Japanese bamboo weaving


Bamboo weaving is a form of bambooworking and traditional Japanese craft, with a range of fine and decorative arts especially in basket weaving.

History

More than six hundred species of bamboo grow in Japan, including Phyllostachys bambusoides, which can grow to a height of 15–22 m and a diameter of 10–15 cm. Some species are endemic to Japan. Although defined as a subfamily of grasses, bamboo is characterized by its woody culm and a root system that can form either thick, slowly spreading clusters or more aggressive runners.
The bamboo has unique characteristics which naturally give it a positive symbolic significance: it grows straight and fast, is flexible, does not decay quickly and can be used for building shelters, weapons, instruments, and cut into stripes for making containers. Young bamboo stems can even be eaten and have found their way into the Japanese cuisine. Bamboo is a common theme in Japanese literature and a favoured subject of painters. Along with the evergreen pine and plum, which is the first flower of spring, bamboo is a part of the traditional Three Friends of Winter. The three are a symbol of steadfastness, perseverance, and resilience. Japanese artists have often represented bamboo enduring inclement weather, such as rain or snow, reflecting its reputation for being flexible but unbreakable, and its association with steadfastness and loyalty. The most favoured sort used in Japanese craft is the Phyllostachys bambusoides species, called madake in Japanese.
Flower baskets for ikebana and other types were imported from China or their style copied. These karamono baskets had formal, symmetrical structures with tightly plaited weaves. It was the 16th-century tea master Sen no Rikyū who advocated for a simple, austere wabi-cha style with natural and spontaneous or seemingly artless utensils. These tea utensils established a Japanese bamboo art distinct from the imported Chinese style. Baskets were developed to appear in a natural, asymmetric style, called wamono. Around 1700 the embrace of the steeped sencha tea ceremony coincided with a renewed admiration for Chinese culture, literature, and painting among the Japanese literati, a phenomenon that continued into the 19th century. Finely woven, elegant baskets imported from China served as models for karamono baskets now created by Japanese craftsmen, following a tradition established during the Muromachi period. Recognition of bamboo craftsmanship as a traditional Japanese decorative art began at the end of the 19th century, and became accepted as an art form.
The Bamboo Technical Training Support Centre in the town of Ōita was established in 1938, making it the only publicly funded prefectural- level institution in the country that is dedicated to bamboo crafts. Following World War II, bamboo crafts disappeared as plastic replaced it for utilitarian products. Nevertheless, high-level production remained and art forms developed apart from crafts. Bamboo art gained increasing recognition. In 1967 Shōnō Shōunsai from Beppu became the first bamboo artist to be nominated by the government as a Living National Treasure. In 1979, Bamboo crafts of Beppu were designated by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry in 1979 as a Traditional Arts and Crafts.
Most of the master artisans designated Living National Treasures are selected from among participants in the annual Japan Kōgei Association exhibitions. Whereas the annual Japan Art Academy exhibitions emphasize artistic expression, the Art and Crafts exhibitions prioritize the preservation of traditional skills and typically feature functional, though modern, baskets. In the postwar era, many of the leading bamboo artists were linked to established lineages. Although most artists are men, a number of female artists have emerged recently, such as Toshie Ōki, and Setsuko Isohi.
Bamboo art of recent decades reflects a greater diversity in technique and vision, though the same respect for tradition, areas, and lineage that characterizes the history of the medium is still manifest in many ways. Notable artists have come to the craft from outside the traditional family lines, and many of them work independently. Some have a background in the fine arts, while others found themselves attracted to the ancient practice after having worked in an unrelated field.
As is similar in other Japanese crafts, the acquisition of knowledge usually involved a lengthy apprenticeship with the master of the workshop, often the father of the young disciple, in a system called shitei . Learning the basic skills and techniques generally takes five to ten years, but mastering them and developing an individual style can require decades. Hard work was required from the pupil almost every day in exchange for little or no pay. Living in the master's household and participating in household duties, apprentices carefully observed the master, senior students, and workshop before beginning any actual training. Even in the later stages of an apprenticeship it was common for a disciple to learn only through conscientious observation. This has changed in more recent times, as younger generations are unwilling to go through this traditional system and learn instead the basic skills in technical schools such as the centre in Oita, and later go to a master.
While some works can be completed in several weeks, others take many months, and exhibition pieces often require longer, sometimes a year or two. Bamboo arts have a low profile compared to ceramics, mainly because of the comparatively low number of artisans, and the amount of time it takes to finish an object.
Bamboo basketry is often complemented with other materials such as rattan or hemp palm. Basketry of only these materials also exist. Another is tsuruzaiku, the craft of vine weaving, which is popular in many parts of the northern Tōhoku region where bamboo is more scarce, specifically the weaving of akebia quinata, called akebizaiku.
The three main production areas of bamboo weaving are the western Kansai region around the cities of Osaka and Kyoto, the eastern Kantō region around Tokyo, and the southernmost island of Kyūshū. Each had their own plaiting techniques and styles.

