Origami Tanteidan Convention Book 19 12

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Mazie Wingeier

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Jul 9, 2024, 12:12:43 PM7/9/24
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Although there will be other foreign visitors to the convention, and we'll have lots of help from our local friends, this is not a tour. You are responsible for your own activities, meals, transport, dealings with hotel staff, etc. All minors must be accompanied by an adult. In general, here are no professional tour guides, no fixed meals, etc.

origami tanteidan convention book 19 12


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Plan as if you're going on your own, do the proper advance research, and you'll be a much happier visitor. Fail to do so, and you'll be hot, end up doing things you aren't interested in, and generally will be a burden on fellow visitors, and that is Not Fun.

The Origami Tanteidan Convention is the yearly gathering of members of the Japan Origami Academic Society (JOAS). It is held over a weekend in August each year, on a university campus in Tokyo, Japan. In duration and flavor it's much like the yearly OrigamiUSA convention held in New York.

No, I'm afraid there is not. A trip to a Tanteidan Convention is not a professionally organized "tour" in any way, shape or form. Any and all activities (including the convention itself) are organized and run by volunteers. There's no central agency setting up lunches, dinners, sightseeing, paper shopping, etc. in Tokyo for the foreign attendees. (If you find such an agency, would you sign me up for the tour, too?)

The Convention itself, of course, is organized and structured - from mid-day on Friday through around 5 pm on Sunday, there will be things to do, meals will be arranged (or at least easy to do) and so on, though you will be responsible for your own travel (via subway) from your lodging to the convention location; some years there is a small trip after Convention organized for visitors as well, where all travel, meals and lodging will be pre-arranged; this cannot necessarily happen every year, nor is there always space for all visitors, so you should plan on your own touring around.

Do not panic. You should definitely consider attending a Tanteidan Convention even if you've never been to Japan, and don't speak the language, as long as you are an adult capable of:

If you plan on attending, you should expect to do all the research and planning you'd do before traveling to any foreign (and unfamiliar) country on your own. This means you must be willing to do the research and figure out things like:

You will, however, have lots company in all this: there happen to be a collection of like-minded non-Japanese-native origami friends and acquaintances who go to the Origami Tanteidan Convention as often as they can. Many are repeat visitors, some speak Japanese, and we're lucky enough to have really good Tokyo-local friends at Gallery Origami House (which I abbreviate GOH) who will help us out as much as they can with the logistics of a couple of tricky things, namely Tokyo housing, getting to/from the airport, recommending good local restaurants, and the like.

A core group of us on the US side of the Pacific will help to pull stuff together for any foreign attendees who want our help, and we are doing so as volunteers, too, so be kind! And the staff of GOH have normal business to do, and are ramping up for their convention, so contact with and questions to them need to be kept to a reasonable minimum (or routed through one of us) if possible. (They have no native-English speakers on staff, so it's quite inconvenient for them to deal with English email/phone/fax. If you cannot communicate in Japanese, please remember to use straightforward language, and short, easy to understand messages. Contact us if you need assistance with tricky details.)

This group of America-based quasi-organizers will use email and shared online documents to try and coordinate schedules and stuff before everyone goes; and, if the group wishes, can try and coordinate Things To Do in Tokyo, too; with our obvious common interests, there are lots of fun shopping things and sights to see that we would all probably enjoy together in the free time pre-convention. (Post-convention, people are generally really on their own, although many years there is an organized excursion.)

The better prepared you are before you go, the better off you'll be, and the more fun you'll have on the trip. To this end, you must spend time with maps, guidebooks (see some recommendations), and consider doing all the language cramming you can handle in the time before you leave. (Ok, you don't have to panic about the language, but any bit you can learn before you go will be helpful. Remember, you're about to become completely illiterate, and incapable of communicating with the locals!) Before you go, you should research and think about the kinds of things you'd like to see and do while there so you can make informed decisions each day as to what you'd like to do (rather than just tagging along with a group and then not being happy about the choices, which has happened to the gang in the past, and is, I can say from direct experience, Not Fun.)

During OrigamiUSA's 19-day online event, a different teacher taught a different origami model daily. I was one of the 19 teachers. All class recordings can be purchased for a limited time after the event.Aug 2021: Second Origami World Marathon (OWM2)I was one of 48 origami designers invited to teach their original origami models for the 100% online event. Instructional videos for all of the models taught during the event remain available for purchase on the origami-shop.com website for a limited time.

I was one of the invited teachers for the planned virtual half of the 2021 Wuzhen Wucun Origami Convention. The teachers taught from many different countries. The second half was initially intended to be offline but was later changed to online.

I taught one of my models at AEP's (Asociacin Espaola de Papiroflexia) online convention. The convention was supposed to be held in person, but the organizers quickly adapted to the changing circumstances and hosted a wonderful event online.

I was honored to be one of the special guests for the 2019 OrigaMIT convention, alongside Artur Biernacki.2019 OrigaMIT Convention Shirt, drawn by me, featuring models by me and Artur Biernacki.Dec 2016: "Mujeres de Papel" Exhibition at the EMOZ MuseumIn 2016, I submitted a few models (Great Dome v1.1, Awareness Ribbon Angel v2, Kokeshi Doll v2) to the "Mujeres de Papel" exhibition at the EMOZ museum in Zaragoza, Spain.

The Bug Wars were origami contests among members of the Origami Detectives (Tanteidan in Japanese) which started when one member made a bug, a horned beetle with outspread wings, from a single sheet of paper: this design provoked other members to design more complex origami in the shape of bugs, such as wasps and praying mantises.

The Bug Wars motivated computational origamists to build models and algorithms to add complexity in a more systematic manner. The majority of the origamists in the Origami Detectives did not use these novel computational tools in the creation of their own origami art. Since the Bug Wars, there have been a collection of books, instruction guides, academic papers, and origami art that have been inspired by the prolonged event. Each year, the Origami Tanteidan Convention in Japan hosts conventions that feature the work of some of the world's most renowned origami artists. Along with the convention, Tanteidan Convention Books are released each year with exclusive folding instructions from different designers. An Origami Tanteidan Magazine is released more frequently (6 times a year) and includes diagrams for 3 to 5 models, a crease pattern challenge, and other related articles in each issue. Recent content is published both in English and Japanese.[1]

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