know what to expect or how to appreciate the flowers in Japan, but I feel compelled to photograph them anyway. 

IMG_2010_03_27_1538 Soon sakura season will be upon us. The pink and white flowers from cherry trees will be in full bloom probably come this weekend.  Where people will sit and drink underneath cherry blossoms in full bloom. 

For the next couple of weeks my personal project is to shoot as scenes involving cherry trees.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

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Night View of a Pogoda




The golden shimmer of the pogoda at night stands as a symbol of Japan's past. Although you will find these symbols almost everywhere their locations are often with in easy walking distance of a 7-11 or a train line.

Much of Japan today is littered with powerlines and other signs of progress. Even on mountain tops, powerlines and towers cast a shadow over the once beautiful landscape.

It doesn't make Japan less beautiful it does make it less natural in a way. It is merely the sign of the times.

Progress and preservation have lead us to saving monuments of the past by capitalizing on their worth as an attraction and as a point of sale transaction. This contrast between beauty and commerce is easily seen near all historical sites.

The key to enjoying these sites is to look past it and maintain a sense of awe despite the signs of the current age.





Friday, March 26, 2010

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“By the light of the moon”

IMG_2867 Often when I take photos at night, I have a few songs running through my head.  This past winter, I often reverted back to my childhood for my sound track.  For some odd reason “It’s a Wonderful Life” crept into my subconscious and provided me with “Buffalo Gals”.  This American classic song somehow brings out certain emotions. It must be the darkness that harkens me back to old black and white films (although I grew up with color, but my first personal TV was black and white"). 

At night there really is only one real option for photography,  the use of long exposures with a tripod.  I find myself near rivers and ponds at night to try and capture the reflection of light . I also enjoy using long exposures due to the transitions of objects through both time and space within the frame of the camera.  Objects transitioning from one space-time position to another while displacing the space before and after them.  Objects floating and displacing space like the logs and boulders in a river. 

Space-time is such a transitional playing field it behaves in accord to the objects around them.  A single long exposure is a unique capture of not only objects, but objects in transition.  They exist and don’t exist in certain positions.  

Looking back at my childhood, I am the moving light along the track, the flowing river of thoughts, the transitioning from one time frame to the next.  The boy that watched “It’s a Wonderful Life” all IMG_2856those years ago no longer exists, only his light continues on.  The boy’s interaction with a black and white film that featured an old song brought about emotions in a man 25 years later.  And that man took a photo while having “Buffalo Gals” running through his head along a river bank half a world away from his birth place.  That light continues and is captured not by the photos themselves, but by his act of taking them. 

(© Robert J. Hartung III, 2010 All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

Thursday, March 25, 2010

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Kyudo and Zen?

IMG_0458Kyudo like many Japanese martial arts has spiritual aspects attributed to it. Most notably Kyudo is seen primarily as a practice of Zen Buddhism in the west. Eugen Herrigel was the first to popularize Zen in the practice of Kyudo with his book “Zen in the Art of Archery”.

In recent years, a few Japanese writers have argued that Herrigel’s view was both the result of poor or vague translations at the time and Herrigel’s aspirations to find Zen in Kyudo. The strong association of Buddhism and Zen with Kyudo doesn’t seem to be going away anytime soon, regardless of recent journal articles arguing against Zen’s inclusion. The relationship is so intertwined in the collective consciousness that it seems unlikely to ever disappear. This is due to the nature of religion and Japanese martial arts in general.

Buddhism and Shinto are the two main religions in Japan and they are so interwoven that most Japanese cannot tell the difference between the two. Often one will find Buddhist temples next to  Shinto shrines, which further confuses the differences between the two faiths.

Kyudo is primarily used in Shinto ceremonies. The bowman will wear the white garments of a IMG_0678Shinto priest while performing ceremonies. Unlike Buddhist ceremonies in which pure white garments are not used. The arrow itself is a Shinto talisman to ward of evil and to attract good luck. In Zen the sword carries a heavy symbolic weight and the arrow has no symbolic significance.

Despite the utter lack of Buddhist ceremonies involving Kyudo in Japan there are an extensive Kyudo exhibitions in the west involving Zen temples. Kyudo exhibitions are never held at Buddhist temples in Japan. It seems that Zen and archery has stronger associations in the west than it does in Japan. 

Although Zen Buddhism might not have anything to do with Kyudo directly, the ideas and practice of it are quite Zen-like. Central tenets like the concepts of no-mind and non-attachment are notions shared with Zen Buddhism, however slightly differing in aim and approach.

IMG_0790 Since Shinto lacks a founder and religious texts, many attribute Buddhism to things that are primarily Shinto in origin. The Shinto/Buddhism difference is paper-thin in Japan which further perpetuates the seemingly contradictory statements about Kyudo and Japanese spiritual life.

Some might regard Kyudo as an inner and outer practice uniquely Japanese, the outer as the expression of Shinto with the inner the expression of Zen Buddhism. Regardless what is attributed to Kyudo, the practice requires diligence, concentration and Zen-like qualities to perform the elegant and sublime feats of Japanese archery.

(© Robert J. Hartung III, 2010 All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

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Spring has Sprung

IMG_2010_03_13_0045 Spring has sprung in Japan. The plethora of flowers bring both joy and punishment as hay-fever suffers pound the antihistamines.  First arriving are the ume (plumb) blossoms, with subtle whites and striking pinks. Their bloom foreshadows spring that brings in the pride and joy of Japanese spring – sakura (cherry blossoms). 

