Category Archives: J-FEST

J-FEST Moscow 2011. Festival of Contemporary Japanese Culture

J-FEST was a festival of Contemporary  Japanese culture held in Moscow at the Central House of Artists. It was designed to showcase or present Japanese culture with an emphasis on youth and young people with the accent on phenomena like manga and anime, cosplay etc. The event was held in the House of Artists in the centre of Moscow. I wanted to the film the event partly out of curiosity and partly to collect material for the Japan-Philosophical Landscapes project and maybe get an interview or two with some of the main participants and speakers at the event. We arrived an hour or two after the event had started and I was surprised by how many people had turned up. Several hundred people were milling around the foyer and in the various exhibition points where events were being held.

A fashion show was just ending in the DNK hall with fashions from the Harajuku area of Tokyo. Outside in the foyer young Russians dressed in various costumes of manga and anime style were thronging around the two floors where the event was taking place. On one side of the foyer a whole wall had been given over to Kyoto Seiko Universtity  with a video instalation dedicated on the theme of the recent earthquake and a mural being painted by students from the university.
The costumes were various but mostly on the themes of maids, cosplay, anime and manga with a strong influence of gothic but generally recognisable as derived from the  street fashions of Harajuku.
At the press conference the panel consisted of the architect Takayuki Suzuki and  May J the singer who heads the show J-Melo on NHK . J-Melo is a cult musical TV show Japanese TV channel NHK. It is broadcast in 180 countries and regions, and finally made ​​it to Moscow.  May J.  is of Japanese, Iranian, Turkish, Russian, Spanish and English extraction.
It was strange to see these symbols and emblems of Japanese culture being played out in Moscow but one way of understanding this phenomena is with reference to Takamasa Sakurai was also on the panal. A journalist and a media content producer – he is convinced that the world will certainly have a “kawaii revolution.” He is convinced that due to the popularity of their pop culture, Japan could become a diplomatic mediator between different countries. In recent years, Sakurai-san has been an active lecturer in various countries.

The next day of the festival I managed to secure an interview with Takayuki Suzuki

Suzuki-sensei is trying to reconcile  modern building and new forms of the 21st century with traditional Japanese ideas of beauty. Thus, in their university building,  which he designed,  he tried to include as much as possible, “the sky” which “need students to dream.” 
    In his lecture he spoke  about contemporary Japanese landscapes from the perspective of Japanese culture. 
    Takayuki Suzuki: “Situated in the Far East, modern Japan is one of the centers of world culture and therefore for understanding the future we need to talk about the features of Japanese culture, characteristic of the Japanese urban landscape and everyday life of Japanese youth”.
After his interview I am hoping to use some of the material for the project Japan Philosophical Landscapes. His work and ideas may form the nexus between traditional and contemporary understandings of landscape and pinch  together these two major themes in the film.

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Work assignments call and projects continuing.

Main work carrying on at a reasonable pace with various welcome distractions and diversions. One  of which was an interview of Eamon Gilmore, the Irish Foreign minister who was in Moscow a week or two ago to sign a trade agreement with Medvedev and which I recorded together with Estelle Winters of “The Voice of Russia” who conducted the interview . You can listen to the whole interview here.

Central House of Artists - Moscow

Tomorrow and Sunday the J-FEST of Japanese Contemporary culture is being held at the Central House of Artists in Moscow in central Moscow. Its a two day exhbition of all the elements of modern Japanese culture from fashion to manga and Anime to music with an accent on new directions in Japanese art and culture. Today we received press accreditation and I intend to film this event.

All the other work moving along step by step. Today there is another episode of the web documentary “Japan - Philosophical Landscapes” An ongoing film and internet project about Japanese landscape and its expression in Japanese art, culture and living. Watch below.

The theatre projects centred around a film adaptation of “The Fairground Booth”  is still very much in a development stage of writing and research and at them moment is on the back burner as I clear my way through other projects.

 

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