TAMA had twenty years together creating their anarchic folk music. These days Chiku and drummer Ichikawa perform with a band called Pascals whilst the other members, Takimoto and Yanagihara, have their own solo careers. Part of TAMA's charm was in their rejection of the cute, manufactured J Pop appearance and sound. Instead they embraced a more primitive or naïve style. In particular, drummer Ichikawa Kohji adopted a casual dress sense based on the artist Yamashita Kyoshi, a legendary figure with Downs syndrome who wandered Japan, often without a shirt, painting. Known as the Japanese Van Gogh, he died in 1971 at the age of 49. It was during the war when he ran away and began living the life of a vagrant painting as he went. He had to beg for his own food and was once arrested for vagrancy. His style of painting is described as being 'mosaic'. Clearly his pictures have also influenced the painting style of film director Kitano Takeshi. There is a clear similarity between the pictures of Yamashita Kyoshi and the artwork that is featured in Takeshi's film Hanabi. I completed my PhD on Yoshimoto Banana and contemporary Japanese literature at Swinburne University of Technology in 2009. I want to use this blog to post notes about Yoshimoto Banana and other aspects of Japanese culture that interest me.
Saturday, July 12, 2014
YAMASHITA KYOSHI: HADAKA TAISHO (LIFE OF A VAGABOND)
TAMA had twenty years together creating their anarchic folk music. These days Chiku and drummer Ichikawa perform with a band called Pascals whilst the other members, Takimoto and Yanagihara, have their own solo careers. Part of TAMA's charm was in their rejection of the cute, manufactured J Pop appearance and sound. Instead they embraced a more primitive or naïve style. In particular, drummer Ichikawa Kohji adopted a casual dress sense based on the artist Yamashita Kyoshi, a legendary figure with Downs syndrome who wandered Japan, often without a shirt, painting. Known as the Japanese Van Gogh, he died in 1971 at the age of 49. It was during the war when he ran away and began living the life of a vagrant painting as he went. He had to beg for his own food and was once arrested for vagrancy. His style of painting is described as being 'mosaic'. Clearly his pictures have also influenced the painting style of film director Kitano Takeshi. There is a clear similarity between the pictures of Yamashita Kyoshi and the artwork that is featured in Takeshi's film Hanabi.
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