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The Ginza is, of course, Tokyo's most famous
and expensive shopping district. I passed through a few times doing
toy and other shopping. The Tokai bank (ahead on the right in the
top two pictures, not that you can tell) had a great, free exhibition
of Hiroshige's "Fifty-three stages on the Tokaido" series.
Prints of most of the fifty-three stages by the ukiyo-e master were
displayed! |
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But mostly the Ginza just has some cool buildings.
This Coke building and the screens next to and inside it definitely
define the Tokyo experience! |
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More cool buildings. The Sony building, at left, is
also a showroom. All of these pictures were taken along the main drag
of the Ginza, chuo-dori. |
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One of the destinations in the Ginza: Hakuhinkan
Toy Park. This is a great toy store, along with KiddieLand in Harajuku
one of the must-visit spots for a trip to Japan. I was very
happy when I found what's shown at left: The Parappa the Rapper character
goods section! Go Rodney (Greenblatt, the artist who did Parappa)!
This set my Visa card back a bit. Incidentally, on this trip I found
Visa cards were very widely accepted in Japan -- something that wasn't
true a few years ago (although Hakuhinkan took them even on my previous
trip). |
My friend James took me to the Gallery on the Ginza where a mutual
acquaintance bought a couple shin-hanga a couple years ago (Shin-hanga
are Japanese woodlblock prints by artists active in the 1920s and
1930s. These artists were among the first Japanese artists trained
in western art, and thus in perspective. Some of them rediscovered
the art of Japanese woodblock printing and the results are called
shin-hanga). Through them, I contacted Gallery Sobi, which is just
off of the south end of the Ginza in the Shimbashi area. Here's a
(very off-center)picture of the new Yoshida Toshi print I acquired
there, Running. I've been collecting prints from the Yoshida
family of Japanese woodblock printers for about five years, but this
is the first of Toshi's contemporary style prints I've acquired (my
other prints are shin-hanga styled prints from either Yoshida Toshi
or his father, Yoshida Hiroshi). |
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"Running" ©
1975 Yoshida Toshi
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