Why do these bears seem to have emotive expressions or mischievous poses? The original generation of carvings produced in Yakumo often featured personified elements. Setting foot inside the museum, I was struck with an iconic Hokkaido souvenir image -- the fierce visage of a bear gripping a salmon in its jaws.
The heritage of this art form dates back to 1922, when Yoshichika Tokugawa, the 19th feudal lord, brought folk crafts back from his trip to Switzerland, and used them as models to promote woodcarving as a side business for the farmers.
This peasant art was originally made by Swiss farm folk to sell to tourists, and it's thought that Tokugawa brought it back to Japan with the intention to add cultural content to the daily life of people in Japan. In 1924, the first Hokkaido-made bear woodcarving was created by a dairy farmer, modeled after this Swiss folk craft. In time, an art studies society was formed at Tokugawa Farm in Yakumo, and high quality works of art were marked with a brand and sold.
Yakumo's bear woodcarvings can be broadly classified into two techniques: “hairline engraving” and “surface engraving”. Hairline engraving is characterized by representation of the delicate beauty of an actual bear’s coat of fur. According to museum curator Mr. Shigeyuki Oya, “Kaneyuki Tokura was an artist and leader of the art studies society. He engraved hairlines in an expressive style similar to the traditional nihonga style of painting. Under his style, hair flows radially from the crest of the shoulders in a kiku-gata (chrysanthemum) shape, a signature of genuine Yakumo woodcarving.”
Shigeyuki Shibazaki began woodcarving while working on a farm. Finding he had considerable talent in “hairline engraving”, Shibazaki set off to pursue his own engraving style, eventually perfecting a unique “chip engraving” method, classified as a type of “surface engraving”. It’s said that the bear woodcarvings that originated in Asahikawa reached new heights of success only after Shibazaki’s works were brought to Asahikawa.
Bear cubs were raised at Tokugawa Farm, and used as models for woodcarving, giving rise a number of styles showing the bears in a more familiar light than the wild pose of a bear gripping a salmon in its mouth. However, with the onset of the Second World War, the art studies society was disbanded, and production of bear woodcarvings waned.
An Irish folk song is inscribed upon the stock of Yoshichika’s bear hunting gun.
As the war went on, most of the artists stopped producing bear woodcarvings, but Takiji Mogi continued to produce bears with true-to-life hairline engravings, despite being called unpatriotic. Curator Oya remarks, "Without this man, Yakumo's bear woodcarvings would likely have faded away. He became a master of the craft and passed the art on to his successors." It's almost as if the feudal lord has looked over this culture as it flourished.
Yakumo Bear Woodcarving Museum
Japan's only such museum, with a collection of over 300 bear woodcarvings created in Yakumo and other regions, including Hokkaido's first bear woodcarving. Informative exhibits introduce the Swiss peasant art that inspired these bear woodcarvings while displaying collections of folk crafts from throughout Japan and around the world.
154 Suehiro-cho Yakumo, Hokkaido, Japan
Tel.: 0137-63-3131
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