Canadian Nikkei Artist
Canadian Nikkei Artist series will focus on those in the Japanese Canadian community who are actively involved in the ongoing evolution: the artists, musicians, writers/poets and, broadly speaking, anybody else in the arts who grapples with their sense of identity. As such, the series will introduce Discover Nikkei readers to a wide range of ‘voices’, both established and emerging, that have something to say about their identity. This series aims to stir this cultural pot of Nikkeiness and, ultimately, build meaningful connections with Nikkei everywhere.
Stories from this series
David Hayashida on his first visit to BC, euphemisms and life on "The Rock" - Part 2
Sept. 24, 2019 • Norm Masaji Ibuki
Read Part 1 >> Can you talk about how your career as an artist began? I am turning 60 this year and it is my first piece on JCs. If Dr. Heather Read had not very kindly invited me to turn my decades old idea into reality, it might never have existed outside of my head. Also, my younger sister Charissa Alain Lilly (also an artist) just passed away and that difficult event has in many ways pushed me to …
David Hayashida on his first visit to BC, euphemisms and life on "The Rock" - Part 1
Sept. 23, 2019 • Norm Masaji Ibuki
I caught up with Newfoundland artist David Hayashida on his return home after returning from the BC Internment Camp tour in July. Like me, he grew up in Ontario far removed from most Japanese Canadians. We were often the only Asians in our schools. And as inheritors of the internment and the Redress legacy, we have spent much of our adult lives figuring out how to become valued members of our mostly-white communities where we grew up clinging on to …
Marjene Matsunaga Turnbull: Baking Japanese Canadianness
Aug. 13, 2019 • Marjene Matsunaga Turnbull
Read the interview with Marjene Matsunaga Turnbull by Norm Ibuki >> After learning what the Japanese Canadian (JC) history was, I could describe events. Using layers to build upon, it became like a cake. And making a recipe for it was perfect for doing the family history within the general JC history, I thought. Each layer was done separately, glazed, and fired. Layers were glued together. Recipe for The Hisaoka History Cake: “Continuum” Preparation Time: 90 yearsUse three nesting bake …
Marjene Matsunaga Turnbull: How-to-Bake a Japanese Canadian Cake
Aug. 12, 2019 • Norm Masaji Ibuki
Here’s an intriguing idea about how to think about your Japanese Canadian identity: What if it were a cake recipe what would go into it and how would you construct or, perhaps, more aptly, deconstruct, it? De/constructing my own Japanese Canadian identity over the years, I’ve learned that the foundation of the Japanese part of my cultural shaping would include the food, my awkward way of interacting with others (especially in Japanese), Buddhism, aikido, how history has twisted and bent …
A journey of becoming ... with Toronto’s Lillian Michiko Blakey - Part 2
Aug. 1, 2019 • Norm Masaji Ibuki
The continuation of Lillian Michiko Blakey's story. Read Part One >> Right after the craft show, I got busy with my first real art piece. I am still mystified as to why I chose to create a nonrepresentational piece of art. “White Night” was an abstract landscape completely created in varying tones of point fabric. Upon reflection today, I find myself thinking this is an odd way of representing night. The other strange thing is that abstract expressionism of the 60s …
A journey of becoming ... with Toronto’s Lillian Michiko Blakey - Part 1
July 31, 2019 • Norm Masaji Ibuki
Dear Reader: When did you decide to become “Japanese Canadian” and did that choice come at a cost? For me, it was when I realized that despite being immersed in a white community, I was not a full member and that my position in it was always qualified and defined by a persistent ‘otherness,’ that stereotype that even my most well intentioned friends can’t seem to see beyond. It’s always the same asinine comments about Japanese culture, baseball, or sushi. …