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Etegami by Nancy Bea Miller |
This past Saturday, I attended my first class at the
Main Line Art Center, in Haverford, Pennsylvania. Nancy Bea Miller taught a group of seven of us about an art form known as etegami. I came across the class in the Art Center's online catalog, and was drawn to the fact that it incorporates drawing, watercolor painting, rubber stamp carving, and mail art all in one art form.
Never having heard of etegami before, I did some research before the class took place. I came across
the web site of Deborah Davidson, who serves as kind of an "etegami guru" for Westerners. (Perhaps she should be called an "etegami Sensei"!)
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Etegami artists at work |
I found out that etegami is translated "picture letter," and can be called a form of Japanese folk art or mail art (because it is usually created on postcards and mailed). Etegami usually contains a simple image, accompanied by some carefully chosen words, as well as the
hanko, or stamped "signature" of the artist.
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A summary by Nancy of the main characteristics of etegami |
The art form is considered a "one shot deal"--no planning, no sketching. There are no rough drafts. The artist uses a line drawing brush and liquid ink to draw a picture of some object she is currently viewing. She then adds color with another brush and two to three colors of watercolor paint. (Traditionally, the artist uses water soluble mineral based gansai paints, which some of my classmates were fortunate to possess, but I used the basic Western version of watercolor paints.)
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Nancy's workspace before the class began |
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Nancy's workspace during class |
The traditionalist might paint her image from colors she has organized in a porcelain dish with shallow compartments for mixing the paint colors; many of us used standard watercolors in plastic pans. The traditionalist might paint upon washi postcards called
gasenshi; many of us used watercolor paper cut to 4 x 6 postcard size. Our
hankos were carved from pink erasers, going to show that there are perfectly adequate substitutes for pricier or harder-to-access supplies for the artist who wishes to jump in and try something new!
On her web site, Deborah Davidson explains the origins of etegami by describing how Japanese calligrapher Kunio Koike developed the art form in the 1960s because he wanted to develop something more spontaneous than what he was studying; he is now considered the Father of the Modern Etegami Movement.
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Etegami samples by one of my classmates |
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Etegami samples by one of my classmates |
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Etegami samples by one of my classmates |
The etegami motto is
Heta de ii. Heta ga ii. This is translated along the lines of, "Clumsiness is no problem. Clumsy makes it better." All of us in this beginning class at the Art Center felt pretty comfortable moving forward with a motto like that!
When I watched videos of artists creating etegami online, I saw them sitting up very straight, their elbows raised, and their forearms stretched in front of them at the same height as their elbow. They hold the brush at the very top, quite lightly between their thumbs and first two fingers. The brush essentially dangles down so that only the tip touches the ink to the paper.
On the web sites I was using for research, it was emphasized that the artist is to control the brush's movements with the upper arm, rather than with the wrist. (Somewhere I read that when you hold the brush like a pencil or pen, you focus more on "drawing well," which is not what etegami is about.)
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Nancy demonstrates etegami by drawing two peppers.
Our teacher Nancy reinforced the idea that we should move the brush quite slowly in order to make a more interesting line drawing. The goal is actually not to have too much control of the brush. Wobbly lines are good! Wobbly lines are preferred! They are "living lines" that give the work more character, and let the ink interact with the artist's heartbeat.
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Etegami creator Kunio Koike recommends spending up to 30 minutes practicing lines, letters, spirals, and other shapes and motions with the ink and brush before beginning a new work of etegami. Since many of us enjoy the fact that etegami is a rather "quick" art form to engage in, preceding it with 30 minutes of practice is probably not feasible for most of us! But I enjoyed our ten minute warm-up more than I thought I might. I can see the value in spending time getting "re-acquainted" with the brush, the way it makes contact with the paper, and the way the ink moves between brush and paper.
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Getting to know my brushes and ink during the warm up session |
Etegami uses as its subject matter the things of everyday life. Traditional etegami often reflects the seasons through such things as fruits, vegetables, and flowers. Many etegami artists will draw toys or other objects that surround them in daily life. Like sketching, etegami makes the artist pay closer attention to things around her. I found myself looking at things and thinking, "Hey, that would make a good piece of etegami!"
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Nancy set up a table of objects for us to choose from as subjects for our etegami. |
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A close-up of some objects, with a sample of Nancy's beautiful etegami in the background |
Nancy suggested that we start our drawings off the edge of the paper: the lines of the object run off the page so that the drawing looks like it is completed somewhere beyond the boundaries of the card. This approach forces me to draw the object much bigger than I would have a tendency to otherwise, and gives a very vibrant, graphic quality to the painting.
The color is applied more by rolling or tapping the brush, rather than sweeping the brush across the paper. Etegami doesn't result in photographically-correct images, which is probably another reason it is an approachable art form for the beginner.
The words used on the card can come from song lyrics, poems, or quotations. The ones I appreciate most are the ones that introduce some sort of humor related to the object that is drawn.
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My work space at the beginning of class |
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My work space at the end of class |
I love the fact that etegami is created from the "stuff" of everyday life. I don't have to look far at all to find a subject for a piece of etegami--the remote control on the coffee table, the cat curled up beside me on the sofa, the apples in a bowl on the kitchen counter, the weeds growing up in the garden outside my window, the butterfly that just landed on the bush, the back of the car parked in the garage, the toy pony my daughter left on the living room floor...any or all of these things could become a perfectly legitimate subject for a new piece of etegami.
In fact, I think I'll go make one now...
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Some more photos of my etegami classmates at work:
I will share some of my own etegami in a future post!