Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Netsuke Designers - Artistically Expressive

The awe and fascination that Netsuke still continues to bring to us today, from a Japanese culture in a time frame of over 300 years ago, still can stir the emotions of today's various cultural backgrounds of Netsuke makers and Netsuke collectors from all around the world. Just as back then in the socially controlled era of Japan's people, the original highly expressive tiny little detailed one-inch objects would openly say so much through the very detailed and exquisite formations of carvings that only Netsuke was allowed to express under the Japanese dynasty rule.

Starting out so innocently by the means of quintessential needs of the Japanese, the small Netsuke toggles were first made only for holding in the personal belongings around their waists, while going throughout their average day. Since the Japanese traditional dress of Kimonos did not have pockets, there were pouches, or small woven boxes worn around the waists by most of the Japanese culture, so to carry along their coins, medicines, tobaccos and so forth, while going about their daily routines. It was the small 1-inch size toggle that kept the personal items from falling out of the personal carrying device.

In a closed society that was not allowed to be freely expressive, the Netsuke toggle soon became a way of quiet individual expression that could be worn. These Netsuke creations quickly became the ways of expressing all that was seen, desired and experienced during the daily lives of the average Japanese person. Not only were the Japanese Netsuke craftsmen personally being openly expressive and very individual with their highly detailed creations, but so were those that chose to wear the openly expressive Netsuke carvings.

Netsuke carvings would be based upon all of the different types of surroundings and actions of the natural world, such as animals above and below the seas, trees, and humanistic formations with and without animals intertwined, along with the fantasy realm of Japanese culture. Netsuke was and still is made today from some of the most precious natural resources around, such as various legal animal ivories, natural hard woods, hard ocean corrals, along with glass, and ceramic mixtures for making the delicately beautiful Netsuke art forms.

The Netsuke handcrafting designers and the collectors of today have continued to carry the history, tradition, the beauty and the passion for the love of Netsuke today, just as was felt by the original Japanese creators and collectors in the beginnings of Netsuke so many centuries ago within the Japanese culture.

Anita Satin Choudhary writes for Ivory and Art Gallery. Browse the gallery for unique collection of artifacts ranging from Netsuke to Bronze and Silver Art

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Anita_Satin_Choudhary

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