Bustle Best Book of the Month
From the critically acclaimed author of The Heart: Frida Kahlo in
Paris, a fascinating, intimate portrait of one of Japan's most
influential and respected textile artists.
Writer, filmmaker, and photographer Marc Petitjean finds himself in
Kyoto one fine morning with his camera, to film a man who will become
his friend: Kunihiko Moriguchi, a master kimono painter and Living
National Treasure--like his father before him.
As a young decorative arts student in the 1960s, Moriguchi rubbed
shoulders with the cultural elite of Paris and befriended Balthus, who
would profoundly influence his artistic career. Discouraged by Balthus
from pursuing design in Europe, he returned to Japan to take up his
father's vocation. Once back in this world of tradition he had tried to
escape, Moriguchi contemporized the craft of Yūzen (resist dyeing)
through his innovative use of abstraction in patterns.
With a documentarian's keen eye, Petitjean retraces Moriguchi's
remarkable life, from his childhood during the turbulent 1940s and 50s
marked by war, to his prime as an artist with works exhibited in the
most prestigious museums in the world.