5 Rings, One Doll



五指輪一の人形
Go Yubiwa Ichi No Ningyō

The Kokeshi Project
Nikkei National Museum
Burnaby, BC

Fir wood base, acrylic paint, oil based wood stain,
twine, incorporated objects
8” tall x variable dimensions.
Neal E. Nolan
2013


















5 Rings, One Doll both incorporates and conceptualizes the teachings of the legendary samurai, Miyamoto Musashi (The Book of Five Rings.) The piece additionally acknowledges the philosophies of the Shinobi- whom, both coincidently and transcendently (see research disambiguation), shared in these principals and philosophies; incorporating them in martial and everyday practical use. 

According to research, despite popular belief and the depiction of folklore, the ninja weren’t a separate martial force from the Samurai but a subgroup generally made up of foot soldiers (Ashigaru) and samurai retainers- hired by feudal lords and others as spies and mercenaries.

By the way of disambiguation of these two warrior classes, and in illustrating the dichotomy of these two precepts- 5 Rings, One Doll intends to illustrate the falsehood within the hierarchy of class and express human equality both historically and contemporary.























5 Rings, One Doll
Disambiguation


The Book of 5 Rings*(1) is a text on kenjutsu and the martial arts in general which incorporates general sociology and psychology- both directly in relation to life in its general essence and in metaphor. The text relates the idea that there are different elements of battle, just as there are different physical elements in life, as described by Buddhism, Shinto, and other Eastern religions.

The text is broken up into 5 “books:”
Earth. Water, Fire, Wind, Sky and relates the tactical aspects of each book in metaphorical connection to the attributes of each element.

The Shinobi also followed a philosophy based on the 5 rings founded in the five elements, Earth (Chi) representing stability and confidence - Water (sui) representing adaptability - Fire (ka): energy and commitment of spirit - Wind (fu) is freedom, both of mind and body, and finally the void or sky (ku) which represents the things beyond our everyday existence, the unseen power and creative energy of the universe.

The breakdown of these two precepts is incorporated both aesthetically and tangibly within the development of 5 Rings, One Doll.

The Ring of Earth is represented by the Sakura branches extruding from the Kokeshi. Bound with rigging, they represent the ring of earth philosophy as it expresses the use of one’s natural environment in martial strategy and everyday effort.

Arranged asymmetrically, a Wabi-Sabi aesthetic was incorporated in leaving the structural composition of the Sakura branches open with the possibility of rearrangement- not only embracing the potential for desired compositional adaptation and reconstruction, but as a nod to the transience associated with the Buddhistic influence of mono no aware connected to the blossoms of the Sakura. This approach was taken in connection to the elemental teachings represented by the ring of water in embracing its formidability.

A flame was used to aesthetically condition the twine incorporating the ruing of fire.

The use of an airbrush incorporates the propulsion of air in delivering the pigment to its surface. (Wind).

And finally, the Tanuki (, ) (“Racoon Dog”) painted on both the front and back of the Kokeshi..  The Tanuki is a mischievous figure in Japanese mythology commonly associated with excessive drinking, gluttony, good fortune and prosperity - also a bringer of good luck.
Bake-danuki (化け狸) are a kind of tanuki yōkai – a Racoon Dog possessing mystical attributes.
In some regions of Japan, bake-danuki is reputed to have abilities similar to those attributed to kitsune (foxes): they can shape-shift into other things, shape-shift people, and possess human beings. The Tanuki is also said to be evasive, it’s habits are not only nocturnal but it also hibernates through the winter months.
In all of its illusory, vague aspects, the Tanuki is incorporated, not only in representation of the Shinoibi, but its mystical connection to folklore embraces the 5th element of Sky/ Void.

The origins of the Shinobi carry much historical conjecture as, despite pop-cultural reference, historical accounts of the ninja are scarce. Ninja were mostly recruited from the lower class, and therefore little historical literary interest was taken in them.
Historian Kiyoshi Watatani states that the ninja were trained to be particularly secretive about their actions and existence(2) so this could also contribute to their vague origins.

“The origin of the ninja is considered a “Dark Age” in Japanese history as no historical documentation of its creation is contemporary to the first records of ninja activity. This means that all ideas aimed at the ninja origins, are open to theory and are not supported in any way by documentation that was written when the ninja first appeared.” (3)

One widely opposed theory(3) claims that Ninjitsu came to Japan by way of Chinese refugees fleeing from the Chinese totalitarian system. These theories are heavily supported by what is known of Ninja mysticism and military tactics. Romantic folklore depicts the ninja as a
counter-culture of peasants that were based in Iga and Kōka that developed special skills to defend against samurai oppression. The refuges settling amongst the Japanese Iga and Kōka mountains as early as the 12th century, adopted by the Japanese farmers as part of their community, this romanticism believed Ninjutsu was honed and refined (along with a 5 rings paradigm similar to that illustrated in Miyamoto’s teachings) by the establishment of these inter-cultural Chinese/ Japanese families and villages and passed along as the two cultures merged.
Being that the Iga and Kōka mountains were populated by land owning Samurai class, the popular belief of the Iga farmer/ ninja subculture has been, in ways, disproven. Though, in truth, the medieval documents that express the origins, traditional philosophies and practices of the Ninja have never been seen in full in the west and are rarely seen outside of certain circles in Japan.

What is known is that following the unification of Japan under the Tokugawa shogunate (17th century), the ninja faded into obscurity, being replaced by the Oniwabanshū body of secret agents. A number of shinobi manuals, often centered on Chinese military philosophy, were written in the 17th and 18th centuries, most notably the Bansenshukai (1676). Speculating further the connection to the dichotomy differing the Shinobi and Samurai in both Folk and pop-cultural depiction- the section of Bansenshukai that outlines philosophy (Seishin {correct heart/ mind})*(4) is very closely comparable to the Samurai code of Bushido. It is said that these manuals were written by shinobi in the development of the Oniwabanshū principal discipline. 


*(1) The Book of Five Rings (五輪書 Go Rin No Sho?)
       Author: Miyamoto Musashi c. 1645
        Translated: William Scott Wilson, 2002
          
*(2) Bugei Ryuha 100 Sen (武芸流派100) (Selection of 100 Martial Arts.)
         Watatani Kiyoshi (1972)

*(3) Various writings and books
       Antony Cummins, MA, BA – Historian

*(4) Bansenshukai (萬川集海)
      Fujibayashi Sabuji (1676)

     The three Shinobi Scrolls of the Gunpo Jiyoshu samurai manual
     Document un-authorized and written upon approval: Tokugawa Ieyasu (Shogun 1603 – 1605)
     c.1612

    Shinobi-uta
     Authorship contributed to: 12th Century tactician, Yoshimori

    Ninpiden
    Author: Hattori Hanzo and various others
     c. 1560