この数日、凝りに凝ってカバーページを更新しました。

WordPressでテーマを選んで更新しましたが、premiumを買うと画面が動くのがよさそうで、購入したもののインストールの仕方がよくわからず2日間苦労しました。

****************書いたばかりだっけど、古くなったBlog***********

ひかえ目ながら画面でSliderが自動で移動するのを見たときはかなりうれしく思いました。とりあえず「良し」としたのが、下の画面です。満足度は85%ぐらい。
 

Mobileでの見栄えと使い勝手が良いのも重要ポイントです。下はiPhoneでの画面。iPhoneとiPadではバラの画面が動きます(好きです)。満足度90% 
スライダーが入っていない、更新初期の製品。これも、色合いが捨てがたい。
 
それ以前の、約5年間使っていたMovable Typeで作った画面です。(懐かしい)
 
 
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❝我がもの”顔が目に余る安倍首相が、普通のひとの素直な感覚と高齢の天皇の思いも全部無視して、「男系」死守しか考えていない「解決」方法が決まりかけているとき、論理が通じる石破さんが、勇気を振り絞って(命運を賭けてかもしれない)異論を唱えた。異論といっても、論議をしていないのに「論議が終わったことにし」て、現天皇一代限りの退位を決めようとしていることに、「議論はまだ終わっていないでしょう。そんなことしたら国民に見限られるだけだよ」といったに過ぎない。

毎日新聞より
「ポスト安倍」の有力候補と目される石破茂前地方創生担当相。真意はどこにあるのか--

特別立法ではむしろ制度不安定に
 衆院議員会館の事務所を訪ねたのは、自民党幹部らで構成する「天皇の退位等についての懇談会」(座長・高村正彦副総裁)が、「現在の陛下一代に限って退位を認める特別立法が望ましい」とする見解をまとめた翌14日のことだ。石破さんは懇談会が呼びかけた党内意見の集約期限だった1月31日、退位について「陛下一代に限るのではなく、恒久的なものとして皇室典範に定めるべきだ」との考えを書面で提出し、その内容を自身のブログで公表していた。党見解はこの「石破ペーパー」と正反対のもので、さすがに表情は険しい。
 「(陛下の退位の意向は)昨年の8月8日、突如として言い出されたものではない。考え抜かれて仰せになったことに、誠実に応えるというのはどういうことかと考えたときに、『一代限り』という答えは出てこない」

 


 ■石破さんが自民党に提出した意見書

 「天皇陛下のご生前ご譲位について」(抜粋)

・今上陛下ご一代に限るものではなく、恒久的に、厳格な要件のもとに生前のご退位を認めるべく皇室典範を改正することが至当

・皇位継承に関わることがらは皇室典範によるべきものであり、皇室典範の改正をしないままに生前退位を可能とすることは、憲法に抵触する恐れが極めて大きい

・「国民の総意」を体現するためには、衆参両院総議員の出席のもと、全会一致が望ましい

・男系男子による皇位継承を基本としつつも、女系天皇の可能性もあえて追求し、早急に解を求めるべきものと思料


毎日新聞記事(全文)

天皇退位と憲法問題Coverへ

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あの「大きな顔」の人がいる国には当分行かない。多くの人がそう思っていると思う。
アメリカでももうそれが問題になっているようだ。数百人の雇用が生まれたとか威張ってみても足もとが崩れるのでは?(そういう日本も・・・)

そういえば、YCUの先生も、「アメリカは自分の意思表明が不自由の国、日本の方がよほど自由だ」と言ってた。Harvard Univでの1年間のサバティカルを終えての感想というから怖い。

 

別の友人  Felipe もアメリカのゴタゴタに時間を無駄にするのは「止めた」と。2月14日 

Ok… I was not to continue wasting my time on US politics but seriously is reaching a level where the credibility of a whole nation and not any little nation, is totally at stake! I wish us all luck but particularly those that still believe he will Make America Great Again!

Trump’s travel ban is causing a large drop in US tourism

By Christopher Muther GLOBE STAFF  FEBRUARY 14, 2017

President Trump’s travel ban targeting nationals of seven Muslim-majority countries may not have held up in court, but it appears quite successful at keeping plenty of other people out of the United States.

Trump’s order brought with it a swift decline in the number of worldwide tourists and travelers looking to visit the United States, say people in the tourism industry. Some say it could be as damaging to the US tourism sector as the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Online booking websites reported that flight searches from international points of origin to the United States were down anywhere from 6 percent to 17 percent since Trump signed the executive order on Jan. 27. But experts say what’s more alarming is the icy message it sends to the world.

“The US is in danger of taking the same path it took after Sept. 11, which led to a decade of economic stagnation in the travel and tourism sector,” said David Scowsill, president and CEO of the World Travel & Tourism Council. “Strict visa policies and inward-looking sentiment led to a $600 billion loss in tourism revenues in the decade post 9/11.”

