Tag: ‘Vintage’

Bunraku puppet robots resurrected (pics/video)

26 Jan 2009

Bunraku robot -- Bunraku robot --

A trio of old-school bunraku puppet robots revived nearly 40 years after they were unveiled at the 1970 World Expo in Osaka are temporarily on display at the National Science Museum in Tokyo. Modeled after classic bunraku puppets, each pre-programmed robot is driven by around 20 pneumatic cylinders that move the arms, torso, head and face in sync with accompanying audio.

Here's some video of one whose face transforms into that of a demon:


+ Bunraku robot

A few more photos of the other robots, which are on display at the Science Museum until February 8:

Bunraku robot -- Bunraku robot -- Bunraku robot --

Bunraku robot --

Bunraku robot --

Bunraku robot --

Bunraku robot --

Bunraku robot --

Futuristic credit card ads from the ’70s

21 Jan 2009

Sanwa Bank ran some funky magazine ads for the JCB card in the early 1970s.

Vintage JCB card ad --

Date with Miss Venus... Travel to Mars... Brain transplant... Space restaurant... Vacation home on the moon... Time machine... Rent-a-rocket... Life extension medication... All OK with the JCB card!!?

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Vintage JCB card ad --

"I'm back from my reconnaissance mission. This is Earth money."

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Vintage JCB card ad --

Cash has disappeared from Earth?

Vintage alien landscapes by Kazuaki Saito

08 Dec 2008

In the early 1970s, artist Kazuaki Saito's fantastic alien landscape illustrations graced the covers of SF Magazine, Japan's first successful and longest running science fiction periodical.

S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover -- S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover -- S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover -- S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover -- S-F Magazine cover --

S-F Magazine cover --

[More: SF Magazine review]

Dr Lakra inks Mexican tattoos on Japanese prints

31 Oct 2008

Mexican tattoo artist Dr Lakra is known for drawing macabre designs on found objects and images. During a visit to Japan last year, he inked hardcore tattoos on some fine antique ukiyo-e woodblock prints purchased at used bookstores. Some of these works were included in the "Goth" exhibition at the Yokohama Museum of Art in March, but a few of the more provocative tattooed shunga prints were refused because they offended museum officials.

Dr. Lakra --
Untitled (Hiroshima Tomonohira Take-Emon)

Dr. Lakra --
Untitled

Dr. Lakra --
Untitled (Yokohama doll)

Dr. Lakra --
Untitled (Shunga IV)

[Images: Kate MacGarry]

Vintage avant-garde manga by Maki Sasaki

27 Oct 2008

"A Dream To Have In Heaven" (Tengoku De Miru Yume - 天国でみる夢) by Maki Sasaki is a surreal non-narrative one-shot manga published in the November 1967 issue of the now-defunct Garo, an alternative manga monthly magazine that peaked in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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A Dream To Have In Heaven --
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Kaiju anatomical drawings

23 Oct 2008

Flickr user modern_fred's Japanese movie monster scan collection includes a few vintage illustrations detailing the innards of Godzilla and other famous kaiju.

Anatomy of Godzilla --
Godzilla

This anatomical sketch of Godzilla reveals a relatively small brain, giant lungs that allow underwater breathing, leg muscles that can support 20,000 tons of body weight, and a "uranium sack" and "nuclear reaction sack" that produce radioactive fire-breath and energize the body.

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Anatomy of Jiger --
Jiger reveals her inner self

According to this anatomical drawing, Jiger has a pair of horns that can shoot missiles made of hardened saliva and one that fires a deadly magnetium (?) beam.

Anatomy of Jiger --
Jiger (uploaded by Paulkaiju)

Other characteristics include extremely powerful suction cups covering the entire body, an organ that enables Jiger to spit jets of seawater at 300 kilometers per hour, a stomach that can melt iron ore, and a tail that functions as an ovipositor.

