Tag Archive for 'Medicom'

Exhibitionism

This weekend, Eri and I realised that about 3 separate exhibitions that we had meant to see for ages were all ending, and with an impending hangover on Sunday, Saturday was the only day we had free. So, five exhibitions in a day then...

First up was the double Moriyama Daido exhibition at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography. The exhibition, in two parts was a retrospective of his work in one gallery and then large prints of his Hawaii series in the second. I found that his photos generally got more interesting the older they were. I found a lot of the exhibition a little confusing and realised that I don't really have any idea what made certain shots "good" or not, but a lot of the older ones, particularly the Light and Shadow series, were beautiful.

I wasn't as impressed by the Hawaii series. Some of them are quite nice, but on the whole I find Moriyama's style doesn't work as well outside Japan. I found some of the Buenos Aires ones a little dry for the same reason, although Eri said she liked the Buenos Aires ones most of all, and, being a lot more artistically inclined than me, she could well be right.

After Moriyama, we went down to the basement of the museum for the World Press Photo 2008 exhibition. I enjoyed this far more than the Moriyama. I prefer photojournalism to "art" photos, so this was always going to be far more suited to me. Some of the shots on display here were awe-inspiringly good. I think the photo below is probably the one I liked most; there is a very strange and ominous atmosphere to the position of the men in it that I really love. Click to see some of the other highlights.

After the photos were went to Omotesando for Eri's Blythe Once Upon A Wonder World Exhibition and Beauty Contest. Eri has come out recently as a bit of a Blythe fan, despite hating herself for doing so. Girls and women who like Blythe in Japan have a (deserved) reputation as being on the verge of the goth-loli cosplay kind of scene that Eri loathes, but nonetheless, she finds herself liking the doll itself. I can't really complain, considering my own interest in toys though. The Blythe exhibition was properly wierd. There were six areas where Blythe dolls had been dressed up in costumes to represent characters in Fairy Stories (Little Red Riding Hood etc), and then in the middle of the room were are hoardes of Blythes all in costumes designed by international fashion houses. Serious looking women were walking round with voting ballots choosing the costumes they liked best. There's a big gala event in July to crown the winner...which just kind of beggars belief. (Photo by Bubujojo)

Last was the yearly Medicom Exhibition in the Parco Art Gallery in Shibuya. I thought the gallery space itself was a little less nicely designed than in previous years, and there seemed less on display too. The highlights for me were the (much lauded) wooden Bearbricks, the new Star Wars figures, and the Mick Jagger doll. I didn't win a prize this year though, which somewhat ruined the event for me.

Tokyo Toy Tour: Day 1 - Shibuya

A couple of weeks ago, I bought a book called Tokyo Underground, a guide to toy and design culture in Tokyo. It's basically a Tokyo guidebook, but only concerned with toy stores. I've decided to check out every store in the book quite a few of which (shamefully), I have never been to, in my own little Tokyo Toy Tour. I'm also going to try to check out a few others in the same areas that I know about but weren't in the book for some reason. Today was the first day of my toy tour...Shibuya. The toy stores in Shibuya have, in my opinion, gone downhill a bit recently since the closure of one of my favourite stores (the name of which I forget), about a year ago. The first store I tried to hit up from the guide was the Shibuya branch of Hobbit, but either the map in the book wasn't good enough, or I was too stoopid to find it, or it's gone. Having checked out the internet a bit, I realise that I was too retarded to find it, AND the map was wrong. Bit of a disappointment really as it was the first stop of the day and on of the stores that I don't think I have ever been to. Anyway, next on the list was Blister, which I know pretty well, so at least wasn't a problem finding. On the way I went into Loft, which used to stock some decent toys and was one of the better places to find Monsterism and a few other lines, but they have also slacked off a bit recently and didn't have much apart from a big Mario Statue which wasn't for sale anyway. Blister was pretty empty considering it was sale time and they also had Fukubukuros on sale, in Star Wars, Spiderman 3 and "Cute" varieties, but you could see inside the bags where the staples had broken and the Star Wars stuff didn't look too promising for 3000円. Upstairs in their designer toy section they had some nice Kubricks on display, but have got rid of the massive museum-like unit that had the entire collection of Star Wars Kubrick with all the chase editions that used to be in there. They also were patrolling round the isles trying to stop me from taking any photos, but I managed to squeeze off a few shots. From Blister I went to the basement of the Shibuya Parco to check out their design book store and the Delfonics store. They had some nice looking old cameras in Delfonics, but all I ended up buying were these magnets from the book store. From Parco I went to Tokyu Hands, which is more of a hardware store than a toy store, although, like Loft, they have a "variety goods" section, which usually has a few good bits in it. Today they had a very disturbing display of Sonny Angel mini figures, and some cool little match stick keitai straps. I also got the.best.present evah for my friend back home too, which I have been looking for for a while. Next on the Tokyo Underground list was Project 1/6, the official Medicom store. I can't believe I have never known about the store before, but it's a gold mine of Medicom special editions and Kaiju toys. In here I picked up a Metal Gear Solid 20th Anniversary Kubrick figure. In a blind selection, I got the original Metal Gear Solid Snake, the second rarest at only 16.6% (I knew that omikuji was talking shit!). They were also a bit militant about not taking photos, and the store was too small to get any sly ones so I only have the ones from outside. Last on the list was Mandarake, which I had also presumed was a misreading of Mandrake, but according to my girlfriend I am wrong. They had signs all over the store about not taking photos too. I really don't understand why all these shops are so concerned with people not taking photos. The stores are set up pretty much as museums, and any photos that would be taken would surely help to promote the stores, but I guess that would remove some of the mystery. I did manage to take a few pictures, but had the aperture on my camera all wrong so they didn't really come out. Not sure if I missed any other stores around Shibuya...I think I got the main ones. There's a couple which are kind of on the border with Harajuku, but I'm gonna check those out when I go there.