Saturday, March 8, 2014

Japan: Yokohama Doll Museum

While on holiday in Japan, I kept a detailed series of notes in honour of Nanowrimo.  All posts about Japan comprise excerpts from my journals.


6th November, 2013

"Where the Baby Fish Aquarium made me feel giggly, the Yokohama Doll Museum makes me quiet.  Contemplative, even.  I wasn't expecting that.  I'm not even sure what to expect of a doll museum.  We only pick it because it sounds cool and is located in Motomachi Chukagai, a stroll away from Chinatown.


The sun is setting when we get there.  I don't know what I'm bracing myself to see - Barbies, a row of Cabbage Patch kids - but what it really is, is a love song to toys and artforms throughout the ages.


The museum, which is small but colourful and wonderfully organised, has dolls and toys from over a hundred different countries and from throughout the 19th century till now.  The introductory panel tells us that Yokohama has a soft spot for dolls because the dolls from overseas, the West in particular, came in to Japan through Yokohama and at the same time, on a kind of friendship exchange programme, dolls from Yokohama went out to the rest of the world.  This way, children from all over got to know each other vicariously.  The friendship dolls apparently travelled on a special passport that cost one cent.


The array of toys is quite astounding.  And every one has an individual identity and story.  The Japanese used to make horses out of tightly twisted and packed straw.  There are little reindeer on toothpick sized legs that peek out from forests of tiny trees.  The horses from later years look more like Inuit art with graphic colours and prints.  The Brazilian dolls are great fun, wearing fruit on their heads and real beaded necklaces of their own.  The Korean dolls are pretty and slim with exquisite makeup and costumes but there are also a couple of older people, a grandfather and grandmother, sitting together and laughing.


One set of animals groups together playing instruments and baying with endearingly human looks on their lupine faces.


We find one set of dolls from my father's homeland and... well, I have to say, I'm not sure what's going on, Pakistan.  You guys really need to lift your game.


The Mexican dolls have corn husk clothes, as do the dolls from one Scandinavian country and despite their monochromatic garb, both sets are deeply expressive.  The Native American dolls are filled with intricate and heartbreaking detail and I start to realise that they are all about different aspects of life.  An old woman carrying a bundle of twigs.  A man struggling to prop a tuna on his shoulders.  A hunter, coming home with the pelt of a deer in his hand.  A woman at a loom, or feeding a baby.  


We move further back into history with intricately made Japanese dolls and the "twice baked" Bisque dolls from France that started doll-making and owning crazes.  There is one Bisque doll, a Miss Mettie McRoberts, who has her own trunk of clothes.  In a separate room, we get to watch the doll-making process for a Japanese and Western doll.  The processes are similar, molding and carving and delicate, slow brush strokes to paint eyelashes and red lips.  It's absolutely fascinating.  

Some of the dolls are immediately, intuitively exquisite.  Some are strange, even a little grotesque but every single one of them was made lovingly for a reason, with a purpose in mind.  Someone molded their limbs and curled their hair.  Sewed them clothes.  Carved their faces and painted in eyes.  Some as religious effigies.  Some, simply to be loved.  I am suddenly deeply moved.  We walk, quietly, respectfully from case to case admiring the workmanship and the effort.  Maybe some time a long time ago, these were some child's dolls and drank from plastic teacups at plastic tea parties or comforted an insomniac ten-year-old. 

The most haunting part of the museum is a timeline that stretches over two floors of dolls over the years.  We walk down the line looking at pictures of people smiling with their dolls and cuddling them.  

My mum points at a picture of toddlers in my dad's year.  1942.  "They would all be in their seventies now," she says.  We stand and look at them for a little while longer.  


We decide to walk the three-something kilometres back to Minato Mirai, where we are staying.  My head is full of things I've seen, of kindness and passion and good-humour and things being treated with respect.  The sky is turning navy and all the little lights are winking in the harbour as runners, children, dogs head home.  We walk to feel the wind on our faces, to see the sliver of a crescent moon climb slowly over the skyline.  


My mum picks up a gingko leaf.  Holds it in both hands and shows me how it fans out.  We take a picture, throw the leaf to the wind.

A dog's bark carries on the air, over the slap of waves on the concrete of the canal.  A particularly big swash creates a fine spray and two people leaning on the railing at the wrong time scream.

My mother shoves her hands in her pockets, looks at me and says, "I'm so glad to be here."


PS  After our fake detox day, we are so starved we end up pigging out on a shitload of good ramen, gyoza and veggies.  Righteous!"


Friday, March 7, 2014

Bath and Body Works, in Singapore


Sindhu and I decided to hit the new Bath and Body Works in Marina Bay Sands last week just to check it out and even though I was under strict orders from my mother not to purchase anything, well, SHE'S NOT THE BOSS OF ME! 

