Wednesday 26 February 2020

Qi Bai Shi - Rats and Millet

#nezumi #yearoftherat #qibaishi #chinesepainting

For my final Year of the Rat Artwork a Chinese painting by Qi Bai Shi.

Note how the puddling technique is used to create the rats fur and bodies!

Also the simple but powerful line work and two colors plus black all working together!

The cereal is millet. Enjoy!




Sunday 16 February 2020

More Nezumi - Prints!

#Nezumi #prints #japaneseprints

Here's some NEZUMI on Japanese Prints!


Shigenobu New year print -  a woman confronting a mouse or rat. Its white so about an escaped pet?


Here's a #surimono format print with the image of the rat serving as an introduction or maybe the top page of the print when folded since Japanese texts were read from right to left.


The last print is by Seiho - 1937 of a rat exploring a top hat. 
Kawaii but also iki ? 

Monday 10 February 2020

Inro Nezumi

#nezumi #yearoftherat #2020 #mouse #inro #japanese lacquer

INRO NEZUMI

Here are 3 delightful inro featuring nezumi to enjoy ! They also shows the diversity of techniques used to make lacquered objects and turn them into small elegant treasures.
A tonally restrained but wonderful use of the sprinkled gold dust technique 



A  beautiful netsuke attached to a polychrome lacquer with very limited use of gold and skilled use of the low relief technique 



A small ivory netsuke contrasts with plain black and gold used for an outline rather than tone.



Monday 3 February 2020

SHU and Nezumi - A story of small animals

#yearoftherat #nezumi #radical208 # kanji #hanzi 

SHU and Nezumi - A story of small animals 



Radical 208 translated as Rat or Mouse is also used to refer to several other species of rodents and insectivores too hence my use of the rainbow filter to reflect this diversity.

This may tell us something about cultural change in ancient China when writing systems were first developed and also that despite legends that Hanzi have changed over the centuries.

Just as some words written with radical 153 also appear written with the dog radical so likewise some animals with names written using SHU also appear with dog used instead.

There are 2 main reasons I can think of for this

Firstly the Dog radical has LESS Strokes - easier to memorize and write

Secondly a change of attitudes towards animals.
With growing urbanization small mammals that might compete with farmers seen as a group of pests.

Squirrels have a Chinese name meaning pine rat songshu

Voles are field rats tianshu

Shrews which are insect are qu with shu as the radical for their character.

Diao (pine) martens have dual forms

Weasels lingyou or qingyou called itachi in Japanese retain their own kanji

Oddly Moles have a hanzi of their own but in SinoJapanese the word is written with 2 kanji.

What do all these have in common apart form being small mammals?

They would mostly be seen as plant eating nuisances or food or fur sources by early farmers.

Squirrel fur can be used for brushes and winter hats.

Voles water or field do look like rats or mice if you only spot them briefly.

Pine martens are small predators also used for fur.

Weasels will try to raid poultry pens.

Moles digging runs can disrupt the planting and plowing of wheat and cereal crops and gardens.

However my first suggestion is probably the most likely though bearing in mind that Chinese has a semantic classifier system classifying animals as large predators dog and dog like, big cat/ tiger, medium size predators, badgers leopards etc, a third category for other small mammals makes sense?

If you have only seen these names listed under the dog radical do check out the entries under radical 208 in various web and print dictionaries.