While not every Open CulÂture readÂer dreams of movÂing to Japan and becomÂing a woodÂblock printÂmakÂer, it’s a safe bet that at least a few of you enterÂtain just such a fanÂtaÂsy from time to time. David Bull, a British-Born CanaÂdiÂan who got his first expoÂsure to the art of ukiyo‑e in his late twenÂties, actuÂalÂly did it. Though he’s been livÂing in Japan and steadiÂly purÂsuÂing his art there since 1986, only in recent years has he become known around the world. That’s thanks to his YouTube chanÂnel, which we’ve feaÂtured here sevÂerÂal times before. In the video above, one of his most popÂuÂlar, he lets his viewÂers expeÂriÂence printÂmakÂing from his point of view, seeÂing what he sees and even hearÂing what he hears.
Though Bull norÂmalÂly focusÂes on the earÂly stage carvÂing images into the blocks, here he spends about an hour on the final printÂing phase, going through a batch of eight sheets. As even a few minÂutes’ viewÂing reveals, this is a labor-intenÂsive and thorÂoughÂly anaÂlog process.
That impresÂsion will be heightÂened if you wear headÂphones, since, as Bull explains, he shot the video while wearÂing in-ear microÂphones that record the sounds of the job just as he hears them. This parÂticÂuÂlar aspect of the proÂducÂtion required him to rise conÂsidÂerÂably earÂliÂer than usuÂal, in order to avoid the conÂsidÂerÂable dayÂtime noise on the streets of Tokyo right outÂside his workÂshop — and thus to more fulÂly satÂisÂfy the large ASMR crowd.
The term ASMR, or “Autonomous SenÂsoÂry MeridÂiÂan Response,” refers to a set of pleasÂing senÂsaÂtions trigÂgered by cerÂtain kinds of sound, often those proÂduced by soft-spoÂken indiÂvidÂuÂals like Bull or the kind of repetÂiÂtive, methodÂiÂcal tool work he does. Chances are, many if not most of the almost 950,000 views this video has racked up so far have come from ASMR enthuÂsiÂasts less interÂestÂed in JapanÂese woodÂblock printÂing per se than in the genÂerÂal aesÂthetÂic expeÂriÂence of watchÂing and lisÂtenÂing to JapanÂese woodÂblock printÂing — at least at first. We all know how life can go: one day you’re checkÂing out YouTube, just lookÂing to relax, and the next you’re ensconced in Asakusa, havÂing wholÂly devotÂed yourÂself to a three-and-a-half-milÂlenÂniÂum-year-old traÂdiÂtionÂal art form.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Enter a DigÂiÂtal Archive of 213,000+ BeauÂtiÂful JapanÂese WoodÂblock Prints
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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