Get The Weekender in your inbox:

The Globe’s top picks for what to see and do each weekend, in Boston and beyond.

Just last week the US Travel Association reported that in 2016, the number of international tourists had finally returned to pre-Sept. 11 numbers.

さあ、どうなるか??

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Hiroshige’s Japan: Views of Mount Fuji

15 November 2016 to 26 March 2017

Gallery 29 | Admission Free

Mount Fuji, an active volcano and Japan’s highest mountain, has long been praised by poets and depicted by artists for its beautiful shape and sacred status. In the mid-1800s, the great landscape print designer Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858) produced numerous views of Mount Fuji in different seasons and weather conditions. These were probably inspired by his contemporary Hokusai, whose ground-breaking series ‘Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji’ was hugely successful in the 1830s.

A special exhibition in the Ashmolean’s Eastern Art Prints and Paintings Gallery (Gallery 29) shows a selection of Hiroshige’s views of Mount Fuji, drawn from the Ashmolean’s own collection. The exhibition includes views of Mount Fuji from several different Hiroshige series, some devoted entirely to Fuji and others in which Fuji appears in views of Edo, or seen from the Tōkaidō Road, Japan’s major highway. It is the second in a series of displays highlighting the Ashmolean’s collection of Hiroshige landscape prints.

Inume Pass in Kai Province (Kai Inume tōge甲斐犬目峠) Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji Date: 1858 Colour woodblock print Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, EAX.4389 © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford Travellers walk along the edge of Inume Pass on a chilly autumn day. A flock of geese flies in front of Mount Fuji, adding to the melancholy autumnal atmosphere. Hiroshige is known to have travelled to this area in the spring of 1841. In his diary he described its awe-inspiring beauty. Hiroshige absorbed a wide range of artistic influences, evident in this work: the fluffy clouds in the ravine and the shading on Mount Fuji are probably influenced by Western copper-plate prints, but the dots on the craggy rocks are more reminiscent of Chinese ink painting.

Inume Pass in Kai Province (Kai Inume tōge 甲斐犬目峠)
Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji
Date: 1858
Colour woodblock print
Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, EAX.4389
© Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
Travellers walk along the edge of Inume Pass on a chilly autumn day. A flock of geese flies in front of Mount Fuji, adding to the melancholy autumnal atmosphere. Hiroshige is known to have travelled to this area in the spring of 1841 and in his diary he described its awe-inspiring beauty. Hiroshige absorbed a wide range of artistic influences, evident in this work: the fluffy clouds in the ravine and the shading on Mount Fuji are probably influenced by Western copper-plate prints, but the dots on the craggy rocks are more reminiscent of Chinese ink painting.

 

By Hiroshige’s time, the Japanese print industry was booming and ukiyo-e woodblock prints depicting the lively popular culture of the urban pleasure districts could be purchased for the price of a large bowl of noodles. However, the landscape print was a new genre, pioneered by Hiroshige’s contemporary Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849). Hiroshige’s own breakthrough came with the publication of his series ‘Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō’, which appeared between 1832 and 1834 and depicted scenes at the fifty-three post stations along Japan’s major highway. In his work Hiroshige captured quite brilliantly the effects of season, weather and time of day. He took full advantage of recent technical developments in his work, in particular the introduction of a new Western pigment known as Berlin or Prussian blue, which became commercially viable in Japan from the mid-1820s. The brilliantly coloured Prussian blue gave artists much greater freedom of expression in the depiction of sky and water. The new blue was particularly effective when it was applied using a method of sophisticated colour gradation known as bokashi, in which printers wiped and diluted the amount of pigment applied to the woodblock. The success of Hiroshige’s designs depended largely on the skilful use of bokashi colour gradation to enhance the mood of rainfall, mist or snow.

The ‘Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō’ was so successful that Hiroshige continued to produce series of landscape prints of well-known locations for the rest of his life. His final series of prints was the ‘Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji’ (Fuji Sanjū-rokkei 富士三十六景), produced for the publisher Kichizō (Kōeidō) from around 1858 to 1859. It was made in conjunction with Hiroshige’s pupil, Hiroshige II, and indeed was probably finished by him after Hiroshige’s death in 1858.

The subject of Mount Fuji, shown in different seasons and weather conditions from a variety of different places and distances, had already been made popular by Katsushika Hokusai in his famous series of 1830–1833, the ‘Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji’ (Fugaku sanjū-rokkei) and later in his book One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei). Hokusai himself was probably influenced by an earlier illustrated book entitled One Hundred Fujis (Hyaku Fuji), written by Kawamura Minsetsu in 1767. The notion of a set of 36 was a traditional format, referring back to the group of 36 revered poets selected in the early twelfth century as models of Japanese poetic ability.

