Design: Japan

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  • Опубліковано 2 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 35

  • @LindieBotes
    @LindieBotes Рік тому

    Keiichi Tanaami reminds me of Yokoo Tadanori and Awazu Kiyoshi. Great video!

  • @lwongl3147
    @lwongl3147 3 місяці тому

    No mention of Tadanori Yokoo, a very influential pop artist in the 1970s

  • @KidNasEasy
    @KidNasEasy Рік тому

    Thank you for sharing this knowledge. I would like to add one really important and populair Japanese designer, Takashi Murakami.

    • @Amoslemon_art
      @Amoslemon_art Рік тому

      Thank you for your comment! Totally agree, I don't know why I didn't include the MASTER! Maybe I was thinking of him as more of a fine artist than designer, but he does cross all categories!

  • @MrAarky
    @MrAarky 3 роки тому +2

    Well done I really enjoyed that, a couple of things though: the music got a bit to loud at the end and the applauses should have been cut out (they confused because of not being linked to the content on screen) the history was great but occasionally superficial without going in to detail. For example mentioning the relationship of Jomon (rope patterns) to the primitive(savage and dynamic), and yayoi to the aristocratic and the refined. With the 2 styles clashing again in the 60 expo with tanges roof and the tower of the sun. Would have been nice. Or the relationship between the Japanese prints and Frank Lloyd Wright. Or Bruno Taut and his voyage. Please do more

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks for sticking with it! Amateur one man show over here :-D but I am getting a little better with time.

  • @LaLA441000
    @LaLA441000 3 роки тому +3

    Eurhm....huh? Me 15 seconds in...Japan is not tiny.
    I come from Burundi and The Netherlands! Can I take anything that is stated after that introduction serious???

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому +2

      You are correct! :-D I apologize, only makes sense in contrast with previous chapters / videos on Design in Africa, China and the Middle East - by comparison with these it is a small geographic area. But I appreciate the comment! And this is only a tiny introduction to huge, rich histories - a survey course.

    • @LaLA441000
      @LaLA441000 2 роки тому

      @@annlemon1438 Thanks for the response! Looking forward to your next video's.

    • @roymichaeldeanable
      @roymichaeldeanable 9 місяців тому

      Nope...pile of rubbish from someone with no clue

  • @marcosbarreto1234
    @marcosbarreto1234 3 роки тому

    Very interesting. I Loved know more about Japan and its arts. Thank you

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому

      My pleasure 😊 I am not a great scholar of Japanese art history but it's a starting point!

  • @aleulf6305
    @aleulf6305 3 роки тому +1

    Nice work! Amazing video!

  • @davidhuber9418
    @davidhuber9418 3 роки тому

    perfect! thank you!

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому

      You're welcome! Double check all my facts, I had to make these really fast :-D

  • @ccengineer5902
    @ccengineer5902 3 роки тому

    5:40 That's incredible

  • @margaretfarquhar9567
    @margaretfarquhar9567 3 роки тому +1

    I am njoying this video,but the narrators is rushing through the dialogue
    and doesn't give us time to digest what we are hearing before rushing on the
    next sentence.
    It is spoiling this excellent lecture.

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому

      Thank you so much! You are so right - I'm a professional scholar but amateur narrator :-D but glad you got something out of it anyway!

  • @ryanbeck1338
    @ryanbeck1338 3 роки тому

    Good content!

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому +1

      Thank you so much - it's only a taste, of course!

  • @kejorafall
    @kejorafall 3 роки тому +1

    Very interesting content, but i think you can work more in the narration,
    Good job eatherway

    • @laurenmary9296
      @laurenmary9296 3 роки тому +1

      You could work more on spelling, FYI.

    • @kejorafall
      @kejorafall 3 роки тому

      @@laurenmary9296 i dont give a fuck its not my language, you can work more on your face lauren, FYI

    • @laurenmary9296
      @laurenmary9296 3 роки тому +1

      @@kejorafall Well, well, well... doesn't the internet bring out the classlessness in you! Philistine....

    • @GigiofGigi
      @GigiofGigi 3 роки тому

      @@laurenmary9296 Well maybe you shouldnt have made a sassy weird comment about a valid and respectful critique and compliment

    • @judylloyd7901
      @judylloyd7901 2 роки тому

      @@kejorafall If English is not your first language, wouldn't you want to improve it?
      Of course Lauren could just have given the correct spelling for you
      😊
      Either* way... 👍👍😊😊

  • @jjopan
    @jjopan 2 роки тому

    @0:33 ummm

  • @frillseeker685
    @frillseeker685 3 роки тому

    Great content but talks way too fast. Needs modulation and quiet spaces.
    Reply to yours: you are well worth listening to, keep it up!

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому

      Too much coffee and too much time as a New Yorker. I always tell my students "I wouldn't talk so fast if I didn't have to repeat myself so many times." Is there ANYTHING worse than recording and editing your own voice? Ugh!

  • @takuan650
    @takuan650 3 роки тому

    Unfortunately not much of these design concepts are visible in Japanese daily lives. It lives in museums, exhibitions and theme parks. Usually it's 'helter skelter', crammed with stuff in tiny chaotic spaces and plastic ugliness. None of these noble ideas exists in the current Japanese daily culture.

    • @tonhommer
      @tonhommer 3 роки тому

      sad how globalization is innately disconfiguring the truth of what we are

    • @annlemon1438
      @annlemon1438  2 роки тому

      That's so interesting! It is a large and rich subject that deserves much more time than one humble video as part of a large survey course... and of course I am approaching the topic as an America - luckily there are many additional resources out there I can direct students to, but tried to give an overview of pre-modern times...