Akihiko Seki

Japanese Spa


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      the Japanese Spa

       A Guide to Japan's Finest Ryokan and Onsen

      Akihiko Seki and Elizabeth Heilman Brooke

       photography by Akihiko Seki

      contents

       The Japanese Ryokan: A Timeless Retreat

       Ryokan and Onsen Etiquette: Essential Knowledge

       Around Tokyo

       Gora Kadan 強羅花壇 Hakone, Kanagawa

       Tsubaki 海石榴 Yugawara, Kanagawa

       Atami Sekitei あたみ石亭 Atami, Izu Peninsula

       Kona Besso 古奈別荘 lzu-Nagaoka, lzu Peninsula

       Yagyu-no-Sho 柳生の庄 Shuzenji, lzu Peninsula

       Seiryuso 清流莊 Shimoda, lzu Peninsula

       Senjyuan 仙寿庵 Minakami, Gunma

       Bankyu Ryokan 本家伴久万久旅館 Yunishigawa Tochigi

       Sanraku 山楽 Nasu Tochigi

       Kyoto and Nara

       Hiiragiya 柊屋 Kyoto

       Seikoro Inn 晴鴨樓 Kyoto

       Kikusuiro 菊水楼 Nara

       Central Japan

       Ryugon 龍言 Minami-Uonuma, Niigata

       Yumoto Choza 湯元長座 Kamitakara-mura

       Wanosato 倭乃里 Miya-mura, Gifu

       Kayotei かよう苧 Yamanaka, Ishikawa

       Araya Totoan あらや滔々庵 Yamashiro, Kaga

       Houshi 法師 Awazu Onsen, Komatsu

       Northern Japan

       Mukaitaki 向澈 Higashiyama, Aizu-Wakamatsu

       Saryo Soen 茶寮宗園 Akiu, Sendai

       Tsuru-no-Yu 鶴の湯 Tazawako, Akita

       Kuramure 蔵群 Otaru, Hokkaido

       Southern Japan

       Sekitei 石亭 Ohno-cho, Hiroshima

       Yamatoya Besso 大和屋別荘 Dogo, Matsuyama

       Murata 起量技 Yufuin, Oita

       Miyazaki Ryokan 宮崎旅館 Unzen, Nagasaki

       Yusai 優彩 Kurokawa Onsen, Kumamoto

       Gajoen 雅叙苑 Makizono, Kagoshima

      Around Tokyo

      Gora Kadan 強羅花壇

      Tsubaki 海石榴

      Atami Sekitei あたみ石亭

      Kona Besso 古奈別荘

      Yagyu-no-Sho 柳生の庄

      Seiryuso 清流荘

      Senjyuan 仙寿庵

      Bankyu Ryokan 本家伴久万久旅館

      Sanraku 山楽

      Kyoto and Nara

      Hiiragiya 柊屋

      Seikoro Inn 晴鴨樓

      Kikusuiro 菊水楼

      Central Japan

      Ryugon 記言

      Yumoto Choza 湯元長座

      Wanosato 倭乃里

      Kayotei かよう亭

      Araya Totoan あらや滔々庵

      Houshi 法師

      Northern Japan

      Mukaitaki 向瀧

      Saryo Soen 茶寮宗園

      Tsuru-no-Yu 鶴の湯

      Kuramure 蔵群

      Southern Japan

      Sekitei 石亭

      Yamatoya Besso 大和屋別荘

      Murata 無量塔

      Miyazaki Ryokan 宮崎旅館

      Yusai 優彩

      Gajoen 雅叙苑

      The Japanese Ryokan: A Timeless Retreat

      Slip off your shoes and enter a world that is distinctly Japanese. Cherry blossoms. Zen. Foamy green tea. Warm water meditations one might call, simply, a bath. Hospitality of honor. Ritualized routines to quiet, to sooth the mind, the spirit.

      The philosophers, the potters, the tea masters and the poets of Japan, who, thousands of years ago halted the elaborate evolutions of beauty in all its sumptuous gold-leaf manifestations, have attracted generations of humbled aesthetics. Van Gogh, Picasso and Frank Lloyd Wright are among the many painters, architects and creative iconoclasts who have looked to Japan for inspiration. Free spirits have marveled at Japan’s studied serenity and heightened awareness of the beauty of a single blade of grass, a single flower petal, a single wave, a single volcanic mountain. They have studied wood, earth and stones, lines, planes and space, and man’s daily interaction with the impermanence of nature.

      A Japanese Zen monk once described absolute beauty as "pure white snow in a silver dish." This crystalline perception of beauty, the distilled, asymmetrical, modest interpretations of Japanese art and architecture that now are emulated around the world are no longer easy to find in Japan. A 21st century traveler to Tokyo must visually edit telephone wires, construction cranes, a wealth of concrete box buildings, concrete mountain faces, neon, plastic and florid representations of nature in ersatz form.

      The good news is that even the Japanese have begun to look for spaces that are authentic, organic, human, historic, refined and natural. There are classic inns throughout Japan that have maintained and refreshed their thatched roofs, their bold wood beams, their fragrant tatami floors. And there are innkeepers, who, thankfully, have saved farmhouses, samurai and lordly residences, sometimes moving them and adapting them to accommodate modern-day guests. There are also recently built inns that are prize-winning in design, progressive in their reverence for the use of natural