Libby suggested that I do a short review, so here goes.  Bath and Body Works in the United States is relatively affordable and I was worried that the markup was going to be astronomical.  We were pleasantly surprised to find out that while for some products (pocketbac hand sanitisers, I'm looking at you), the markup was steep, for others, it was comparable to Victoria's Secret in that three big items (moisturiser, body spray, body wash) would run you about $48.  And the smaller body sprays and room sprays were about $10.  Not too bad, I guess.

So, I got:

1)  Buttercream Mint Candle - This candle smells like a less minty, more buttery version of Yankee Candle's Nostalgic Snow which absolutely kills me because Nostalgic Snow is limited edition and I have no idea if I will ever see it again.  Buttercream Mint satisfies my craving and it is such a beautiful, decorative green colour.

2)  Winter Cafe Candle (basically repackaged Espresso Bar) - You know how Starbucks is my second home?  This candle makes it smell like Starbucks in my room.  Dark roast coffee, with a touch of nutty sweetness and vanilla foam.  I play soft hipster music as I burn it and I feel like there's a barrista brewing away in the corner.  What's not to love?

3)  Forever Red Eau De Parfum - Okay.  I really wasn't going to buy a perfume.  I really, really wasn't.  But I read the scent description on this and... well, how can you say no to vanilla and rum?  I tried it and swooned - it's like cake soaked with heady, dark alcohol and I keep sniffing my wrist all day.  

4, 5 and 6)  I've tried the Bath and Body Works moisturisers already and I think they are just a little less rich in formulation than the Victoria's Secret ones but more complex-smelling.  So, swings and roundabouts.  I got two scents I've tried before - Sweet Pea (sweet, very slightly, pleaseantly floral) and Twilight Woods (sweet and musky, like ripe fruit and sandalwood) and Midnight Pomegranate (mostly just a clean, fruity amplified pomengrante scent).

That's pretty much it.  I'd say it was pretty restrained... for me.  Sid got a beautifully deep-scented blackberry and vanilla sugar scrub and a couple of sprays.  

We'll be back!  Till then, I had an awesome evening laughing over products with Sindhu in French accents (don't ask) and then, stuffing our faces with bak chor mee.  It doesn't get better than that.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Sunrise


The problem with pursuing photography is that there are just two golden hours in a day and I mostly work through one of them.  So this weekend, a friend and I went to Changi Beach to see if we could capture the first one.  

Having had a couple of early morning photo shoots with Rebecca, I know what to expect when I'm taking pictures of people, but I've never taken actual sunrise pictures before and my brother absconded to Sapporo with the filter, so I wasn't sure how it would go.  


But it was lovely taking pictures at my own speed with the briny sea breeze lifting my shirt and buffeting round my face and I'm even quite happy with some of the shots.  I followed the sun as it climbed up through the clouds and worked on practising exposure but, like a dolt that can't multitask, I had some issues keeping the horizon level.


I loved how the sun reflected off the waves in rippling crescents and how the water seemed at times to climb over itself, making frothy shelves.


I also wanted to capture how dark and atmospheric it was, and how the waves scrumbled like chalk, all crunchy and defined, so I spent a good deal of time on my haunches in the sand, playing with the shutter speed.  At the peak of every wave, I would hold the shutter and my breath and wait for it to plunge downward like an arc of ice, smooth and glassy.

It was good practice for steadiness and timing, but I think I need to go back a couple more times before I get it just right.


When the sky had lightened past the point of no return, we took a few more snaps and then headed for breakfast... and it was only eight thirty!  I felt calm, fresh, at peace.

I never thought I would say this, but the older I get, the more of a morning lark I become.  



"Why do we bother with the rest of the day,
the swale of the afternoon,
the sudden dip into evening,

then night with his notorious perfumes,
his many-pointed stars?

This is the best—
throwing off the light covers,
feet on the cold floor,
and buzzing around the house on espresso— "
                                                                              -- Billy Collins

Why, indeed!

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Fumes


Yesterday was the perfect day.  I'm on the kind of writing jag that I haven't been on in, maybe, years and I've been taking it out by hand on one of my sweet Japanese notebooks.

I decided not to meet anybody, woke up late, wrote, had coffee with my mother, wrote, had a slow plod in the late afternoon, came back and wrote yet again.  My hand started cramping, my fingers seizing up from all the scribbling.  I went to bed feeling strangely proud.  This is the first time in a long time that I've written without a plan.  It's all gibberish right now, but I'm enjoying the process so much, I don't even care.  I just want to see where the pen takes me.

And speaking of pens, if you like them, you can't go wrong with Paper Stone; adorable gel ink pens at 5 for $5 which make a beautiful, black (slightly waterproof) line of, in my opinion, just the right thickness.  I don't really need new pens, but these make me want to write forever.  

As if I needed an excuse.
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