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Anatomy of Mothra larva --
Mothra larva

This anatomical sketch of Mothra in larval form shows a robust jaw, an enormous stomach, an elongated silk-producing organ, a row of breathing orifices on either side of the body, countless cilia on the bottom surface, and a rudimentary nervous system consisting of a cerebral ganglion and a network of nerve ganglia distributed across the body.

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Anatomy of Guiron --
Guiron -- a peek inside the belly of the beast

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Anatomy of Anguirus --
Anguirus

This anatomical diagram of Anguirus shows eyes that can detect infrared light, a pair of sub-brains that control the forelegs and rear legs, highly developed rear leg muscles, and a heavily spiked rear carapace.

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This illustration of "Flaming Monster Gamera" (from An Anatomical Guide to Monsters) reveals eyes that can see in the dark, arms strong enough to lift and throw a 50-ton boat, and "fire sacks" that let Gamera shoot flames from his hands.

Anatomy of Gamera --
Gamera

The illustration also shows a series of sack-like organs for storing lava, oil, coal and uranium (like Godzilla), as well as balloon-like organs in the legs that can blast air through the bottoms of the feet.

[Link: modern_fred's kaiju eiga photoset]

Related: Kaiju art collection

Monsters in mid-1870s news prints

15 Oct 2008

For a brief period in the mid-1870s, artistic woodblock prints known as "newspaper nishiki-e" were a popular form of mass entertainment in Japan. These colorful prints fed the public's enormous appetite for sensationalism by retelling shocking stories culled from the major newspapers of the day. The Meiji government swiftly cracked down on the publishers of these "unofficial" sources of information, causing them to disappear as quickly as they had appeared, but not before hundreds of issues had been published and circulated around Japan. While newspaper nishiki-e most often retold stories of scandalous or heinous crimes, they occasionally presented accounts of monsters, ghosts and mysterious happenings, such as the ones included here.

Monster in nishikie news paper --
Osaka Nichinichi Shinbunshi, No. 13 (ca. 1875)

This print shows a lecherous monster said to have haunted the home of a master carpenter in the Kanda area of Tokyo. The apparition habitually showed up late at night to perform unspeakable acts on his sleeping wife, until the family enlisted the help of prayer-chanting priests to cleanse their home. In the Meiji era, recurring nightmares about this sort of monster were apparently quite common.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Tokyo Nichinichi Shinbun, No. 445 (1874)

In the early morning hours of August 4, 1873, a man named Umemura Toyotaro was awakened by an earthquake. As he struggled to get back to sleep, his child, who lay nearby, suddenly burst out crying hysterically. The man looked up to find a strange, three-eyed monk standing over them. He watched in disbelief as the mysterious monk grew taller and taller, until his head reached the ceiling. Unrattled, the man grabbed the monk's sleeve and pulled him to the ground. The monk turned out to be an old shape-shifting tanuki.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Tokyo Nichinichi Shinbun, No. 697 (May 25, 1874)

This print depicts a giant alligator inhabiting the Koga inlet of eastern Mie prefecture. The feared sea monster, which was described as being covered in seaweed and oysters, was known to attack ships and devour anyone thrown overboard. One day a ship in the area caught fire. As the crew abandoned the burning vessel, the creature ate them all.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Osaka Nishiki-e Nichinichi Shinbunshi, No. 26 (ca. 1875)

This print shows the ghost of a disgruntled candy store owner who grew ill and died after falling deep in debt to his neighbor, the owner of a successful tempura restaurant. The ghost has returned to settle the score.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Tokyo Nichinichi Shinbun, No. 851 (1874)

In 1874, the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy embarked on the Taiwan Expedition of 1874, their first ever overseas deployment. This print depicts the restless spirit of a young Japanese soldier named Saito who died from illness during the mission. Saito's ghost returned home for several days to haunt his brother-in-law, who had grown very depressed after learning of Saito's fate.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Yubin Hochi Shinbun, No. 527 (1875)

