netsuke tiger

Netsuke - Tiger (Signed Okatori)

This tiger by Okatori has big heavy eye lids and a swirling tail curled up on his back. His markings are carved slithers of wispy leaf like patterns. He crouches with his hind leg reaching up to his mouth, licking his paw - a yoga pose definitely to aspire to!

I sketch what I can from my dark grainy photograph and scan the sketch, print on tracing paper, rub the image onto the block, carve the tiger and ink up.

Two bottles of ink sit on my studio table like two characters, a bright green squat rounded shape with a black cap and a tall black cuboid with a red cap. I have been using the little green bottle of Japanese Carbon ink which smells of cool mint. Today I am going to try the tall bottle of Chinese sumi ink. The smell is pungent almost like stale blood. I recently read 'Colour' by Victoria Finlay. Each chapter is titled by a colour. In 'Black' she explains the origins of producing ink from soot and sometimes from dead bodies and I wonder what concoction this bottle is holding as I find it hard to get used to the overpowering smell.

Wood Tiger

Before inking up the wood I look at the carved image. I can't make out the shape at all. First I see a dog, then a monkey and then finally my eyes adjust to the lines and a tiger emerges from the grain. I am still printing on dry paper as I just want to get a quick idea of the kind of print this wood will make. If it's a bad print at least I won't have wasted time dampening Hosho paper. Fortunately the first print on Japon Simile does reveal a tiger and not one to be messed with. His eyes are staring wildly, much more than the one behind the glass at the V&A. It's the biggest print of the mini prints so far (9cm x 7cm) which shows that tigers really do need their space.

TigerSignedOkatoriPrint.jpg

"Although the tiger is not native to Japan, it has been widely used as a motif in Japanese art because it is one of the 12 animals of the East Asian zodiac which derives from Chinese cosmology. The 12 animals, one for each year, were used in a fixed order that was repeated every 12 years. The traditional order is rat, ox, tiger, hare, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, cock, dog and boar. The rat, monkey and tiger were among the most popular of the zodiac animals. A tiger netsuke might be used over the new-year festivities for the year of the tiger, as well as at any time throughout that year." V&A online collections

Japanese Woodblock Printing Courses

I have so many questions I want to ask about this process and a few months ago I had booked a one to one day course with printmaker Laura Boswell. Laura had kindly offered to come and teach at my studio in Bristol but unfortunately due to unforeseen family matters we had to cancel the date. I hope to try and book in with Laura again some point in the future. For now I look forward to her exhibition at R K Burt Gallery in London with Ian Phillips from 12th - 22nd May.

In the mean time I have been looking at alternative Japanese Woodblock Printing courses. I had decided it was too far to travel to Edinburgh Printmakers a few months ago when I was researching courses but today I'm feeling adventurous. Paul Furneaux will be teaching the course at Edinburgh Printmakers. I came across Paul Furneaux a few months ago and really like his work. His approach is very free, direct and expressive. Here's a video showing the process of dampening paper for printing.

I ring the college to find out more. There is one space available...I click the book online now button.

Resources

Laura Boswell

R K Burt Gallery

Paul Furneaux

Dampening Paper video

Tiger by Okatomi (430-1904 Dresden Bequest)

Carving Tiger

I moved into my studio in March 2012. I set up my Adana 8 x 5 platen press and began to print. No computer. No digital printer. Just the simplicity of my printing press, tools, inks and paper. This was good for a time but when I recently started to explore woodblock printing I realise the beauty of combining the print world with the digital world. I was initially sketching my images directly onto the tracing paper and then rubbing the reversed side onto the wood but soon realised its limitations - if I needed to re-carve any of these netsuke I would have to sketch from scratch each time as I did with Recumbent Goat. So a few weeks ago I brought my old computer and printer to the studio, which has been a break through and another step forward in getting to grips with this process.


TigerTomotadaCarving.jpg

Every month I meet with Lilla and Meg. We carve out time and space to explore print making, stamping, make connections, conversation and share our explorations. I have brought the tiger ready to carve. I know it's going to be the most difficult one to carve so far as the image is so small (5cm h x 4cm w).

I start carving...a couple of hours later I've already taken out some of the tiger's eye. The outlines are unrecognisable. I take it home to finish and know that this little tiger is far too small for my limited experience with Japanese wood carving tools. I have lost the definition from the original sketch.

TigerTomotadaPrint.jpg

The good news is I can re-size the original image in Photoshop and print on a fresh piece of tracing paper to transfer to a new block. I notice also that the tools are not as sharp and it's time to use the slipstrop to hone the blades.

Netsuke - Tiger (Signed Tomotada)

I am working on Tiger. The ivory tiger netsuke is crouched behind the glass with his back leg raised up to his whiskers. He is in between 'Tiger' signed Ransen (A.52-1915 FOX GIFT) and 'Tiger' signed Mitsuhide (A.51-1915 FOX GIFT). On a recent trip to see an interview with Judith Kerr (The Tiger who came to Tea) at The Southbank in London. I spent the next morning visiting Japan to find a different type of tiger lurking in a corner.

Neatly tucked between Europe and China, Japan is on display. The light is dim and hauntingly spacious. Textiles, ceramics, Japanese woodblock prints, lacquer chests glow from glass cabinets and in the corner, the reason I have come here; rows and rows of miniature sculpted creatures behind glass. Japanese netsuke.

Edmund De Waal mentions in his book "for rooms covered in gold, it is very very dark". After reading In praise of Shadows by Junichiro Tanizaki (Recommended by Lucinda at Mr B's Emporium in Bath) I now understand the importance of low lighting and how gold and lacquer actually become illuminated in the dark.

"And I realised then that only in dim lit half-light is the true beauty of Japanese lacquerware revealed - Lacquerware decorated in gold is not something to be seen in a brilliant light, to be taken in at a simple glance; it should be left in the dark, a part here and a part there picked up by a faint light." Junichiro Tanizaki

So here I am in Japan. This is Room 45 at the V&A South Kensington. I am photographing in turn these new found inspirational objects, quietly building my own collection of netsuke. See post The Hare with the Amber Eyes, for my introduction to netsuke. I am drawn to the tigers, possibly after an inspirational interview with Judith Kerr yesterday afternoon - taking me back to my own childhood and one of my favourite illustrated books 'The Tiger who came to Tea.' It was first published in 1968, now a classic which is still so popular with children today. The entire audience, including the children, are mesmerised by Judith's eloquently spoken stories about her own childhood in Germany when Hilter came into power.

I upload my photos to the computer, blow up the tiger to full screen and make a drawing of the the tiger in my sketchbook.


TigerTomotadaSketch.jpg

I then scan the image back into the computer, re-size the tiger in Photoshop and print it out on tracing paper.

TigerTomotadaTracing.jpg

I rub the reverse side of the tracing paper onto the wood with a bone folder. What a joy to discover the ink transfers beautifully onto the magnolia wood. Much clearer than the rough plywood. This tiger is ready for carving...

Tiger (signed Tomotada 429-1904 DRESDEN BEQUEST)