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#kawara no yu
harpersessentials · 7 months
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my next generation will spend a lot of time in komorebi - a world which, despite its amazing landscape, tends to bore me to death - so, to change that, i decided to look for a few fanmade lots to brighten things up a bit. this was the result, a list of favourite lots for mt. komorebi that i now share with you.
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1 - 241 Wakabamori 20x15
Wakabamori Hostel (Rental/Residential) by @rebouks
241 Wakabamori (Residential) by @mysimsloveaffair
241 Wakabamori (Residential) by @pixelco
Wakabamori 241 (Residential) by @pilcrow00b6
Traditional Japanese Home (Residential) by @simkatbuilds
2 - 242 Wakabamori 30x20
The Maeda Residence (Residential) by @ladychaos
Akiya (Haunted House) by @whyeverr
Newlyweds Japanese Home (Residential) by @ludicsim
242 Hasegawa (Residential) by @cerubean
3 - 243 Wakabamori 20x15
Japanese Cottage (Residential) by cross-design
Wakabamori's Cat Café (Café) by @incandescentsims
Natsukashii (Rental/Residential) by @grimsae
4 - Hazakura Lounge 30x20
Hādowāku Dojo (Gym) by @thepixelarchitect
Karaoke Bar Hazakura (Karaoke Bar) by @mikkimur-sims
Mt Komorebi Home (Residential) by @lilaicks
5 - 251 Wakabamori 50x50
Japanese Countryside House by @plantsimgirl
The Uchida Residence (Residential) by @ladychaos
Ryokan “Yukimatsu” (Rental) by @alerionjkeee
6 - 641 Haniamigawa 20x15
The Laurel House (Residential) by @moonlightowl-es
Maid Cafe and Some Manga (Restaurant) by @alerionjkeee
641 Haniamigawa (Residential) by @thepixelarchitect
7 - Hanamigawa Koen 30x20
Sushi Restaurant (Restaurant) by @mikkimur-sims
'umamichi’ & machiya (Restaurant) by @caelhinn
Senbamachi Street Food (Community Space) by @alerionjkeee
8 - Izakaya Ippai 30x20
Japanese Tavern (Bar) by @secretscones
honeyasume sento (Onsen Bathhouse) by @beetlemp3
Kawara no Yu (Onsen Bathhouse) by @whyeverr
Refuge de l’Aube (Residential) by @simsontherope
Old Townhouse (Residential) by @alerionjkeee
9 - 561 Shinrinyoku 20x15
Red Dragon (Night Club) by @mikkimur-sims
561 Shinrinyoku (Residential) by @alerionjkeee
561 Shinrinyoku (Residential) by @kazroze
561 Shinrinyoku (Residential) by @scarletts4
564 Shinrinyoku Apartments (Residential) by @alerionjkeee
10 - 531 Shinrinyoku 30x20
Downtown Senbamachi (Bar) by @ladychaos
leblanc bar, laundromat, café  (Bar) by @lizardtrait
Senbamachiya Market (Retail) by @whyeverr
531 Shinrinyoku (Residential) by @mikkimur-sims
11 - 5-1-1 Kiyomatsu 30x20
Winterland Shopping Street (Retail) by @mikkimur-sims
Snow Equipment Shop (Retail) by @thepixelarchitect
511 Kiyomatsu (Rental) by @mikkimur-sims
12 - 5-1-2 Kiyomatsu 30x20
512 Kiyomatsu (Rental) by @mikkimur-sims
Komorebi Motel & Bar (Bar) by @scarletts4
13 - Sutefani Onsen Bathhouse 30x20
La Source Émeraude (Onsen Bathouse) by @simsontherope
Nordic Spa (Spa) by @darthmol
14 - Kiyomatsu Point 50x50
The Sactuary of Komorebi (Park) by @alerionjkeee
Tinamatsu Snow Café (Café) by @simgurl
Kiyomatsu Lodge (Rental) by @darthmol
Onsen Bathhouse Sakura (Onsen Bathhouse) by @mikkimur-sims
15 - Top Mt Komorebi 20x20
Mt. Komorebi Peak (Special Lot) by @simgurl
Mt. Komorebi Castle (Special Lot) by @ariafaeyt
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Akiu-Onsen Sakan, Hot Springs Hotel(Miyagi, Japan)伝承千年の宿 佐勘★★
I stayed at Sakan in Akiu Onsen (^o^)
Hot spring bath called Kawara-No-Yu was great (^o^)v
秋保温泉の佐勘に宿泊して来ました(^o^)
河原の湯が気持ちよかったな〜(^o^)v
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whyeverr · 3 years
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Kawara no Yu | Onsen Bathhouse
Senbamachi residents have gathered for generations inside the faded tile walls of this retro-style public bath for relaxation and hot, no-frills baths with family and neighbors. The mineral water of Mt. Komorebi’s hot springs is said to have restorative properties, leaving your skin feeling silky-smooth. Scrub yourself down on a stool at the shower stall, settle into one of the baths, and relax in midcentury bathing style. Forgot your soap? Toiletries are available for purchase at the front counter, along with cool, refreshing drinks from the vending machine.
