Explore Japan — Season 1, Episode 7: The World of Miniatures
Documentary • 28 min • 1 season, 21 episodes
Episode synopsis
The world of miniatures is a surprisingly whimsical one, and among it Japanese miniatures have gained a worldwide reputation for being exceptionally unique. In 2020, one of the world’s largest indoor miniature theme parks opened in Tokyo. We watched the craft of a miniature artist with over 2.5 million followers on Instagram, as he uses his incredible imagination to create art with substitution, or mitate: Ordinary objects such as staples and vegetables stand in for scenery or landscape to create immense worlds. Another artist specializes in miniatures carefully recreating the images of rooms and buildings so as to immortalize the memories found within. His works portray the recollections of those who order the miniatures, and the Japanese sensibilities embodied by them. Examining the creations of 3 different miniature artists, the program explores Japan’s largely unknown history of miniatures, and what it is about them that has earned such an adoring following in Japan.
About Explore Japan
Japan continues to thrive as it incorporates cultural elements of music, fashion, cuisine, sports, arts and science from around the world. People’s encounters trigger the fusion of Japan’s and the world’s diverse culture, unceasingly producing a myriad of new phenomena and events. This series will feature how various culture in modern Japan and overseas blend together and influence each other.
More episodes from Season 1
- E1Koshu: The Miraculous Wine
- E2Japan-discovery, Self-discovery: Exchange Students in Tokyo
- E3My Life with Aikido
- E4Delivering to Space
- E5Peru & Japan Fusion of Cuisine
- E6The Somin Naked Festival
- E8The Manufacturing Spirit and Sustainability
- E9Japanese Gardens, Aesthetic Encounters
- E10Going Beyond Tradition: The Challenge of Craftspeople in Kyoto
- E11Innovative Japanese Bread
- E12Capturing Masters’ Workmanship
- E13MUSIC TRUNK: Journey to Discover the Roots of Japanese Sound