UPDATE on 2/17/18 via FB: “Due to muddy path and the tea ceremony attendant being sick we need to postpone the tea ceremony.
Thank you for your understanding.”
UPDATE: Both tea ceremonies postponed to March 31, 2018 – 1 and 3 p.m.
On display Feb. 1, to March 4, 2018.
“Hinamatsuri or Girls’ Day is an annual holiday in Japan held on March 3rd, which honors the health and well-being of girls. The holiday celebration includes special foods and sweets and the exhibit of a plum tree, flowers and a Hina doll display. The doll display is set up by families in mid-February to rid the girls of bad spirits and to renew and strengthen their character. The custom of erecting a doll display is rooted in a traditional belief that dolls have the power to contain bad spirits. To rid their homes of evil spirits, ancient Japanese people had a ritual called Hinanagashi, in which straw Hina dolls were set afloat on a boat down a river out to sea. In some regions of Japan, people follow this tradition and float the dolls from the Hina display on Girls’ Day.
The Hina doll display includes ornamental dolls representing the Emperor, Empress and their court set on a seven-tiered stand covered with a red carpet or cloth. Since Hinamatsuri was first celebrated in the Heian period (10th and 11th centuries) the dolls are dressed in the court garb of that period. The Imperial dolls are placed at the top of the display followed by three tiers featuring particular attendants or musicians. The bottom two tiers are filled with palatial items such as furniture, tools and carriages. Traditionally the Hina doll display is set up in February and disassembled no later than March 4th because it is believed that setting up the display early and clearing it out promptly will bring an early marriage for the girls. Failure to do so could mean a late marriage or no marriage at all.
The Girls’ Day Display at The Mini Time Machine Museum of Miniatures is a five-tiered display including 15 dolls and other symbolic accessories. The display dates to the 1950s and was donated to the museum in 2014 by Nancy Phillips.”
Mini Time Machine Museum is at 4455 E. Camp Lowell Dr., Tucson: https://theminitimemachine.org/portfolio/girls-day-display/
Performance schedule flyer added 1/15/18 below (updated 1/17/18): Don’t miss mochi pounding & samples.
For event updates and info on prizes to be given away, go to our FB page: www.facebook.com/southernazjapan/
“In a heartfelt Domo arigato! (“Thank you!”) to the entire Tucson community, Yume Japanese Gardens will feature live performances of Japanese music and songs and demonstrations of popular Japanese traditional arts in a day-long celebration of its fifth anniversary on January 13, 2018. UPDATE: performance schedule below
Festivities will include demonstrations of Ikebana, or traditional Japanese flower arranging, and of origami, the Japanese art of folding paper to create three-dimensional figures. Musical performances will range from traditional melodies played onshakuhachi (bamboo flute) to a recital of Japanese folk songs and thunderous taiko drumming by Odaiko Sonora, southern Arizona’s premier Japanese drumming ensemble.
The day’s events begin at 10:00 am and continue until 4:30 pm. Japanese food will be available for purchase, and admission is $15 for adults and $7 for children under 15. Attendees may purchase tickets at the door, or in advance by calling (520) 272-3200 or by visiting www.yumegardens.org and clicking on “Events” and then on “Buy Tickets.” All tickets are non-refundable.
Literally created from nothing, non-profit Yume was laid out on an empty clay lot before opening in 2013 with five classical Japanese garden landscapes, including a koi pond. It has not stopped growing since. Over the years it has added a replica traditional Japanese cottage, a small museum of Japanese arts and crafts, and an art gallery and gift shop, while hosting a lengthening roster of cultural events. These have ranged from exhibits of hanging scrolls and hand-painted kimonos to musical performances on traditional instruments, as well as tea ceremonies and seasonal festivals marking such Japanese holidays as Children’s Day every May.
The Gardens are at 2130 N. Alvernon Way, one block south of the Tucson Botanical Gardens. Celebration attendees are requested to avoid parking on East Hampton Place on the north side of the Gardens, so as not to disrupt neighborhood traffic.”
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For more information on the anniversary event or on Yume Japanese Gardens of Tucson, visit www.yumegardens.org, writeyume.gardens@gmail.com, or call (520) 272-3200.