Kansai artisans

Sophisticated sencha flower baskets and tea utensil baskets were in especially high demand in the western region of Kansai, with Osaka and Kyoto at its centre. In the late 19th century, master craftsmen in the region began combining technical perfection with artistic individuality to produce functional "art baskets" that were signed by the artist.
The pioneering Kansai bamboo artist Hayakawa Shōkosai I, believed to be the first master to sign his baskets, studied the traditional craft of rattan plaiting and concentrated on sencha tea utensils. His eldest son, Shōkōsai II, followed him into the basketry trade but died at an early age. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Shōkosai III, who developed an advanced style of plaiting called "coarse weave", a departure from the family's signature techniques. After World War II, Shōkōsai IV moved from Osaka to Kyoto, where he established the new family workshop. Shōkōsai V explored further possibilities in armor plaiting, a type of parallel construction considered one of the traditional Hayakawa techniques. He exhibited his work at the annual Japanese Traditional Art Crafts Exhibitions beginning in 1966 and was designated a Living National Treasure in 2003.
The Osaka-based bamboo artist Wada Waichisai I established an important and long-lasting lineage of masters. He was known for his precise, delicate plaiting techniques, making primarily karamono baskets and utensils for the sencha tea ceremony.
Among his numerous disciples was Tanabe Chikuunsai I, who both perpetuated inherited traditions and began to modernize them. He developed the so-called ryūrikyō style of basketry after studying the 18th century paintings of Yanagisawa Kien, who often depicted bamboo baskets filled with flowers or fruits in the bunjin literati style. Chikuunsai made ryūrikyō baskets explicitly for exhibition, a trend that marked a significant shift in Japanese bamboo art, reflecting the ambition of master craftsmen to achieve the same degree of recognition already accorded contemporary ceramic and lacquer artists. Tanabe Chikuunsai II and Chikuunsai III extended the Tanabe lineage, with the latter producing unique geometric sculptures. The Sakai-based Tanabe Chikuunsai IV has carried on the family tradition while also experimenting with monumental sculpture and organic installation works, such as the almost 6 metres high Godai at the Musée Guimet in 2016, or with The Gate in 2017 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Another disciple of Wada Waichisai I was Yamamoto Chikuryūsai I, who received awards at the 1925 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris, the 1933 Century of Progress fair in Chicago, and the 1937 Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne in Paris. He was also one of the first bamboo craftsmen whose work was admitted to the Teiten exhibition of the Imperial Fine Arts Academy.
Maeda Chikubōsai I, also from Sakai, established his own distinguished family line. He began his career producing karamono and literati baskets, but then developed a unique method of using natural bamboo branches and roots to achieve a more rustic effect. He also made several pieces for the Imperial Court. Chikubōsai II produced both sencha baskets and modern vessels made from round strips of bent-and-gathered bamboo. Beginning in the Taishō era, both Tanabe Chikuunsai I and Maeda Chikubōsai I incorporated antique arrows into their work, which was particularly appreciated by clients who were descended from samurai. He was followed by his on Maeda Chikubōsai II, whose works were shown at the Nitten and who in 1995 was awarded by the government as the third bamboo artist to be named a Living National Treasure.
One of the artists who was influenced by Tanabe Chikuunsai II is Sugita Jozan. Other notable artisans and artists include Suzuki Gengensai, Higashi Takesonosai, who was influenced by Rōkansai and received the Special Recognition Award at the 1971 Nitten exhibition,, Tanaka Kōsai whose also integrated the shafts of arrows into his work,, Tanaka Kōji, and Tanioka Shigeo who was an apprentice of Tanabe Chikuunsai II.
Monden Kōgyoku made thousands of utilitarian baskets for wholesalers for two decades after the war. He later made a number of artistic pieces with extremely fine strips of bamboo and intricate techniques. He lives near Hiroshima in the neighbouring Chūgoku region.

