Tricolor
Originally uploaded by nofrills.
a tokyo photolog (my flickr archive, and occasional rant and rave: I have a free flickr acount, and want to keep the pics I have uploaded.)
Fire alarm at a metro/underground/subway station.
Tokyo, Japan
Click on the photo and read the embedded description for language tips.
Minato-ku's symbol, based on the hiragana, み (of みなと く = 港区).
A dogwood blossom for Minato-ku, Tokyo.
In 1915, Japan sent cherry trees to Washington D.C., and the Americans sent dogwood trees to Japan. I heard this is where it started.
A screenshot.
news.bbc.co.uk/
Japan adds to pressure on Burma
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7046267.stm
* Posted on the "Nagai updates" thread.
Tokyo local goverment's idea of "Street Art" in reality. Ishihara declares the wall is a canvas, and he means this.
Roppongi, Tokyo
A close-up shot of this piece. I believe someone put a finishing touch on it to make it look "real". *grin, grin*
Roppongi, Tokyo
I think I got the artist's idea, and this makes me grin.
The same wall as this and this, that is, a part of Tokyo's official "Street Art Programme".
Roppongi. Tokyo
The same wall as this and this, that is, a part of Tokyo's official "Street Art Programme".
Roppongi. Tokyo
Tokyo local goverment's idea of "Street Art" in reality. Ishihara declares the wall is a canvas, and he means this.
Roppongi, Tokyo
I'm not going to give a lecture about the Governer of Tokyo, Shintaro Ishihara. All you need to know is 1) He is a right-wing hardliner, 2) He wanted to be an artist (visual art) when he was young (himself being a novelist/author as well as a politician). He used to paint (or draw, I'm not so sure), and one of his sons is an artist (well, sort of). In a word, Ishihara is interested in art. But it seems that in his eyes and mind, there is a clear border between "authorised art" and "un-authorised/anti-authorisation art". Thus, he prohibits "graffitti" while he encourage "street painting" (He's using the words, see the note).
Next to a new museum (the New National Museum of Art, or I should think it's the New National Gallery of Art. The archtecture of the museum/gallery is by the late Kisho Kurokawa, by the way).
Roppongi, Tokyo.
*Click on the photo and read tags.
Next to this wall, there is a "No Graffiti" poster. They say they are watching, though I didn't find a CCTV above the poster. Well, there must be a camera or two nearby.
Roppongi, Tokyo.
1 (centre). Farewell...,
2. At the gate,
3. Flowers for Nagai,
4. Flowers for Nagai from Burmese people,
5. Nagai's camera (not the lost one),
6. Attendants,
7. Attendant,
8. The press crew,
9. He's gone.,
10. Nagai's works,
11. Nagai's works 2,
12. Nagai's works 3,
13. Nagai's works 4
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
Kenji Nagai's body has gone to be cremated. They played Nagai's favourite music for the last minutes: 吉田拓郎 (Takuro Yoshida, a Japanese folk singer-songwriter) and John Lennon. The hearse went out of the ceremonial site to "Imagine".
Rest in peace, Nagai-san.
PS:
The song was "Imagine". We sent him to the pure land (浄土) on the Lennon's famous tune.
While we waited for his coffin to be carried into the hearse, the rain fall got heavier and heavier.
The person under the transparent umbrella is a media photographer.
Journalists at the funeral. Monday 8 October 2007. Aoyama, Tokyo.