Hiroshige had himself already produced a version of the 36 views of Fuji in small horizontal format at the end of 1852, and Mount Fuji also featured in many of his views of Edo and views along the Tōkaidō. However, this final series devoted entirely to the sacred mountain was designed in vertical format. This allowed him to show off the bold compositional skills he had developed in the 1850s, in particular his fondness for balancing foreground elements with landscape backgrounds.

The Sagami River (Sagamigawaさがみ川) Series: Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji Date: 1858 Colour woodblock print Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, 1952 EAX.4384 © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford This print is unusual within this series for its focus on human activities, as two men punt log-rafts along the river. Hiroshige has layered multiple visual planes in this composition, starting with the egret and reeds at the front, and ending with Fuji at the back. This device creates a sense of depth in the composition without resorting to Western linear perspective. The column of smoke from the fire divides the print vertically and the unexpected colours evoke a bright spring morning. This print was famously included in the background of van Gogh’s 1887 oil portrait of Père Tanguy.

The Sagami River (Sagamigawa さがみ川)
Series: Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji
Date: 1858
Colour woodblock print
Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, 1952 EAX.4384
© Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
This print is unusual within this particular series for its focus on human activities, as two men punt log-rafts along the river. Hiroshige has layered multiple visual planes in this composition, starting with the egret and reeds at the front, and ending with Fuji at the back. This device creates a sense of depth in the composition without resorting to Western linear perspective. The column of smoke from the fire divides the print vertically and the unexpected colours evoke a bright spring morning. This print was famously included in the background of van Gogh’s 1887 oil portrait of Père Tanguy.

 

Mount Fuji, an active volcano that last erupted in 1707, is the highest mountain in Japan at 3776m. It has long been praised by poets and depicted by artists for its beautiful shape and sacred status. In June 2013, it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage cultural site in recognition of the way in which it has ‘inspired artists and poets and been the object of pilgrimage for centuries’. Fuji is located just 70 miles from Hiroshige’s hometown of Edo (modern-day Tokyo) and on a clear day can be seen from many points in the city. It was also visible from many parts of the Tōkaidō Road that linked Edo with the ancient capital of Kyoto.

Mountains have traditionally been considered sacred in Japan, thought of as homes to spirits and gods, and by the seventh century Mount Fuji was being worshipped by wandering ascetic monks who climbed the mountain as a form of worship. By the early 1600s a Fuji cult, known as Fuji Shinkō, had developed in Edo. The Fuji Shinkō, which combined elements of Buddhist and Shinto belief, believed that Fuji protected Edo and the prosperity of the whole country, and established organizations of Fuji worshippers to provide rituals, prayers and pilgrimage practices for their members. These Fujikō groups, as they were called, were also responsible for the construction of a number of artificial Fuji-shaped hills in parks throughout Edo. These ‘mini-Fujis’ allowed citizens unable to travel to the actual mountain the chance to make substitute pilgrimages, or simply to enjoy them as a kind of theme park. There were ten of these replicas in Edo in Hiroshige’s day and he depicted them in several of his prints. Many purchasers of printed views of Fuji may have belonged to branches of these Fuji associations, which had around 70,000 members in Edo in Hiroshige’s day. One branch was led by a leading publisher of the early nineteenth century, Nishimuraya Yohachi (Eijudō), who produced several of Hiroshige’s print series (although not this one).

 

The Sea at Satta in Suruga Province (Suruga Satta kaijō駿河薩多海上) Series: Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji Date: 1858 Colour woodblock print Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, EAX.4387 © Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford Here Mount Fuji is framed by a giant curling wave in the foreground. The design recalls Hokusai’s famous depiction of Fuji, known as ‘The Great Wave’. Hiroshige’s version is calmer and more detached. The water has been printed with great sophistication, with three different shades of blue contrasting with the white wave crests, which in turn harmonize with the white peak of Mount Fuji in the background. The marks of the baren printing tool are clearly visible on the slopes of the mountain.

The Sea at Satta in Suruga Province (Suruga Satta kaijō 駿河薩多海上)
Series: Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji
Date: 1858
Colour woodblock print
Presented by Mrs Allan and Mr and Mrs H. N. Spalding, EAX.4387
© Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
Here Mount Fuji is framed by a giant curling wave in the foreground. The design recalls Hokusai’s famous depiction of Fuji, commonly known as ‘The Great Wave’. Hiroshige’s version is calmer and more detached. The water has been printed with great sophistication, with three different shades of blue contrasting with the white wave crests, which in turn harmonize with the white peak of Mount Fuji in the background. The marks of the baren printing tool are clearly visible on the slopes of the mountain.

 

 

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Clare Pollard
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