Kantō artisans

Japanese bamboo art in the eastern region of Kantō around Tokyo underwent a process of modernization during the first half of the 20th century. Several masters rose to fame through their participation in newly reorganized domestic art international exhibitions and began producing "art baskets".
Iizuka Hōsai II and his brother Iizuka Rōkansai spearheaded the movement, pioneering new directions for the field and elevating bamboo craft to an art form. Emphasizing artistic freedom and individuality, Rōkansai experimented with the possibilities of the medium and developed several new techniques, including bundled plaiting and embroidered plaiting. He received an award in the 1925 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris. Iizuka Shōkansai, who trained under his father, the famous Rōkansai, regularly exhibited his works at the annual Nitten exhibition and the Traditional Art and Crafts exhibitions, and was designated a Living National Treasure in 1982. The Iizuka family traditions were transmitted to Katsushiro Sōhō and Fujinuma Noboru, both Living National Treasures active in Tochigi Prefecture.
Ishikawa Shōun was a disciple of Iizuka Rōkansai, as was Yokota Hōsai. Hōsai was one of the seventeen founding members of the Japan Bamboo Artists Association in 1955, along with Kosuge Shōchikudo and Iizuka Shōkansai. Suzuki Kyokushōsai I might have been connected to the Hōsai linneage. Another disciple of Rōkansai was Nakata Kinseki.
Buseki Suigetsu is an artist working in Tokyo.
Fujitsuka Shōsei had his apprenticeship under Baba Shōdō and is based in Kanagawa. His produces installation art in a highly individualistic style.

Chūbu artisans

An important Chūbu lineage, specifically in the Hokuriku region, is that of Honma Kazuaki, from Sado Island and based in Niigata Prefecture. He studied under Hayashi Shōgetsusai He specializes in bent-bamboo works and has won renown for his large-scale abstract compositions. He further developed Iizuka Shōkansai's idea of two-dimensional, framed bamboo works called "plaited paintings" and received two Special Recognition Awards at the Nitten, one in 1983.
His disciple Honma Hideaki, working on Sado Island, employs a flexible local variety of bamboo in works inspired by the island's flora and fauna. Another disciple of Honma Kazuaki was Ueno Masao from Iiyama, Nagano, who creates installation works.
Another important lineage on Sado Island was founded by Kosuge Chikudō, continued by his sons Kosuge Shōchikudō and Kosuge Kōgetsu.
Shōchikudō initially had no interest in becoming a bamboo artist and did not formally study under his father. He nevertheless submitted a work which was accepted by the Tokyo Craft Arts Exhibition when he was fourteen years old. Subsequently, he worked with bamboo and after the end World War II, the Niigata Prefectural government hired him to teach bamboo basketry. His work was admitted to the Nitten exhibitions, and in 1955 he became one of the seventeen founding members of the Japan Bamboo Artists Association. He eventually stopped producing works for public exhibitions and focused towards design and small items, working for example together with fashion designer Issey Miyake. Baba Shōdō was trained by him.
His younger brother Kōgetsu, a student of chanoyu, became renowned for the "twisted construction" technique. He participated in both the Nitten and the Traditional Arts & Crafts exhibitions and received awards for his flower baskets.
Torii Ippō, born in Nishio, Aichi, had to continue his family's bamboo business at the age of 21 after his father passed away. In 1959 he saw a ceremonial bamboo basket from the 8th century CE at the Shōsōin in Nara. Inspired by this piece, he eventually submitted works to the Japanese Modern Art & Craft exhibitions and received a Special Recognition Award at the 2006 Nitten.
Yako Hōdō, originally based in Niigata Prefecture, studied under Nakajima Hoso, Nakamura Yukosai, and Baba Shōdō, who encouraged him to explore contemporary sculpture. He moved to the Tokyo area later, and made large-scale compositions for which he earned recognition. He began exhibiting his work at the Nitten in 1973.
Nagakura Ken'ichi is an artist from Shizuoka Prefecture. He initially studied yūzen dyeing techniques, but moved to bamboo weaving after working at his grandfather's bamboo wholesale enterprise. His organic, sculptural baskets and three-dimensional abstract sculptural works owe their appearance to a variety of traditions. He works as an independent artist and is not associated with any particular organisations.

