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Kendama: a whole new ball game

Kendama: a whole new ball game

A traditional wooden Japanese toy is taking the world by storm

By Masami Ito,

Nov. 8, 2014

The Japan Times

Almost every child that has grown up in Japan has seen a kendama, a wooden traditional Japanese toy consisting of a ken (sword) and tama (ball) connected by a length of string.


The ken has three cups and a spike that fits into a hole that has been drilled through the center of the ball. Using their knees, kendama players bounce as they pull the ball upward so that it may either be caught in one of the cups or land on the spike. All in all, it used to be a very simple and straightforward game.


Not anymore.


Kendama has grown in popularity overseas over the past decade or so, blending in naturally with the freestyle image of the skateboarding communities in urban centers in Europe and North America. More recently, the game has even been re-imported back to Japan in a form that is barely recognizable from its origins.


“People didn’t think much of kendama in the past other than that it was an uncool children’s toy. I used to get frustrated because people teased me for playing kendama in college,” said Tamotsu Kubota, head of Global Kendamas Network, which was established in 2012 to promote the game worldwide. “It was then that I knew I wanted to change the image of the game so that others would see how cool and amazing it really is.”


People in the United States first started to see kendama a little differently around 2006. One of the first advocates is believed to be Colin Sander, a freelance filmmaker who stumbled across video footage of skiers in Hokkaido playing kendama during a storm.


“I knew right away that it would be of large interest and new enthusiasm,” Sander told The Japan Times in an email. “I couldn’t contain myself and went around telling my close friends that I had this epic discovery for them. They all thought it was wild and really out-there.”


Sander shot a few videos of himself playing kendama and posted them on Youtube. It didn’t take long for word to spread.


Kendama USA was registered as a business in 2008, and it soon became the leading kendama manufacturer in North America. Other manufacturers have since emerged, including Sweets Kendamas and Kendama Co. in the United States, Copenhagen-based Krom Kendama and Amsterdam-based Sunrise Kendama. These companies often employ professional kendama players as consultants to help promote their products. Sander, for example, works closely with Kendama USA in this capacity.


“I like that kendama can open your mind to new ways of thinking,” Sander said. “Whether it be other sports or just life … the detailed nature of kendama moves increases your perception in general. I think a big part of the game’s growth had to do with the fact that it is so analog and we were entering a very digital-heavy era. People responded well to the low-tech nature of the game.”


Toys similar to kendama can be found all over the world, but the game is believed to have developed from France’s bilboquet. According to the Japan Kendama Association, bilboquet can be traced back to the 16th century and was even played by King Henry III. The toy made its way to Nagasaki around the late 18th century, as that was the only port open to foreign trade at the time.


Japan Kendama Association Chairman Yoshiki Matsunaga says kendama used to be played at drinking sessions by adults before ultimately being used as an educational toy by the end of the 19th century. Hiroshima’s Hamaji Egusa registered a patent for the contemporary-shaped kendama in 1919, which he called nichigetsu ball (sun moon ball).


Kendama in Japan has always been used in a fairly sedate environment.


Matsunaga, 62, attended a vibrant freestyle kendama competition in Tokyo’s Shinjuku district in September called Catch & Flow. The atmosphere was electric, with booming music providing a noisy backdrop for the fanciful moves on stage.


“I have to admit, it’s tough for us old folks to sit in that noise for three hours,” Matsunaga says with a laugh. “Kendama is a traditional part of Japanese culture and that’s why we call it kendama-do, or the way of kendama. At our competitions, we ask everyone to be quiet so that the players can concentrate.”


Established in 1975, the Japan Kendama Association has been involved in spreading the culture for almost 40 years. The organization has set up unified rules for kendama and has its own ranking system. Toys used for official championships and ranking tests must also be approved by the Japan Kendama Association. Matsunaga says none of the toys produced by foreign manufacturers have been officially approved, although a few have been categorized as “recommended.”


The association also promotes the use of kendama as educational toys for infants and children, as well as tools for the elderly at nursing homes. Members organize classes all over the country and visit universities to teach college students who are studying in such disciplines as social welfare or child care.


For more than 25 years, Matsunaga has been holding a Saturday kendama class in Hino, Tokyo. Held at a public facility, about 20 students, from elementary school age to retired people, gather to master the various kendama techniques. Each kendama class begins with a bow and silence prevails when the students are performing and perfecting their moves.


“Kendama is something that can be enjoyed by everyone, from children to old people, and we really value that inter-generational exchange. This dojo is something that I would really like to continue because there are so few opportunities like this nowadays,” Matsunaga said.


Matsunaga, a kendama player for more than 30 years, says the association has also been active in spreading kendama abroad, holding ranking tests in Hawaii and other places.


“Spreading kendama throughout the world is a part of our mission, and so the recent boom in popularity certainly helps us to achieve that,” Matsunaga says. “At the same time, however, such modern competitions operate on a very different level. I think kendama is evolving — it just shows how full of possibility it is.”


These days, kendama has made inroads into the domestic fashion industry, too.


Nobuaki Komoto, owner of Decade, an apparel shop for skateboarders and BMX riders in Tokyo’s trendy Harajuku district, started selling domestic and foreign kendama two years ago.


“In many ways, Kendama is like BMX: the way in which you put all the moves together, the feeling of accomplishment you feel when you’re able to finish off a move with a bang or the simple pleasure you experience competing against your friends,” says Komoto, who organized Catch & Flow in September.


Rows of colorful kendama sit on display at Decade. Some of these were made by domestic companies, but many were actually imported from Europe and the United States.


The basic design of the imported toys is the same as those made in Japan and officially approved by the Japan Kendama Association. However, Komoto says the foreign brands sometimes use wood such as walnut and mahogany — instead of buna (Japanese beech) for the sword and wild cherry for the ball — while the colors, patterns and designs emblazoned on each toy are more varied.


“The foreigners in the industry respect its Japanese background and their kendama initially started out as a copy of those made here,” Komoto says. “Now, however, they are branching out and making unique kinds of kendama.”


The toys have made their way into the art scene as well. An exhibition titled “Around the World — What the Dama?” features 75 domestic and foreign artists from a variety of backgrounds — illustrators, kimono designers and graffiti writers — who were all given the same kendama and were told to use it as they see fit. The project resulted in a dynamic selection of kendama that produced all sorts of shapes, colors and sizes.


The exhibition was held at UltraSuperNew Gallery in Tokyo’s Harajuku district in September and is currently on display at Digmeout Art & Diner in Osaka until Nov. 15.


“Traditional kendama culture has come back to Japan in a completely different form,” says Shimpei Kimura, digital producer at UltraSuperNew Gallery. “Players now take on a completely new approach. Some people didn’t know what to make of it, so we asked the question ‘what is kendama?’ and let the artists express themselves.”


Given the speed with which kendama is spreading worldwide, Global Kendamas Network’s Kubota feels this is the last chance for Japan to join the party if it wishes to avoid being left behind.


“The great thing about kendama is that it is something that everyone can enjoy, regardless of age, gender or nationality,” Kubota says. “The important thing from here is to make sure that this diversity is maintained in the kendama community — to protect the different opinions, the different ways of thinking and various types of products that have been created.”



original story here: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/life/2014/11/08/lifestyle/kendama-whole-new-ball-game/

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