This print shows the restless ghost of a woman whose husband neglected her so much that she fell ill and died. Upset at the way he was raising their young child, she returned from the spirit world to complain in his ear while he slept. The baby woke up and began to cry, so she cradled it in her arms and began to nurse it. When the man awoke and screamed at the sight of his undead wife, she vanished.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Osaka Nichinichi Shinbun, No. 8 (ca. 1875)

Despite appearances, this monster means no harm. The helpful creature is attempting to reform a failed Hyogo-area politician named Nakayama, who neglected his responsibilities after falling victim to a widow's charms.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Tokyo Nichinichi Shinbun, No. 917

When a man stepped outside onto his veranda to check on his crying child, he was alarmed to find a gigantic eagle sitting in a cedar tree overhead. The creature, which stood taller than a grown man, was staring hungrily down at the child. In a panic, the man grabbed his gun and shot the menacing bird from its perch. The enormous size of the carcass astounded him.

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Monster in nishikie news paper --
Nichinichi Shinbun (ca. 1875)

This print shows a policeman capturing a tanuki, a mythical trickster animal known for its ability to outwit humans. This nishiki-e can be viewed as a reflection of the identity struggle that Japan was experiencing at the time, with the tanuki symbolizing Japan's traditional past and the policeman symbolizing the "enlightened" modern society that rapidly emerged after the Meiji Restoration of 1868.

[Some scans via: Waseda University Library // Further reading: News nishikie]

Related:
- 19th-century ghost scrolls
- Edo-period monster paintings by Sawaki Suushi

Vintage Japanese matchbox ads

05 Oct 2008

These stylish matchbox ads for Japanese bars, cafes and restaurants date from the 1920s to 1940s. See the complete Flickr photoset (uploaded by maraid) for much more.

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Shimbashi - Dai-san Otako (Izakaya?)

Vintage Japanese matchbook -- Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Ichifuji Shokudo (Restaurant) // Cafe Takimichi

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Bar Romance

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Fujiya Shokudo

Vintage Japanese matchbook -- Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Kissakeishoku Eho (Cafe Eho) // Cafe Eiraku

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Asahi Tea Room

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Shimbashi Mahjong Club

Vintage Japanese matchbook -- Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Ogawa Cafe // Ultra Service

Vintage Japanese matchbook --
Honten Morishita no Fuji to Seiyu

[Related: Matchbox madness]

Ooishi Hyoroku Monogatari picture scroll

26 Aug 2008

The Ooishi Hyoroku Monogatari, a largely fictional story featured in picture scrolls in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, tells of a young warrior and his encounters with trickster foxes posing as yokai. According to the National Museum of Japanese History, the story takes place in 1624 in Kagoshima, where a group of notorious young warriors have assembled. When a rumor circulates about shape-shifting foxes that have hoodwinked some people in the area and shaved their heads, the men decide to test the courage of one of the young warriors, Ooishi Hyoroku, by sending him on a mission to capture the mischievous creatures.

When the foxes hear about this mission, they transform into eight different yokai to frighten the young warrior:

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Uja

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Minobajo

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Mitsume Koen

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Nurarihyon

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Hobeni Taro

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Teremenchippei

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Konotsukitokko

Oishi Hyoroku Monogatari --
Nuppeppo

Hyoroku flees in fear each time he encounters one of the monsters. After he finally catches a pair of foxes, his father suddenly appears and urges him to let them go. Hyoroku then finds that his "father" is actually a fox in disguise -- but only after he is tricked into eating sweet dumplings made of horse droppings.

Later, the foxes appear as Buddhist monks and trick him into shaving his head. In the end, though, Hyoroku successfully captures two more foxes, and his comrades honor his achievement by making him breakfast.

Several versions of the Ooishi Hyoroku Monogatari scroll remain in existence today. A scan of an entire scroll, dated 1801 (author/illustrator unknown), is viewable online at Waseda University Library. (An undivided version of this scroll is also available here. -Thanks, Darren!)