|
11/21/15 East bank of the Kamo river and Shichijo bridge. |
We had several activities planned for our last full day in
Kyoto, one of which was the famed Toji Temple flea market – something I have been wanting to see for many years.
On previous visits, our timing was off, and we had always just missed the
monthly event. This time we actually scheduled our Kyoto visit so that we would
be sure to hit the market.
|
11/21/15 Herons and egrets fishing on the Kamo river. |
Unfortunately, by that time, we were both sneezing and
sniffling through head colds we had caught while traveling, and we knew the Saturday
market (as well as our other plans) would require battling the usual crush of
crowds we’d encountered everywhere else in Kyoto. With much reluctance, we
decided to bag our plans and lay low for the day.
Walking to the Kamo river a short distance from our rented
townhouse, we discovered an oasis of solitude. Even on a warm weekend afternoon,
the riverbank was deserted – only a few strollers, bike riders and one or two
residents reading or picnicking. The busiest residents were the many egrets and
herons fishing in the shallow water.
That day on the river turned out to be my favorite in Kyoto;
I filled several pages of my sketchbook with those kosagi and sagi as well
as the river itself. It was an important reminder that while I’m always tempted
to experience the “big” things when I travel, sometimes the smallest moments
turn out to be the most enjoyable.
Another example was when we had taken the well-known Philosopher’s Walk in Kyoto the day
before. A tree-lined footpath that takes about a half-hour to finish at a leisurely
pace, it’s most popular in spring when all the cherry blossoms are in bloom,
but November was also beautiful on the sunny afternoon that we were there. It
was crowded, but not uncomfortably so. For me, the icing on the cake was unexpectedly
finding a busker on the path playing an unusual lute-like instrument. After
several days in a row of day tripping and
rushing through crowds, plunking myself down on a bench to sketch that busker
seemed like the ideal, relaxing treat.
Looking back through my Japan sketchbook, I realize that the
small moments were some of the most joyful in other places, too. In Takao after
hiking to a river to see the fall color,
we stopped to buy skewered dango
(rice flour dumplings) at a roadside stand and ate them at a sheltered table
overlooking the river. As I ate, I sketched the dango vendor. Although I enjoyed many amazing gourmet meals in Japan,
that simple snack somehow seemed especially delicious.
|
11/15/15 Dango vendor in Takao. |
Our fourth visit to Japan in the course of 14 years, this
trip brought different experiences than the first three, but it ended the same way: Whenever I leave Japan, it’s with a certain
bittersweetness that I am leaving some part of myself behind. It’s not that I
feel I belong there; as a Japanese American, the U.S. will always be my home.
It’s not that the people there are “my tribe”; I actually have very little in
common with Japanese culture and habits. It must be that my genes stir from recognition
of all those people who vaguely resemble my brothers or my mom or my cousins; all those people who vaguely resemble
me. My roots don’t necessarily take hold in that foreign soil, yet they sense the
ancestral familiarity that my consciousness can’t quite grasp.
|
Ja mata, Japan! We'll be back! |
I love that top sketch along the river. I think I would enjoy the quiet moments too, especially in a city that is usually so crowded. Did you visit any of the cities that your family came from? I smiled at how you found a busker along the path. It seems you naturally gravitate to them.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading, Joan! We didn't visit the places my family came from this trip, but we've done that in the past. It's always interesting and moving to visit one's roots.
DeleteI just read your 8-part series on your trip and enjoyed the sketches a lot. Is it my imagination or has your watercolor work taken on a more Japanese flavor, becoming somewhat more subtle and free-flowing. In any case, I really like it. -- Larry
ReplyDeleteThanks for following along, Larry! It's possible that my watercolors are becoming more Japanese. . . or maybe I was just always in a hurry. ;-) In any case, I think I might continue the technique at home. I prefer it, too.
Delete