Kyūshū artisans

With a warm southern climate ideal for bamboo cultivation, the island of Kyūshū is the site of more than half of Japan's bamboo production. In the
early 20th century, the town of Beppu in Ōita Prefecture, famous for its hot springs, became a noted centre of bamboo crafts; functional baskets and bamboo carvings from the area were widely exhibited. The Ōita Prefectural Bamboo Craft and Technical Training Support Center, a publicly funded institution dedicated to bamboo craft, was established in 1938.
The artist Shōnō Shōunsai attracted numerous disciples over the course of his long career. His abstract bamboo sculptures of the 1950s and 1960s were considered revolutionary. In 1967 he became the first bamboo artist honoured with the title "Living National Treasure". Shōnō Tokuzō, his son and heir to the family tradition, typically uses leached bamboo split into wide strips and combines parallel construction with plaiting to achieve a textural, multilayered effect.
Iwao Kōunsai established a lineage that included Kadota Nikō, who applied characteristic Kyūshū techniques, and Honda Shōryū, one of his pupils, who makes undulating, complex sculptures with light, openwork textiles. Kibe Seihō, one of Shōryū's students, prefers functional vessels and employs classical plaiting techniques. Other artists such as Uematsu Chikuyū and Shiotsuki Juran create unique sculptures.

Techniques

A number of plaiting techniques developed throughout time and in different regions. There are a number of standard weaving patterns, out of which hundreds of combinations can me made.
A number of art works such as paintings and pottery have taken up the theme of bamboo weaving.
A design on a Nabeshima ware porcelain dish from the late 17th to early 18th century depicts falling cherry blossoms in plaided baskets on a stream. The exact meaning of what the artists and owners were trying to convey is not conclusive, but the intention was to celebrate traditional Japanese aesthetics. The falling cherry blossoms in this design most likely commemorated the association between the flower and culture, symbolised by the baskets holding them.
In the kakejiku Autumn Flowers in a Bamboo Basket, the Nanga artist Yosa Buson painted a bouquet of autumn flowers standing in a tall Chinese-style bamboo basket with a rounded handle. The depicted flowers are chrysanthemums, Chinese bellflowers, and rose mallows, and are in full bloom in autumn. They are all therefore associated in traditional Japanese poetry with this season. The artist used a technique called sumi-nijimi, or "ink blurring", for rendering the flowers. He applied brushstrokes to the surface of ink washes before they dried, creating a soft texturing effect. For the texture of the plaited bamboo basket he used short horizontal strokes in dark ink to contrast it with the evocative flowers.
A mizusashi tea ceremony water jar, 1750–1850, is in the shape of a bamboo basket. The water jar is made out of stoneware, with a cream slip and brown glaze, and as the image below attests, the artisan was able to realistically imitate the texture of bamboo.