More than fifty years ago, an incident took place. The Rokuon
Temple (also known as the Temple of the Golden Pavilion), in Kitayama,
Kyoto, was burnt down to the ground by a young monk who was studying
there. It had been established over six hundred years previously by the
Shogun, Ashikaga Yoshimitsu. The Temple of the Golden Pavilion was one
of Japan's major cultural assets and was a designated national
treasure that had escaped the ravages of war. It was thought to be
everlasting. This act of arson happened at the time when I was a high
school student in Kyoto, and I found it deeply shocking. It was not
simply the incineration of a building, but the irreparable loss of over
six hundred years of history.
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I wanted to look into the darkness within the monk's mind and
understand the lifelong irrationalities that lurked there. Of course,
this was a huge event at the time. So many people have produced
sociological analyses and psychological interpretations of what
happened, turning the event into a social phenomenon of sorts. However,
I never felt that any of those works truly grasped the motives buried in
his mind.
Some years after the incident author Yukio Mishima wrote the novel
"The Temple of the Golden Pavilion', which portrayed the young
monk. On reading this work, what struck me even more than the actual
incident itself was how the novel brought out the essence of the young
monk's inexplicable act. While being the fiction of the gifted
Yukio Mishima, it remained engraved in my mind as a sublime reflection
of the truth hidden behind the circumstances of that event.
Later in my life I became involved with film, and within the body
of my work, I wanted to create one entitled "The burning down of
the Temple of the Golden Pavilion" inspired by Mishima's
novel. I was looking for opportunities to make it happen. That chance
came unexpectedly early on in my career and the project was realized by
the Art Theatre Guild of Japan film institute. Feeling that my
dramatization of Mishima's novel affirmed an intimation of my
deeper self, I rewrote the scenario as far as I could allow myself. By
having the actor Saburo Shinoda play the part of the young monk, I felt
sure that the film would turn out well. Following its completion, the
film immediately went on general release and it was very well received.
Thirty years have passed since then and the film had faded out of
people's memories. However, in April 2006 the Kawasaki City Museum
held a screening of nine of my old works, which included "Temple of
the Golden Pavilion". I was contacted by an artist who wanted to
reconstruct the arson scene within her art project. It was out of this
that Yuca Ishizuka's "Golden Pavilion" was born.
In September 2006 it premiered among the satellite projects of the
Shanghai Biennale, and was showcased as the centerpiece of the Japan
Pavilion, where it was a great success. The performance especially held
for the opening night-a collaboration she made with a traditional
Japanese dancer and a lute player-appealed to the international
audience.
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Focusing on the moment of the Golden Pavilion burning down,
Ishizuka restructured the scene and projected it onto an innovatively
designed screen. The speed with which time passes in this climactic
scene had been consciously manipulated. While it was indeed a
reconstruction of the scene from my film, it should be thought of as
coming from Ishizuka's universe: the magnificent creation of a
completely different world.
We take it for granted that, be it screens or cathode ray tubes,
moving imagery is projected onto flat, demarcated surfaces. However Yuca
Ishizuka's screen is not flat, but of an almost spherical
construction, irregularly composed of fragmentary parts and as a result,
the images are intricately broken up, entering a totally unique realm of
spatial conception. Furthermore, Yuca Ishizuka has broken with the
cinematic principle of using 24 frames per second and reconstructed
everything in manipulated time and motion. Thus, the scene from my
original film, the nature of which has already been altered by the
fragmented screen, is altered yet more bringing it into an entirely new
dimension from that of conventional cinematic expression.
The compulsion to burn down the Golden Pavilion, this symbolic act
of trying to transfigure the world through beauty, has now been revived
in her art work. Even to the tips of the roaring flames, her intensely
passionate vision takes on a form that transcends time and space.
While this single event occurred over fifty years ago, it burned
again in Yukio Mishima's 'The Temple of the Golden
Pavilion', it burnt in my film 'Temple of the Golden
Pavilion'; and now, Yuca Ishizuka is making it burn for the fourth
time.
Translation by Ashley Rawlings
By Yoichi Takabayashi film director
RELATED ARTICLE
Yoichi Takabayashi
Director, cinematographer, screenwriter and editor.
Born 1931 in Kyoto.
The pioneer of Japanese experimental and independent film. One of
his early works, "Ishikkoro", (1960) made a great impact on
avant-garde filmmakers, which won the Gold Prize at the Monticatini
International Amateur Film Festival and the Silver Prize at the Salerno
International Film Festival in Italy. His commercial success flourished
in the 70's with major films like: "Gaki Zoshi" (1972),
Grand Prize, International Filmfestival
Mannheim-Heidelberg/International Critics' Week at Cannes Film
Festival, "Murder in Honjin Manor House" (1975), Berlin
International Film Festival, including "Temple of the Golden
Pavilion" (1976), Japanese Ministry of Culture Excellence
Award/Minister of Education Newcomers' Award for Fine Arts.
Currently, filming his new work "Hate-eno-Tabi" is in
progress.
Yuca Ishizuka
Artist and designer.
Her strong background in photography and video, combined with her
insatiable interest in social art drives her deeply into her own style
of unconventional art. In recent years, she has been working extensively
in diverse cross-disciplinary art projects with leading professionals
and experts from various areas including academic field both
domestically and overseas. She continuously expands her engagement into
unexplored territories where she believes our creative heritage should
be equally nurtured, shared and passed on.
Her next solo exhibition will be held June-August this year in
Sydney, Australia. This will be a site-specific project on Nushu, a
unique writing system that was exclusively used by women in Hunan,
China.
http://homepage.mac.com/xyucax/
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.