Chimuo Nureki

From Nawapedia
Revision as of 18:08, 13 July 2010 by H (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Chimuo Nureki

Nureki (濡木) family name, Chimuo (痴夢男) first name, (1930- )

Activities

Kinbakushi, writer and editor.

Alternate Name(s)

濡木痴夢男(Japanese)

Biography

Early Years

1930: Chimuo Nureki was born in Asakusa, Tokyo, and was the third generation of his family to be raised there.

c. 1938: Watching female sumo wrestling left an unforgettable impression on him[1].

1940: While a fifth grade elementary school student, Nureki saw a picture by Kashou Takabatake in which a boy was tied with his hands behind his back, and he became fascinated with pictures which appeared to show seppuku[1][note 1].

1940s: Nureki made a poster at the Health and Welfare public relations office of the Hitachi factory in Kameari where he was assigned during student mobilization[1][note 2].

1945: After the war, Nureki became an apprentice to Fukunosuke Ichikawa, a kabuki actor who played female roles in Shinsei Hanagata Kabuki[1][note 3].

1945: Met Seiu Ito in Asakusa[2].

1946: Another contact with Seiu Ito, this time at the Suzumoto Theater in Ichikawa City, Chiba Prefecture[2].

1946: Nureki spoke with a kabuki troupe and enrolled in a jidogeki theatrical company[1][note 4]. Nureki's first work was as an extra in a Toho movie co-starring Roppa Fukukawa and Ichirou Kagami[1][note 5].

Kitan Club Period

1953: Nureki was sent from a Tokyo design company to Nagoya, where he worked on a clothing-related advertising magazine[note 6]. He became acquainted with Kitan Club around this time[3].

1953: Pleasurable Punishment Performer was accepted in the November 1953 issue of Kitan Club[note 7]

Selected Works

How-to-Kinbaku

  • 濡木痴夢男の縛り方入門1 (Nureki Chimuo's Introductory Guide to Shibari No.1) (Art Video, 1983)
  • 濡木痴夢男の縛り方入門2 (Nureki Chimuo's Introductory Guide to Shibari No.2) (Art Video, 1983)
  • 濡木痴夢男の縛り方入門3 (Nureki Chimuo's Introductory Guide to Shibari No.3) (Art Video, 1983)
  • 濡木痴夢男の縛り方入門4 (Nureki Chimuo's Introductory Guide to Shibari No.4) (Art Video, 1983)
  • 濡木痴夢男の縛り方入門5 (Nureki Chimuo's Introductory Guide to Shibari No.5) (Art Video, 1983)
  • 濡木塾 I :濡木痴夢男新縛り方教室(Nureki School: Nureki Chimuo's New Introductory Guide to Shibari)(Art Video, 1988)
  • 秘技伝授 緊縛入門 (Initiation of Secret Technique: Introductory Class of Shibari) (SOD Create, 2001)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Nureki, Chimuo. Nureki Chimuo's Chat Theater. Web.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Nureki, Chimuo. The Artists of Kitan Club. Tokyo: Kawade Shobo, 2004. Print.
  3. Nakahara, Rutsu. "Another Face of Chimuo Nureki". Bondage - For As Long As I Live (Afterward). Tokyo: Kawade Shobo, 2008. Print.

Notes

  1. Nureki lived with his parents and a younger brother and sister in a two-story wooden house in Ryuusenjichou in Asakusa. He read the authors Edogawa Ranpo, Kyuusaku Yumeno, Udaru Oshita, Saburou Kouga, Juuza Unno and Junichirou Tanizaki repeatedly.
  2. Nureki received guidance from Ichirou Madokoro, a member of Taiheiyogakai.
  3. Based at a remodeled playhouse near Kameari Station. The 'Hanagata Kabuki Troupe had once been located at a theater in Honjo Midoricho, but was re-established in Kameari as Shinsei Hanagata Kabuki (Leaders: Tsuruzou Kantou and Takewaka Kantou) after evacuating Honjo Midoricho due to the destruction caused by aerial bombing.
  4. The troupe isn't specified, but it is thought to be Gekidan Toudou, which was active between 1928 and 1980.
  5. "I remember it seemed to have a title like If My Song Had Wings." The actual work is unconfirmed. One possibility is My Father (Toyotarou, 1946).
  6. Rutsu Nakahara places it with a Japanese PR magazine in the afterward to Nureki's "Bondage - For As Long As I Live."
  7. He strongly desired it to be illustrated by Reiko Kita, but Toshiyuki Suma had already left the magazine by that time. Mineko Tsuzuki Illustrated it instead.

External Links