March 12 (Tuesday) "DaisyBar 14th Anniversary ~ From The Beginning ~" appearance decision!
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Shimokitazawa Daisy Bar https://daisybar.jp
OPEN 18:00 START 18:30
Price: Advance sale 2000 yen (by D) / Same day 2500 yen (by D)
Only for students: 1000 yen (by D)
Cast: Cuckold, Uchida Tamasu, Watanabe Shoyoung my beat ... and more !!
Reserve your ticket here! uchida.shuri@gmail.com
Uchida Shuzuzu (Uchida Suri, April 26, 2001-) is a Japanese female singer and model. She is from Fukuoka Prefecture.
In the sixth grade of elementary school, she won the Grand Prix in the fashion magazine "JS Girl" audition for elementary school students. The activity started as an exclusive model of the magazine later, and has the highest number of cover appearances 14 times (as of 2017).
She graduated exclusive model at "JS Girl" Vol. 38 released in April 2017. From the same month, she will move her base of activities from Fukuoka to Tokyo and start working as an artist. Uchida herself has written all the original songs.
Performed at "Singer's Garden-Bunzuki no 唄" held at Shibuya GUILTY on July 31, 2017, and performed the first live as a singer. The first one-man live "# shuri_1st" was held at Shibuya gee-ge on December 30 of the same year, and the tickets were sold out.
It becomes regular personality of Internet radio "Uchida Suzurin's All Night Nippon i" of 1 delivery from October of the same year.
Watanabe Shōtei aka Watanabe Seitei (渡辺 省亭 , 1851 in Edo – 1918) was a Nihonga painter and one of the first to visit Europe, attending the 1878 International Exhibition in Paris and being awarded a medal. Shōtei blended Western realism with the delicate colours and washes of the Kikuchi Yōsai school, introducing a new approach to kachōga or kacho (bird-and-flower painting).
Born as Yoshikawa Yoshimata, he was later adopted by the family of his father's literary friend, Watanabe Mitsue. His early studies were at age sixteen under Kikuchi Yōsai (1788–1878) after which he spent a brief time in the studio of the painter and lacquer artist, Shibata Zeshin (1807–1891).
In 1878, he travelled in the United States and Europe, remaining in Paris for three years and becoming the first Nihonga artist to live in Europe with the aim of studying Western painting.
Travel abroad was extremely difficult for Japanese artists in the early Meiji period (1868–1912), and it is unknown how Shōtei managed this. A few years earlier, in 1875, he had produced designs for an export company, which may have provided him with the necessary contacts. His works have enjoyed great popularity in the West, and a large number are to be seen in both European and American collections.
On his return from Europe, Seitei created designs for ceramics and cloisonné, working with the cloisonné artist Namikawa Sosuke (1847–1910), leading to acclaim from abroad. He maintained a prodigious output of paintings and illustrations, producing three outstanding albums: Seitei kacho gafu ('Picture album of Seitei's bird and flower'), 1890–91; Kacho gafu ('Bird and flower album'), 1903; and the last series published in 1916 also entitled Seitei kacho gafu.
Watanabe Shotei also edited and contributed to the art magazine Bijutsu Sekai (The World of Art), of which the first number was published by Wada Tokutaro in the year Meiji 23 (1890) and printed by Yoshida Ichimatsu with the blockcuts carried out by Goto Tokujiro. Besides Watanabe's illustration and that of Yoshitoshi Kyosai, there were ten other artists who contributed. Twenty-two of his bird and flower prints were published by Okura Yasugorō in 1916.
A cuckold is the husband of an adulterous wife. In evolutionary biology, the term is also applied to males who are unwittingly investing parental effort in offspring that are not genetically their own.
The word cuckold derives from the cuckoo bird, alluding to its habit of laying its eggs in other birds' nests. The association is common in medieval folklore, literature, and iconography.
English usage first appears about 1250 in the medieval debate poem The Owl and the Nightingale. It was characterized as an overtly blunt term in John Lydgate's "Fall of Princes", c. 1440. Shakespeare's poetry often referred to cuckolds, with several of his characters suspecting they had become one.
One often-overlooked subtlety of the word is that it implies that the husband is deceived, that he is unaware of his wife's unfaithfulness and may not know until the arrival or growth of a child plainly not his (as with cuckoo birds).
The female equivalent cuckquean first appears in English literature in 1562, adding a female suffix to the cuck.
A related word, first appearing in 1520, is wittol, which substitutes wit (in the sense of knowing) for the first part of the word, referring to a man aware of and reconciled to his wife's infidelity.
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日本、〒155-0031 東京都世田谷区北沢2丁目2−3 エルサント北沢 Map
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