Kinbaku
What is kinbaku?
Shibari or kinbaku, is a Japanese art that adopts hojōjutsu, or the act of binding a person. It can have several purposes, including relaxation of the body and mind, an artistic form of living sculpture, or a sexual practice.
The culture of shibari has very ancient roots. In traditional Japanese religious ceremonies, it has always been customary to include ropes and ligaments to symbolize the connection between the human and the divine.
The shibari was born in the fifteenth century, used by the police and samurai as a form of imprisonment, and as such remained until the eighteenth century. At that time the resources of metals were scarce, while hemp and jute ropes were abundant: so often prisoners were not locked up in a prison, but were simply immobilized with a rope. Japanese police still carry a bundle of hemp rope in their vans.
When it came to tying up a nobleman or a samurai there was always an artistic element, while certain shapes and designs made with the rope indicated to the spectators the social class of the accused (in Japan at that time the division into social classes was very rigid) and sometimes even the crime committed.
Shibari is Japanese-style rope bondage, a practice that consists of creating erotic bindings with ropes on a person’s body. Its origins are to be found in hojojutso, the martial art that involves the use of ropes to block and immobilize the opponent, then, around 1700, these techniques have taken on an erotic connotation when it began to use them in the artistic field in some scenes of kabuki theater or in the production of prints on the subject.
However, it will be only in the period between the two wars – and even more in the post-war period – that, especially thanks to the figure of Itoh Seiyu, shibari becomes a practice in its own right, clearly connoted in an erotic and sadomasochistic sense. The beginning of the 20th century saw Japan committed to becoming a modern nation, however the past was always present in the collective imagination and fascinated authors and artists such as the young Itoh Seiyu, considered the “father of kinbaku”.
Particular artist and much discussed, it was he who gave life to the art of bondage, through his paintings. To represent the tortures typical of the Edo period, he tied his models in various positions, immortalized them and from these photographs he drew inspiration for his paintings.
It will finally spread to the West after the Second World War after which shibari will be known first in the United States and from there throughout the world, also determining the development of different styles.
Kinbaku is instead a more recent term whose first written occurrence is in a Japanese magazine in 1952. It means “to bind tight”; “kin” means in fact “tight, firm, stable” and “baku” is another reading of the kanji that can also be read “shiba” (as in 縛り,shibari). According to some masters there is no difference between shibari and kinbaku; according to others instead “shibari” would simply be to make the Japanese style bindings, while “kinbaku” would refer to the binding but with in addition the deep emotional connection and all the relational aspects that are created between who binds and who is bound.
A complex erotic culture, where to stay tied to a rope in the void, a body against the other, skin to skin coordinating perfectly the movements to stay in balance. An art where the rituality of gestures, the brushing of hands and ropes on the skin of the partner, the complete abandonment constitute a sensual and complicit prelude to the love relationship. This, to those who love the genre, gives pleasure and excitement. But it certainly requires a lot of experience and attention, so as not to result in tragedy.
Tying is a very common practice in Japan, extremely rooted in the culture and in everyday life: from the art of wrapping gift packages, to the lacing of kimonos through the band called obi.
A special note deserves the practice of Mizuhiki, which consists of using small cords to decorate paper envelopes containing messages of greetings, thanks or condolences for friends and acquaintances.
The practice of Mizuhiki dates back to the Heian era (794-1185) when women of the court learned the art of creating decorative knots for gifts and letters.
The knots had a very precise meaning, a bit like what happened in Europe during the Middle Ages with the “language of flowers”, which then made the red rose to be associated to the idea of passionate love. During the Edo era (1611-1868) these laces were used for the typical hairstyles of the samurai. Even today Mizuhiki is used during weddings, to decorate the tables or other ornaments, dresses and hair of the bride. In addition, some artists use this technique to create real celebratory sculptures.
Also in the religious sphere, the history of Japan has numerous references to the use of ropes and knots. Shimenawa ropes are usually placed on the doors (the Torii) of Shinto temples and also on other sacred objects such as trees and rocks.
Even in Sumo, wrestlers wear ceremonial belts decorated with ropes that replicate the Shimenawa of the temples. The movements and rituals before the match serve to drive away evil spirits and invoke the arrival of beneficent gods.
Even Buddhism, although to a lesser extent than Shintoism, makes a symbolic use of knots.
The painter often used his second wife as a model. Famous is the episode in which the artist wanted to reproduce the scene of torture “Yoshitoshi” in “Oshu Adachigahara hitotsuya non zu (The house of Adachigara in Oshu), so he left his wife suspended upside down from the rafters, during pregnancy.