The Star Malaysia - Star2

Artisans in waiting

Meet a geisha in Japan and dive into a gold-covered Kobe beef sandwich.

-

A CULTURAL centre in Osaka has opened a geisha cafe, where visitors can meet a geisha-in-training and learn what it takes to become a Japanese “art performer.”

Like a rare wildlife sighting, reallife geishas can be elusive creatures to capture on camera. Graceful and discreet, the ladies are not known to stop and pose for a photo, but are more apt to scurry off to their appointmen­t, head bowed.

Women who do ham it up for photos are likely to be tourists dressed up as geishas.

Enter the Maikoya Osaka, a cultural centre in Osaka, billed as a space where visitors can meet openly with a geisha apprentice known asa maiko, and learn about traditiona­l Japanese art. It occupies a space in the Shinmachi area that used to house a geisha house until the mid-1980s.

“A geisha must be good at traditiona­l Japanese arts and crafts such as the tea ceremony, putting on a kimono, playing the shamisen, doing flower arrangemen­t, and performing buyoo, a traditiona­l Japanese dance,” said Maiko Cafe manager Miho Hirata.

“We want to teach the world that geishas are artisans, not courtesans.”

Traditiona­lly, the geisha world has been a mysterious, secret society, jealously guarded by an inner circle of connection­s, and completely inaccessib­le to foreigners.

But in recent years, tourists willing to pay upwards of US$1,000 (RM4,264) have been able to score an evening at a traditiona­l ochaya (tea house) for the privilege of an authentic geisha experience, via connected concierges working at five-star hotels and luxury ryokan (traditiona­l Japanese inns).

Those with smaller budgets can now learn the art of the tea ceremony with a maiko for about US$90 (RM384) at Maiko Cafe.

The menu also features “golden ice cream” and a US$300 (RM1,281) Kobe beef sandwich, covered in gold flakes.

An English-speaking translator is present so that nothing is lost in translatio­n.

The best odds of spying a geisha are, of course, in Kyoto, the birthplace of geisha culture.

Gion Hatanaka in Kyoto offers a package deal for a meal in a traditiona­l tatami room, and the company of a maiko. – AFP Relaxnews

 ??  ?? A maiko, or geisha apprentice, in Japan. — AFP
A maiko, or geisha apprentice, in Japan. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia