153 résultats
1930228001930. Kendo photo archive group of five press photographs dating from the 1930s to the 1950s documenting the practice of Japanese swordsmanship in both Japan and the United States during a period of war displacement and postwar recovery. The material captures training demonstration and competition settings providing visual evidence of how kendo was practiced across institutional and community environments. These images record both continuity and adaptation showing martial training in prewar Japan wartime or immediate postwar contexts and among Japanese American practitioners maintaining cultural traditions under changing social conditions.<br /> <br /> Five original silver gelatin photographs ranging in size from approximately 5 x 7 inches to 8 x 10 inches each with typed caption slips agency stamps and editorial markings on the verso. The images include scenes of armored kendo practitioners engaged in sparring with shinai captured mid-strike and counterstrike within dojo interiors and outdoor settings. One photograph shows rows of trainees assembled beneath banners indicating organized competition or instruction. Another depicts two fighters in a wooden-floored dojo observed by an instructor in formal attire emphasizing structured training environments. A U.S.-based image presents a group of practitioners in full armor conducting drills against a brick wall identified in captioning as Japanese American kendo activity. An outdoor scene shows two fighters engaged on uneven ground suggesting demonstration or informal practice. A postcard-format image with Japanese text shows a group of female students participating in kendo training indicating inclusion of women in organized instruction. Across the archive visual elements include protective armor bÅgu bamboo swords and regimented group formations.<br /> <br /> Produced across decades marked by militarization wartime disruption and postwar reconstruction these photographs document the persistence of kendo as a cultural and physical discipline. The archive illustrates how martial practices were maintained within Japan and transmitted within diaspora communities including Japanese Americans during periods of restriction and reestablishment. The material supports research into Japanese cultural history martial arts practice and transnational identity formation in the twentieth century. Minor edge wear and corner creasing with editorial markings on versos; overall very good condition. A concise visual record of kendo practice across shifting historical contexts. unknown
1880184811880. Japanese woodblock print 19th century depicts samurai martial practice within a domestic or staged setting providing visual evidence of sword training traditions that informed later codifications of kendo the discipline derived from earlier samurai combat techniques. The composition places a woman in formal kimono in the foreground while a samurai figure engages in training with a bamboo implement in the background his katana remaining sheathed. This pairing of civilian and martial figures situates the image within the social world of late Edo period Japan when samurai identity persisted as both a lived class structure and a cultural ideal despite the gradual decline of feudal governance prior to the Meiji Restoration.<br /> <br /> Hand colored woodblock print on thick tea paper measuring approximately 11.5 x 9 inches accompanied by a secondary tea paper sheet of similar size containing more than ten vertical columns of kanji text. The image presents detailed coloration and line work with emphasis on textile pattern posture and gesture. The samurai figure is shown in active motion with a bamboo weapon consistent with training practices while the foreground figure's kimono is rendered with attention to layered fabric and ornament. The accompanying text sheet suggests publication or descriptive context tied to the image.<br /> <br /> Produced during a period when woodblock printing functioned as a primary medium for circulating visual culture in Japan the work aligns with broader traditions of ukiyo e and related print forms that documented social roles performance and martial identity. The depiction of training rather than battlefield combat underscores the transition of sword practice into structured discipline and codified movement anticipating later formalization of kendo as both martial practice and cultural tradition. Light wear consistent with age; colors remain strong and impressions clear. Overall very good condition. unknown
18892092902138301312Gaku yowai-kan 1889. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 84p Size: 18cm Gaku yowai-kan paperback