Tokyo Travel Sketchbook traces the journey of illustrator and graphic designer Amaia Arrazola on a four-week trip through the beating heart of Tokyo.
When Arrazola accepts a month long artist's residency in the Japanese capital, she has little idea of what to expect but gamely packs her paints and pencils and seizes the opportunity to create an illustrated diary of her time there, filling the pages of her sketchbooks with curious images of life in the world's largest city.
This book provides readers with a unique vision of Japan's capital, as seen through the eyes of an artist. Arrazola immerses herself in the cult of Hello Kitty and the pop-eyed charms of Kawaii cute culture, while conveying the collision of traditional and modern Japanese culture in the female Samurais she meets and draws.
The city's cultural curiosities come alive in a metropolis that is ever on the go, as she browses sex shops, drinks pink coffee, eats spaghetti sandwiches and photographs subway sleepers. Throughout her explorations, Arrazola uses the concept of wabi sabi as a guiding principle-coming to see her own life and artworks as examples of flawed beauty and imperfectly perfect Zen design.
The result is a fresh, often funny, one-of-a-kind look at a city that works hard and plays hard-in many surprising ways. At the heart of Tokyo Travel Sketchbook are two contradictory Japans-the glittering neon world of a high-tech ultramodern society existing side-by-side with a nation where ancient tradition holds sway and where the unadorned, the simple and the silent are prized and celebrated as much as the new, the fashionable and the trendy. These competing realities make for a memorable visual journey and a stunning souvenir of a stranger's brief stay in a strange land.
From smoking laws to high-tech toilets, Arrazola finds beauty in the weirdness and imperfection of this modern metropolis.
*Recommended for readers ages 14 & up*
Amaia Arrazola is a Spanish artist who works in a variety of mediums and formats. She began her career in Madrid as an illustrator and art director, eventually leaving office life to become a freelance illustrator in Barcelona. Her wide-ranging artistic endeavors include silkscreening, ceramics, murals, fabric art, sculpture, typography and graphic design. This is her first book, produced during a month long work residency in Tokyo. You can see more of her work at www.amaiaarrazola.com
Kymm Coveney was born in Boston, earned a BA in Modern English and Spanish Literature (Wheaton College, Massachusetts) in 1981, and has lived in Spain since the 1982 World Cup. Co-host of Barcelona's multilingual poetry recital series, PoemameBCN, she is a freelance writer and translator, as well as habitual translation slam moderator for MET (Mediterranean Editors and Translators). Flash fiction, poems and translations can be found online through betterlies.blogspot.com. She tweets mostly other people's poems @KymmInBarcelona.
Title: Tokyo Travel Sketchbook: Kawaii Culture, Wabi Sabi Design, Female Samurais and Other Obsessions
Author: Amaia Arrazola
ISBN: 9784805315361
Binding:
Publisher: Tuttle Publishing
Publication Date: 2020-03-03
Number of Pages: 192
Weight: 0.6002 kg
...this will appeal to armchair travelers no matter where they're from. - Booklist
...Whether browsing sex shops, encountering pink coffee for the first time, or describing the scene at a five-seat izakaya, Arrazola is an amiable tour guide. - Publishers Weekly
...Readers interested in Japanese culture, especially kawaii, will delight in Arrazola's fresh look at everyday life in Tokyo. Young adults, fans of graphic novels, and armchair travelers of all types and ages will enjoy this colorful and amusing cultural worldview. - Library Journal
Part art collection, part city guide, the Tokyo Travel Sketchbook features a stunning range of drawings that perfectly capture Japanese culture. -Yamato Magazine
The appealing and really special drawing style brings the reader a little closer to this strange giant city...A clear recommendation for anyone interested in Tokyo! -Kimono Books
Reading through her book I love all her weird findings and also the ancient history behind this country. The colourful and cute illustrations captured my attention right from the start. -ET Speaks from Home blog
A look at a city where high-tech ultramodern meets tradition and the contradictions between the two. The author's colorful sketches accompany the text. -International Examiner
...quirky and humorous...as much a revelation of her personal interests as an introduction to Japan's capital. Arrazola sketches Professor Poop and Hello Kitty as well as Daruma and Shinto Shrines...For Japanophiles more accustomed to Anglo angles, the illustrator's Spanish point of view makes this book feel especially fresh. -Kyoto Journal