A tall partition separates the bathing area into two halves, watched over by a large tile mural of Mt. Komorebi. (The halves are currently set up divided by sex—as this style of bathhouse is traditionally—but you can absolutely change the doors on both sides to gender-neutral for your gameplay.) 
Each side has its own dressing room, showers, sauna, baths, and even a reflexology foot path. In addition to the large onsen, there are smaller baths with special therepeutic additives are available for use. (These would not typically be single-occupant tubs in a traditional onsen or sentō, but EA gave us two ginormous onsen objects to work with, so please forgive this inelegant solution!) An open second story allows sunlight from the large windows to filter into the bathing area and gives all that steam somewhere to dissipate.
Sorry for all the parentheticals. As with my Senbamachiya, I have greatly enjoyed the research for this build and have done my best to appropriately translate what I’ve learned into the limitations of the game, but of course apologize if I got anything wrong! 
Lot details:
Lot Type: Onsen Bathhouse
Lot Traits: Clothing Optional, Geothermal, Natural Well—because onsen. I’d recommend removing Clothing Optional if you’d like your sims to stick to swimwear instead of their birthday suits!
Price: §114,361
Size: 30x20
Location: Hanamigawa Yuzu
I’ve used from all packs freely here—naturally, it’s very heavy on Snowy Escape but you’ll need Spa Day for the saunas and different types of bath soaks.
Please enable bb.moveobjects on when downloading to ensure proper placement of the lot!
Download via the Sims 4 Gallery here or the tray files via Sim File Share here. Please don’t re-upload or share without credit. Thank you!
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justinahnyu · 4 years
Video
Family Recipe
Justina Yu
Stop motion and Rotoscope Animation. Foam board, paper, polymer clay, acrylic, Photoshop, Procreate. 2020
Family Recipe connects my cultural ecosystem, lifestyle, and family dynamics with digital media such as animation and instant messaging. My work depicts the importance of my upbringing, parents, as well as my daily communication with them now that I live away from home. I used the kitchen from my family’s home as the setting- it is a space that is frequently used, and is a place that has held some of our most significant discussions, lessons, and decisions. The kitchen is the place where my Hong Kong-born parents passed down their traditions to my sister and myself (their Canadian-Chinese daughters) through recipes and oral tradition. This part of my theme mirrors Karen Tam’s depiction of Canadian-Chinese spaces through constructed sets.
I chose text messages as my digital media because of their accessibility and importance to daily life. The text messages shown in the video are actual texts from my phone; however mundane and minimal they may be, they have become part of my routine. Similar to On Kawara’s Telegrams: I Am Still Alive, the text messages shown in my piece, no matter how silly or seemingly meaningless, are still a message to my parents that we are connected and that I am safe.
