Nightlife in Shinjuku

The Shinjuku Ward of Tokyo at night, famous for its bright lights and great nightlife. This place never seems to sleep or slowdown. In fact, over 3 million people pass through the Shinjuku JR station everyday! For those who saw "Lost in Translation" this is the place were most of the action takes place.

Modern art in Japan


Japanese art covers a wide range of art styles and media, including ancient pottery, sculpture in wood and bronze, ink painting on silk and paper, and a myriad of other types of works of art.

Painting
is the preferred artistic expression in Japan, practiced by amateur and professional alike. Until modern times, the Japanese wrote with a brush rather than a pen, and their familiarity with brush techniques has made them particularly sensitive to the values and aesthetics of painting.

Japanese ceramics
are among the finest in the world and include the earliest known artifacts of their culture. In architecture, Japanese preferences for natural materials and an interaction of interior and exterior space are clearly expressed.

Today, Japan rivals most other modern nations in its contributions to modern art, fashion and architecture, with creations of a truly modern, global, and multi-cultural (or acultural) bent.

Japanese modern art takes as many forms and expresses as many different ideas as modern art in general, worldwide. It ranges from advertisements, anime, video games, and architecture as already mentioned, to sculpture, painting, and drawing in all their myriad forms.

Many artists do continue to paint in the traditional manner, with black ink and color on paper or silk. Some of these depict traditional subject matter in the traditional styles, while others explore new and different motifs and styles, while using the traditional media. Still others eschew native media and styles, embracing Western oil paints or any number of other forms.

In sculpture, the same holds true; some artists stick to the traditional modes, some doing it with a modern flair, and some choose Western or brand new modes, styles, and media. Yo Akiyama is just one of countless modern Japanese sculptors. He works primarily in clay pottery and ceramics, creating works that are very simple and straightforward, looking like they were created out of the earth itself. Another sculptor, using iron and other modern materials, built a large modern art sculpture in the Israeli port city of Haifa, called Hanabi (Fireworks).

Takashi Murakami
is arguably one of the most well-known Japanese modern artists in the Western world. Murakami and the other artists in his studio create pieces in a style, inspired by anime, which he has dubbed "superflat". His pieces take a multitude of forms, from painting to sculpture, some truly massive in size. But most if not all show very clearly this anime influence, utilizing bright colors and simplified details.

A remarkable number of the traditional forms of Japanese music, dance, and theater have survived in the contemporary world, enjoying some popularity through reidentification with Japanese cultural values. Traditional music and dance, which trace their origins to ancient religious use - Buddhist, Shintō, and folk - have been preserved in the dramatic performances of Noh, Kabuki, and bunraku theater. Ancient court music and dance forms deriving from continental sources were preserved through Imperial household musicians and temple and shrine troupes. Some of the oldest musical instruments in the world have been in continuous use in Japan from the Jōmon period, as shown by finds of stone and clay flutes and zithers having between two and four strings, to which Yayoi period metal bells and gongs were added to create early musical ensembles.

Source
: www.wikipedia.org

The Reason Of Love

The reason of love formed thousand years ago. The seed come to the tree. The friend come to the lover. It seems everything has its destiny.I don't know why we meet each other and fall into love but I'm extremely sure the reason of love formed thousand years ago.
One word in Chinese is "Lun Hui". Lun means the round. Hui means coming back. In ancient time in China people believed the after-life will be reborn and the life will start once again in another shape which depend on what you have done in your this-life. If you are good one you become person again or you will be a dumb things like pig and dog. This is Lun Hui. So we usually say, once life is once Lun Hui from birth to death.It just looks like a round.

So concerning the love,people believe it's also affected by Lun Hui.In this-life two people become husband and wife just because of something in their before-life.Maybe they rided the same boat. Or a fishman freed a fish princess for his mercy and the princess pay back in this life.
Lovers hope they can always be couple in their several Lun Hui.

Charlie Chan


Created by writer Earl Derr Biggers, who was inspired by the exploits of Honolulu policeman Chang Apana, Charlie Chan is a fictional master detective who was born in China and immigrated to Hawaii when very young. He is a faithful husband and proud patriarch of a “multitudinous family” of fourteen children. Seen as kindly, insightful and wise, a teetotaler and dispenser of appropriate aphorisms. Ancient Chinese philosopher say, "Hope is sunshine which illuminate darkest path." (Charlie Chan at the Olympics) Identified in early stories as a sergeant he was quickly promoted and known afterward as lieutenant or inspector. In later films he is often seen working as a special agent for the U.S. government and toward the end of the run is portrayed as being in private practice. During the course of the series he traveled to over two dozen cities, five of the 7 continents and is mentioned as having worked on a case in Australia. Far from a negative stereotype Charlie Chan stood like a beacon, a positive example, in an era when most Asians were thought as nothing more than house boys, laundrymen or inscrutable villains in the Fu Man Chu mold. Appearing in more than three dozen films from the silent era to the late 1940s Chan outlasted many imitators and competitors rising to the ranks of the greatest movie investigators to stand alongside Sherlock Holmes, Nick Charles, The Thin Man and Sam Spade.

Charlie Chan appeared in six novels by Earl Derr Biggers, published from 1925 to 1932.

* The House Without a Key (1925)

* The Chinese Parrot (1926)

* Behind That Curtain (1928)

* The Black Camel (1929)

* Charlie Chan Carries On (1930)

* Keeper of the Keys (1932)

Source : www.wikipedia.org
Asigurari