Wednesday, May 20, 2009

James Turrell's House of Light






Last night, half of our group spent the night in James Turrell's House of Light. It is an art installation that is part of the Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennial. Turrell designed this somewhat traditional Japanese house, except the roof slides away and allows for a "light experince" of sorts. The roof slides away after sunset and with the darkening of the sky, the ceiling of the room changes colors. We saw a piece by Turrell when we were on Naoshima, but it was nice to be able to experince this one for an extended period of time. The bath downstairs was amazing. It was all concrete and completely dark except for stands of fiber-optic cables that gave an eerie glow. The best part about the experience for me was the fct that we were so far away from the city. You could really tell by the air quality. While we were laying on the tatami mats, watching the ceiling, you could hear leaves rustling and frogs croaking...and that was it. Overall, a great experience.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Sendai Mediatheque




We made it all the way up to Sendai! And have seen the only building worth seeing in this city :) The Sendai Mediatheque by Toyo Ito.

Utsunomiya

'coal house' by Terunobu Fujimori


"house before house' by Sou Fujimoto



the 'sumika pavilion' by toyo ito



house by Taira Nishizawa
This morning we left very early on our one week trip through Central Japan. On our way up to Sendai, we stopped in Utsunomiya. I was super exhausted and not looking forward to the stop, but it ended up being on of the coolest experiences I've had so far in Japan. There we visited the Tokyo Gas Sumika projects. "Tokyo Gas Co. is Japan's largest supplier of natural gas for both residential and business consumption. For their 'Sumika Project', they teamed up with Japanese architects Toyo Ito, Sou Fujimoto, Terunobu Fujimori and Taira Nishizawa. Each of the architects are responsible for designing a built structure on the project site. The concept behind Sumika is to provide new residential units, buildings and a main pavilion that will use gas as their main source of energy."(DesignBoom). The houses were small, but very detail orineted. I could not tell you which one I liked the most, because they were each so unique and special. It was a very inspirational experience.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Lost in Translation

The Park Hyatt

all dolled up!
Wouldn't mind trading our dorm rooms for this!!Crazy Shinjuku

Last night we walked to Shinjuku and met the department head from Cal Poly at the Park Hyatt. This is the hotel that Lost in Translation was filmed at. The views from the restaurant were amazing! We were given a tour of a couple of suites. Very luxurious! Afterward, we walked around the Shinjuku station district and had a beer and some appetizers with our professor and the dept. head.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Sumo!






There is a Sumo tournament going on right now, so a bunch of us went today to check it out. It was a really cool Japanese experience. There is so much ritual to each bout. There is alot of lunging, foot stamping, and salt throwing involved. The bouts last for about 5-10 minutes each, but the actual wrestling is only a few seconds. Each Sumo wrestler has one only one shot per day, so the winning is based on a couple of seconds. They really get tossed around! This one match ended up in the crowd with one wrestler crashing into this unlucky old woman!

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Dog Park!!





Since there hasn't been a torrential downpour lately, I've finally had the chance to go into Yoyogi Park which is behind our dorms. It was so much fun! We found the dog park where all the young, hip Tokyo-ites (?) take their dogs and parade them around. They are all pedigrees wearing silly little outfits. I got a real kick out of it. There was the hipster with his neurotic black standard poodle (like Coco!), with his girlfriend with the miniature black poodle. And the naughty French bulldog that jumped up onto the park bench and peed on this woman's Burberry purse. And the ex-patriot with the crazed Jack Russel Terrier named Magic Mu that played an amazing game of soccer. I'm definetly going there everytime I get stressed or feel down. Highlight of my week!

Hakone and Mt. Fuji

Mt Fuji!!
almost blown away by the wind up on the mountain!
stinky hot springs
don't go in there!

look at all of his eggs! haha
lush forests all around beautiful Hakone

Please excuse my lack of blog posts! Tokyo has been very rainy and uninspiring this past week. Fortunately, our dorm was closed for Monday and Tuesday, so we had to find hotels for two nights. Sig, Trudy, and I decided to get out of the city and go to this small town in the mountains called Hakone. What a good call!! Hakone is famous for their hot springs, so we caught up on some much needed R&R. During the day, we set up the mountain to get some views of Mt Fuji. We lucked out! Apparently, you can only see it once every four days or so. We were able to catch it for about half an hour before the fog rolled back in. There were these crazy sulferic hot springs near by, spewing steam and stinky aromas. They boil eggs in the springs which turns them black. Of course, we had to try them! It didn't taste that much different, but they supposedly add seven years to your life :) It was a much needed trip. I eally needed to see some greenery after being stuck in the concrete jungle aka Tokyo.