As the ume blossoms bloom and fall sakura begins to bud and bloom.  The report this year predicted that the cherry blossoms will begin to bloom on the 22nd of March.  The cherry blossoms should last about two weeks.  Soon Ueno park and Asakusa will be packed with people sitting under cherry blossoms and enjoying this ritual of spring.  
(© Robert J. Hartung III, 2010 All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

Saturday, March 20, 2010

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Tokyo Communist Anti-war Demonstration

anti-war-demo0001On March 20th, 2010 an anti-war rally under the banner of “Workers Action” was held in Yoyogi Park in Shibuya, Japan. The demonstrators marched through the busy streets of the Shibuya  district and ended their demonstration at a tiny park situated off of Meiji-dori along the Yamamote rail line. The protesters were jovial and peaceful. The number of demonstrators were estimated between 1000 to 1800.

Many protesters carried and wore signs that read, “We don’t need a Base”, “Stop the war”, and “Overthrow Obama”. anti-war-demo0007

Demonstrators chanted to the beat of drums and whistles, “Stop the War” and “End the Alliance”.

The anti-war demonstrators mostly were comprised of the Doro-Chiba (a Japanese National Railway Union) and Zengakuren (The All Japan Federation of Students Autonomous Bodies). Both groups are known to have communist ideologies.

The Doro-Chiba union mostly played a supportive roll in the anti-war rally and demonstrated against privatization and the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The demonstration was held on the seventh year anniversary of the Iraqi war.

The Zengakuren carried signs that read, “Overthrow Obama” and “Whose University? Our University!” The student carrying the “Overthrow Obama” sign when asked why he was protesting merely said: “Stop the war, down with privatization, down with capitalism”.

anti-war-demo0004In recent years the Zengakuren have been in the news for arrests made at Hosei University by the Japanese Security Police. Students were allegedly arrested for handing out anti-government literature on campus. During today’s demonstration there was a minor disturbance between Zengakuren and the Security Police, which resulted in small shoving match.

On March 4th, 2010, the Zengakuren demonstrated in Los Angels with the California ILWU 10 and the United Teachers Union in Los Angeles. The Zengakuren are also allegedly expected to demonstrate in California next weekend.

(© Robert J. Hartung III, 2010 All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

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Fire festival in Nagatoro, Saitama

_MG_4810-1 On March 7th 2010, Nagatoro held a fire festival.  Priests walk through flames and hot embers to pay homage to O-Fudomiyo, one of the Buddhist guardians.

The priests perform an elaborate ceremony and walk through knee high flames.  Onlookers are invited to take part in the stroll over hot embers. 

One participant stated, “It’s not painful at all.  I only got my feet dirty.”

The participants vary in age the youngest being elementary school students to the elderly.  The priests take special care of the participants and provide assistance through the flames, while the fire is continually stoked and fed with the previous year’s temple plaques and charms.  

One of the participating priests explained the basics of enduring the flames: “The festival is for O-Fudomiyo.  I have concentration when I walk across.  I don’t think about anything. So, it doesn’t hurt.”

The festival includes traditional lion dances, taiko drumming and martial art demonstrations.  The festival is held yearly at the beginning of March in this quaint mountain community.      

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(The priests perform a ceremony in front of the shrine. Conch shells bellow in low tones as prayers are offered to O-Fudomiyo. )

 

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(The priests begin a new chant.)

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(Priest chants and blesses the fire.)

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(Priest lends a helping hand through the burning embers.)

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(The heat and rain mixes to form steam.)

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(The head priest prepares to give his acolytes orders.)

(© Robert J. Hartung III  All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. )

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

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Tengu Matsuri

Setsubun 8 Let the beans fly and land where they may. Catch them if you can. Toss them or bounce them off a demon. The more you catch the happier you will be in the coming year. In Shimokitazawa, the demons are fierce tengu and a gigantic tengu head that is paraded through the shopping district. A parade filled with the sounds of taiko drums and shouting with beans flung into the air to bring the promise of a happy and healthy year.

Setsubun is a celebration that varies across the country of Japan. The vast majority of the celebration involves beans being tossed through the air, usually at some sort of demon. In Shimokitazawa, the festival involves tengu. Tengu are famous demons in Japan know for playing pranks and pestering vain monks. Tengu are also associated with martial arts often the teachers of the founders of old martial art styles.

The long-nosed goblins of Shimokitazawa parade around the local shopping district. Every fifty meters the tengu stop and the priests and attendants toss beans in the air. People scramble to Setsubun 15catch them. Following them is an enormous tengu with the length of an SUV. The giant tengu is navigated through narrow streets packed with people scrambling to catch happiness in the form of a bean.

Early in the day they have a celebration for children. The children wear tengu masks on their heads and parade around the neighborhood. Every fifty to one-hundred meters the parade stops and the tengu pied piper calls for them to toss their beans. Often being the target of the tossing.

The parade is conducted by the local Shinryuji temple and supported by the Shimokitazawa elementary school. This event is held every year around the Setsubun, February 3rd and lasts for three days.

(© Robert J. Hartung III, 2010 All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.)