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kantaro-signs · 7 years
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Get湯! ストリート銭湯カルチャーイベントGet湯!のためのグッズデザイン デザイン|石鹸ケース、タオル、お風呂ステッカー A goods for the “Get You! (Yu)”  that is event in public bathhouse in Kyoto. Produce by Get湯! (Kenta Kawara, Sanjiro Minato, Keisuke Yokosuka) 2017 ©Kiyotoshi Takashima
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micaramel · 5 years
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Artists: Barnett Newman, Piero Manzoni, Jiro Takamatsu, Agnes Martin, Imi Knoebel, Teppei Soutome, Frank Stella, Joseph Kosuth, Tomoharu Murakami, Marc Quinn, Rei Naito, Futo Akiyoshi, Richard Tuttle, Lynda Benglis, Kodai Nakahara, Ushio Shinohara, Yu Araki, Richard Aldrich, Henry Moore, Aiko Miyawaki, Kenjiro Okazaki, Yuji Takeoka, Kazuo Okazaki, Dan Flavin, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Anton Henning, Mike Kelley, Marcel Duchamp, Tetsumi Kudo, Daan Van Golden, Naoya Hatakeyama, Tony Oursler, Ryan Gander, Wols, Jim Dine, Tomio Miki, Laurie Simmons, Thomas Ruff, Ilya Kabakov, Jan Dibbets, Nobuo Sekine, Roy Lichtenstein, Tiger Tateishi (Koichi・Taigaa), Stephan Balkenhol, Yoshishige Saito, Lucio Fontana, Sigmar Polke, Jean-Pierre Pincemin, Anthony Caro, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Bertrand Lavier, Gerhard Richter, Joseph Beuys, Oliver Beer, Pablo Picasso, Jean Fautrier, Alberto Giacometti, Georg Baselitz, Richard Hamilton, John Currin, Luc Tuymans, Marino Marini, Jean-Pierre Raynaud, Katsura Funakoshi, Erwin Wurm, Yoshitatsu Yanagihara, Kazuo Yagi, Daido Moriyama, Tatsumi Yoshino, Tam Ochiai, Kiki Smith, Jean-Marc Bustamante, Toshio Shibata, Man Ray, Giorgio Morandi, Arman, Rachel Whiteread, Takanobu Kobayashi, Eri Takayanagi, Kiyoshi Koishi, Natsuyuki Nakanishi, Tony Cragg, Ryuji Miyamoto, Kazuyuki Takezaki, Hamish Fulton, On Kawara, Edward Ruscha, Ryuichi Yamashiro, Andy Warhol, Tadanori Yokoo, Sherrie Levine, Shinji Ogawa, Marcel Broodthaers, Ute Lindner, Candida Höfer, Mel Ziegler, Hisachika Takahashi, U-Fan Lee, Donald Judd, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Saburo Muraoka, Niele Toroni, Max Ernst, Morris Louis, Sadamasa Motonaga, Yukinori Yanagi, Bernard Frize, Yuki Onodera, Wolfgang Tillmans
Venue: The National Museum of Art, Osaka
Exhibition Title: The Myriad Forms of Visual Art: 196 Works with 19 Themes
Date: May 26 – July 1, 2018
Click here to view slideshow
Full gallery of images, press release and link available after the jump.
Images:
Images: Nobutada Omote
Press Release:
Today the world is flooded with information about every conceivable field, and is growing ever more globalized and diverse. In this environment, museums’ conventional procedures for storing and exhibiting art by era or by region are becoming ineffective. In Europe and North America, museums of contemporary art have been holding an increasing number of thematically organized exhibitions. This exhibition presents works from the National Museum of Art, Osaka’s collection, grouped according to 19 themes. These themes are ones that enable viewers to stop, think, and find new meanings, and can be roughly divided into “elements of works” and “subjects depicted in works.” The art on view is diverse, ranging from iconic works that embody certain themes to selections that may surprise you, and includes around 50 new acquisitions. The basic frameworks by which we classify art – era, region, genre – are taken into account, but combinations and juxtapositions highlight connections among widely varied works of art. This special exhibition of works from the collection seeks not merely to reconfirm what each viewer already knows about art, but to elicit new discoveries and offer opportunities to think about art from new angles.
Link: “The Myriad Forms of Visual Art” at The National Museum of Art, Osaka
Contemporary Art Daily is produced by Contemporary Art Group, a not-for-profit organization. We rely on our audience to help fund the publication of exhibitions that show up in this RSS feed. Please consider supporting us by making a donation today.
from Contemporary Art Daily http://bit.ly/2Av6iRC
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whyeverr · 3 years
Note
Hey just wondering why your link for the KAWARA NO YU | ONSEN BATHHOUSE for simfileshare wont work?
Not sure, Anon. Everything is working just fine for me when I download it. Looks like lots of other folks have downloaded it and I haven’t heard of any issues.
Here’s an alt link (Google Drive).
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