Sazaerou No.2: Hiroji Yamao Finished product figure 1:150 size
Hiroji Yamao Object, painted and ready to hang, 1/150 size
Sazaerou 2 (turban shell tower No.2)
Produced in 2019
Comes with its own acrylic case
Size including acrylic case: W 515 x D 365 x H 500mm, weight approx. 10kg
Power supply: 1 x 100V for domestic use
Power supply: 1 x 100V Main materials used: acrylic case (for dust protection), cardboard, illustration board, transparent film, wood (base: cinnabar veneer, lauan veneer, cedar veneer),
Matte acrylic paint (Holbein Acrylagache), water-based stain (Turner Wood Stain), ProCrystal 880 transparent resin (water surface),
WOODLAND SCENICS "Water Ripples" and "Water Waves" (water surface), Akrilla Gloss Medium and others
Lighting: The entire structure is illuminated by about 100 LEDs and the perimeter of the frame is decorated with tape LEDs. There is a main switch and a pilot light at the front of the work, and three individual switches (for the inside of the building, for the outside of the building, and for the perimeter of the frame).
Note:Please contact us if you would like us to consider holding all four pieces of the Seirou No.1 and No.2 buildings and the Dai Ryounkaku No.1 and No.2 buildings together.
Information edited by Sakatsu Gallery
This is a virtual building, an object of structure that cannot be in reality. (Assuming a scale of S=1/150, N scale)
The same concept was used to create version 2 of the object "Eiroro", which was completed in 2016.
It is an imaginary structure with a spiral corridor and a slope of about 1/8 in the corridor part.
The title of the building is taken from "Sazaedou", a Buddhist temple with a cloister inside, which was often built in the Kanto and Tohoku regions in the late Edo period, the same as the first building.
It is said that some of the Sazae halls still exist.
Inside the building, too, there are structures that evoke the life of the inhabitants, silhouetted against the windows by lighting.
The work was exhibited in Tokyo Independent 2019, an open call for artworks by Tokyo University of the Arts.
Note:Please contact us if you would like us to consider holding the four artworks of Eirou Buildings 1 and 2 and Dai Ryounkaku Buildings 1 and 2 together.
You can also find Hiroji Yamao's work.
Sazaerou 2 (turban shell tower No.2)
Produced in 2019
Comes with its own acrylic case
Size including acrylic case: W 515 x D 365 x H 500mm, weight approx. 10kg
Power supply: 1 x 100V for domestic use
Power supply: 1 x 100V Main materials used: acrylic case (for dust protection), cardboard, illustration board, transparent film, wood (base: cinnabar veneer, lauan veneer, cedar veneer),
Matte acrylic paint (Holbein Acrylagache), water-based stain (Turner Wood Stain), ProCrystal 880 transparent resin (water surface),
WOODLAND SCENICS "Water Ripples" and "Water Waves" (water surface), Akrilla Gloss Medium and others
Lighting: The entire structure is illuminated by about 100 LEDs and the perimeter of the frame is decorated with tape LEDs. There is a main switch and a pilot light at the front of the work, and three individual switches (for the inside of the building, for the outside of the building, and for the perimeter of the frame).
Note:Please contact us if you would like us to consider holding all four pieces of the Seirou No.1 and No.2 buildings and the Dai Ryounkaku No.1 and No.2 buildings together.
Information edited by Sakatsu Gallery
This is a virtual building, an object of structure that cannot be in reality. (Assuming a scale of S=1/150, N scale)
The same concept was used to create version 2 of the object "Eiroro", which was completed in 2016.
It is an imaginary structure with a spiral corridor and a slope of about 1/8 in the corridor part.
The title of the building is taken from "Sazaedou", a Buddhist temple with a cloister inside, which was often built in the Kanto and Tohoku regions in the late Edo period, the same as the first building.
It is said that some of the Sazae halls still exist.
Inside the building, too, there are structures that evoke the life of the inhabitants, silhouetted against the windows by lighting.
The work was exhibited in Tokyo Independent 2019, an open call for artworks by Tokyo University of the Arts.
Note:Please contact us if you would like us to consider holding the four artworks of Eirou Buildings 1 and 2 and Dai Ryounkaku Buildings 1 and 2 together.
You can also find Hiroji Yamao's work.