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Saturday, Sept. 13: Georgetown Steam Plant
Showing posts with label Washington State History Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Washington State History Museum. Show all posts

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Witness to Wartime

10/26/17 Wood sculptures by Takuichi Fujii
(Although it includes only one of my own sketches, I'm hoping this exhibit review will be of interest to urban sketchers. The exhibit has historical importance and is a rare showing of this particular experience through sketch reportage.)

When I was a child, I remember looking through our family photo albums and noticing that while there were many photos of my oldest brother Richard, my sister Linda and myself when we were babies, there were very few of my brother Frank. When I was older, I came to understand the reason: Frank was born in 1942 inside Tule Lake internment camp during World War II, where incarcerated Japanese Americans were not allowed to have cameras. My mother explained to me that the few photos of him during those years were taken by friends in the military who happened to be visiting them in camp and later gave my parents the photos.

The sketchbook and paintings of Takuichi Fujii, now on exhibit at the Washington State History Museum, are a rare opportunity to view first-hand images of the internment experience where photography was not allowed. A first-generation Japanese American, Fujii was already a painter when he was first confined to the Puyallup detention center and later relocated to Minidoka, Idaho (the ultimate destination of my family, too). His 400-page sketchbook shows raw pen-and-ink drawings of his day-to-day life: people lining up for meals; using toilets and showers with no privacy, not even curtains between stalls; killing time by playing cards; the watchtowers and military guards. On the facing pages of sketches, Fujii wrote diary entries describing what he saw and experienced.

The actual sketchbook is displayed in a glass case.
The exhibit includes some oil and watercolor paintings he made before, during and after the war, some based on his sketches, as well as a few small sculptures carved from fence posts. According to the placard, “When part of the fence was removed in 1943, people quickly salvaged the materials for use at their barracks. The carved faces of Fujii and his wife are worn by years of having been caressed.” (My sketch of these sculptures is shown above.)

While the finished paintings are interesting and more polished, I found the sketches to be the most moving and heartbreaking images to view. My only complaint about this excellent exhibit is that the sketchbook pages can only be viewed as a digital slideshow that advances automatically. I would have liked to have studied a few of the sketches at my leisure. I also wish each page of his written diary had been translated as part of the slideshow.

Individual sketchbook pages are shown in a digital slideshow.
Fujii may have been one of very few reportage sketchers of the Japanese American internment experience, with his work only now having an audience. 

Witness to Wartime is on view through Jan. 1, 2018.



Saturday, April 4, 2015

Urban Sk-egg-ing in Tacoma

4/4/15 Native American basketweaving
It had been ages since I visited the Washington State History Museum, so when Urban Sketchers Tacoma invited Seattle sketchers to join them this morning for a group-rate discount, I jumped at the opportunity.

This museum is the kind of place where I felt torn between lingering in the exhibits to take in my native state’s rich cultural and industrial heritage – or sketch. You can probably guess which I chose, but it was a difficult choice. My first sketch was part of an exhibit on Native American culture – an interpretive display of a woman teaching a young girl how to basket-weave. While I sketched, I listened to the audio program about how the craft has been handed down from one generation to the next.
4/4/15 Aerospace exhibit

For my next sketch, I went upstairs to find a view of the main floor gallery’s exhibit of the aerospace industry. That’s when I spotted Stevie – a tiny dot dwarfed by the framework of a plane’s fuselage looming over the space. (The dude at left is not real; I think he represented an airplane manufacturing worker.)

By that time the morning had warmed up a little, so I went out to do two iconic Tacoma sketches from just outside the history museum: Union Station and the Museum of Glass’s conical building. These Urban Sk-eggs took a little planning – namely, I had to bring my support materials in a cooler!

Happy Easter!

4/4/15 Union Station
4/4/15 Museum of Glass

Monday, July 23, 2012

A Perfect Day in Tacoma

We really hit the mark on Saturday.  No rain and a perfect day for sketching.  Tacoma is so picturesque the scale of the city is just right.  Sky, water, historic buildings,  the Glass museum and about 35 urban sketchers.  We had a great turnout for our second annual Pacific Northwest regional sketchcrawl.  It was great meeting up with the Portland Sketchers and Whidbey Island Sketchers. Seattle had a great turnout of longtime and new sketchers.  Thanks all for coming and making it a great day!

Looking at Union Station from the Washington State Historic Museum

On the Bridge to Tacoma Museum of Glass