Friday, July 27, 2012

Emotional Support Through Glasswork Beads


Akemi Furukawa from one of Japan’s devastated areas

An exhibition of glasswork beads by Kamaishi City’s Akemi Furukawa (51), entitled  “Glasswork Beads Glittering in the Early Summer Sun,” will be open at the Nonohanasha CafĂ© in Nagayama, Shidzukuishi until the 11th of June. The exhibition holds around 100 works, from flowers buried in transparent glass to ceramic glass painted with Japanese designs; a miniature world inside delicate and vivid glass beads.

Last year’s tsunami destroyed Furukawa’s home in Unosumai Town, washing away the all the tools and works she had kept in her workshop. While considering what she should and could do, she kept thinking, “I just don’t want to give up glasswork.”

Seiko Shirasaki, a friend of Furukawa’s who also holds works in the exhibition, invited Furukawa to move to Niigata prefecture, which she did in September of last year. With a compressor and burner provided by the teacher who taught her glassworking, she was finally able to get back into the mood to create.

The beads Furukawa makes are comprised of tiny parts which she manufactures by hand from colored glass, the flowers represented in each bead finely worked down to the last vein of each leaf. The glass she uses is delicate and can crack if heated too quickly; the small parts inside the beads can melt if too much heat is applied. On the other hand, if the heating temperature is too low, the compounds in the material will not bond and the beads will remain opaque.

“It’s work that can’t be re-done. You have to concentrate hard the entire time.”  The glasswork creations require absolute concentration, but to Furukawa, the time she spends glassworking is priceless. Nowadays, she works part-time, taking up glassworking on her days off. “I’m able to calm down and forget about things while I work,” she says. Glasswork bead-making has become Furukawa’s emotional sustenance.

Her next ambition is to create a series of works with fruits, leaves and winter scenes as motifs. “I want to make works that give a sense of excitement to adults, like the excitement felt by children looking at grape beads and heart-shaped necklaces at festivals,” she says.


Morioka Times 6/5/2012) 

Northeast Japan Rokkonsai

Festival Ends Exceeding Expectations with 240,000 Participants

The Rokkonsai festival, representing the 6 Northeast Japan prefectures, was held this year in Morioka city, sponsored by the Rokkonsai executive committee. The parades unfolded magnificently from Morioka city’s Chuuodori and Maruyama districts, ending without incident on May 27th. Lively performances captured the audiences, while all around the air was filled with Northeast Japan’s energy to “Revive as One” from the earthquake disaster. According to presentations from the Rokkonsai hosts, there were 130,000 visitors on the second day of the festival, the entire length of the festival exceeding all expectations with a total of 240,000 visitors.

The Rokkonsai parade, which holds performers from the 6 Northeast Japan prefectures, began at 12 noon, with crowds so large that entrants to the festival had to be restricted. As the participants, all from 6 different prefectures, finished the parade and prepared to return to the festival site, they were surrounded by visitors with applause and loud cries of “Thank you!” and “It was wonderful!”. 

Tsuyoshi Kawamura, 65, of Morioka’s Higashimatsuzono district, was one of the lucky sightseers who managed to get a front-row view of the parade. “It was the best. I was deeply touched, knowing that the performers had all come from different areas to perform for everyone,” he responded with heartfelt emotion. Tomoe Numahata, 47, a visitor from Aomori’s Hachinohe city, said that she felt “very satisfied, being able to see six different festivals in the same place. [She] enjoyed it very much.”

The deep emotion was affluent in the festival performers as well. A participant in the Rokkonsai festival held in Sendai as well as a Sansa Odori Seiryuu Association member, Rui Abe (30, Oushuu City), says that “the Rokkonsai Festival in Sendai was chaos, and several of the visitors spoke very harshly to me. But this time, the festival was held partly as a means of revival after the earthquake, and it was very pleasant.” Hajime Saitou, an enthusiastic performer of the Akita Kantou Festival, 44, explained that he “wants to see some courage brought to the disaster-stricken areas.”

At the closing ceremony, everybody gathered around the specially set stage in the Morioka castle remains park. Rokkonsai Executive committee member Hiroaki Tanifuji spoke words of gratitude that “[we] were able to share the Touhoku people’s enthusiasm and feelings of reconstruction with the rest of Japan.”

Various opinions on the festival and the future of the Touhoku region were heard during the festival. Katsutoshi Motomochi of Morioka’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry said that he felt “the prefectures were able to express their earnestness [about reconstruction]. This will have a considerable effect on the Touhoku region’s revival.” He continued in a bracing tone that “We must use these festivals as a means of stimulation [for reconstruction]. “

Many hotels and restaurants in Morioka said they had great success due to the influx of visitors to the festival, but there were some shop owners who said that they were unable to sell many of their goods. Liquor store owner Kazushige Yoshimoto, 47, remarked that “Iwate prefecture should call in more people to send to the devastated coastal areas.”

Morioka did experience traffic throughout the city, but it was well directed and no chaos ensued. A total of 269 temporary sightseeing buses stopped at the festival, 5,300 cars came to park in the prepared spaces for the festival, and shuttle buses ran a total of 345 times to and from the festival grounds to the parking lot carrying a whopping 12,756 people back and forth throughout the weekend. A total of 62 people visited the first aid stations; 10 people were transported by ambulance due to heat stroke.



Morioka Times 5/28/2012)