Thursday, May 28, 2026

Day 5025: Playing by Ear? & Japan is Solarizing.

:Drama": junk collage, digital collage.

\

                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click: Jada Monroe, The Woman I Used to Be.



"Bamboo Shoots Sprout"


According to Japan's ancient calendar of 72 microseasons, mid-May is when bamboo shoots sprout. Known as takenoko in Japan, these voracious plants have numerous uses in Japan, both as building materials but also edible vegetables. They can be store-bought but in ancient Japan they were delicacies that had to be picked and eaten right away or they would harden. The image above from the 1800s is part of a series depicting seasonal activities around the year. This one, from May, is a beautiful triptych that depicts noblewomen out on an excursion to gather bamboo shoots.














2GN2S ... Hmmm

Today I was responding on a text to WonderWoman, we were talking and I said, "I'll play it by ear." 

 




And then, I wondered if anyone said that anymore?  The reference (for me) comes from my learning to play my pieces on the piano, finding the notes by ear. My Dad used to use that term sometimes, and today it popped out of me?


Google said it better: To play it by ear is to act spontaneously and according to the situation. Playing it by ear means you have no game plan. The original meaning of this term was to play music without sheet music, meaning you either remembered the music or improvised it. Have you ever heard it, or said it? Just curious.





Jordan, Zack, Jacob

Three young "Grandhunks", 2002





Japan is covering its highway sound barriers with solar panels — turning infrastructure nobody notices into clean energy nobody expected.
Japan's highway network stretches thousands of kilometers across a mountainous archipelago where flat land is scarce and expensive. Sound barriers — the tall concrete and metal walls built alongside highways to protect neighboring communities from traffic noise — line virtually every urban and suburban highway section. They face the sun. They are structurally robust. And until recently, they generated nothing.
The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism has launched a program to retrofit sound barriers along the Tomei, Chuo, and Meishin expressways with thin-film photovoltaic panels integrated into the barrier surface. The panels generate electricity that powers highway lighting, traffic management systems, and electric vehicle charging at adjacent service areas — all without requiring a single square meter of additional land.

Japan's land constraint has driven some of the world's most creative solar deployment thinking. Alongside sound barriers, the country is integrating solar panels into noise walls at railway stations, into the roofs and walls of highway tunnels where light is available, and into the surfaces of agricultural greenhouses where translucent panels allow partial light transmission to crops below.
The innovation that makes this particularly compelling is flexible thin-film solar — panels that can be bonded to curved and non-standard surfaces that rigid silicon panels cannot accommodate. Japanese manufacturers including Sharp and Kaneka are leaders in thin-film photovoltaic technology, producing panels specifically designed for building-integrated and infrastructure-integrated applications.
Japan's solar strategy is simple: if it faces the sun, it should generate electricity.


 



  
 
A 4+ minute video, Archie, here.
 
 
Just because ...

 Festive Coquette Hummingbird


Thursday's Smiles ... 



















Hoping you see all the good things in your day.


  


 

  

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Day 5024: California Scenario & Artist, Sculptor, Isamu Noguchi

"Structure": drawing, photo, collage, digital.

 

                                                                       

  

Want music?



    Click: Jada Monroe, Habit.


2GN2S



Less than half an hour drive from my home is the beautiful California Scenario garden in Costa Mesa, CA. I discovered this treasure over ten years ago and visited with a friend. The art is by Isamu Noguchi, a California native whom many critics consider to be America's leading sculptor. I was so surprised to see it tucked in between skyscrapers and commercial garages. Few Orange County residents know it exists.

His creation is a relatively small 1.6 acre collection of sculpture and plantings called California Scenario, an abstract, condensed vision of the Golden State. A legacy from Isamu Noguchi to his birthplace, made possible by Henry Segerstrom, then owner of Mount Coast Plaza and much of the surrounding land.


As you walk through this urban space, which is open and free to the public from 8 am to midnight, you might notice six distinct aspects of California. The names are Noguchi's words, but titles don't appear on the images. Water Source is a stark 30-foot triangular form of sandstone, suggestion the mountainous water fountain that nourishes life in the state. This sandstone sculpture includes its own miniature cascading waterfalls, providing sound, movement and life-giving potential. The water leaves the mountains and weaves through the landscape before disappearing into the mitered triangular form of white granite, called Water Use.

As you walk along the stream, a symmetrical, circular mound, The Desert Land, suggests the stark beauty of California's deserts. The plants here are native, beaver tail and barrel cactus, ocotillo and agave. Balancing the desert area is a meadow of wildflowers and grasses, bordered by towering redwood trees that rise from a mound of earth with a Sierra granite pathway and park bench .This area is called The Forest Walk. The harnessing of natural forces is suggested in the area, Land Use, where an eight foot knoll with a white Sierra granite form, surrounded by honeysuckle. A stainless steel cone on a base of broken-face Rockville granite, termed The Energy Fountain, for California's dynamic productivity.

One of my favorites, "The Spirit of the Lima Bean", a sculpture containing fifteen, rounded, bronze-colored granite rocks, cut by Noguchi and fitted precisely together. They salute the half century of agricultural use, farmed on this very land.


From CA Interstate 405 (San Diego Freeway) to Costa Mesa, and exit east at Bristol Street, then turn right on Anton, and right again on Park Center Drive, which borders the sculpture garden. For further information on the sculpture garden, contact South Coast Plaza Town Center, 
(714) 435-2000


Isamu Noguchi




Isamu Noguchi was born in 1904 in Los Angeles to an American mother and a Japanese poet father who abandoned the family before he was born. As a child, he moved to Japan, but never truly felt accepted there either.
At 13, his mother sent him alone to America for school. He later called it his first experience of exile.
He first studied medicine, but left it for sculpture. Even his mentor, Gutzon Borglum, told him he would never succeed. Still, Noguchi kept going. In Paris, he worked under Constantin Brâncuși and began searching for pure form in sculpture.
During Attack on Pearl Harbor, he voluntarily entered an internment camp in Arizona to support imprisoned Japanese Americans, only to find himself trapped there too.
After the war, he devoted himself to stone sculpture, creating gardens, fountains, and public works across the world. Near the end of his life, a child invited him to climb inside one of his sculptures. When he came out, he was crying.


He died in 1988, after spending decades turning stone into something deeply human. "If you spend your whole life searching for where you belong… what if the search itself becomes your home?"



 



  
 
A 4+ minute video, When Edgar Meets Sally  here.
 
 
Just because ...

Blue Waxbills


Wednesday's Smiles ... 

 


















Hoping you see all the good things in your day.