As promised, here are two more destinations for Gothic Lolita nightcrawlers. Tokyo Dark Castle lets down the drawbridge every Saturday in Shinjuku. It’s been the top Goth night for years and deserves the award for spookiest posters (see above). Resident DJ Chihiro spins EBM, industrial, and darkwave for his fellow Nosferati. On most nights, he shares the bill with Japan’s Goth-est rock bands.
I wish more North American nightclubs had sideshows with artistic whipping! (You can watch more performances on YouTube.) In 2005, Tokyo Dark Castle exported its morose crew to San Francisco. Hopefully, the dark lords will hear my plea and ship them out again.
The salon I want to crash most of all is Narziß, “a fantastic space where the sophisticated dandiacals can do their best: display their fashions and get hedonistic together.” Unlike at the other parties, the volume is low enough to allow for conversations; playlists run from jazz and French pop to psychedelia and disco. The hosts are Tokyo’s most luscious Yarimanchin – a word that translates to Horny Hermaphrodite, Trisexual, or Playcuntcock. Love it!
Narziß is run by The Fashion Ramone (TFR), a collective of “exquisite and arrogant dandiacals” that make Tokyo’s nightlife their playground. TFR’s blog is exploding with photos of debauched club kids – a visual depiction of its manifesto to uphold “freedom, freshness, and escapism.” I’m inexplicably drawn to Nakao, the gaunt grey-eyed stripper who rarely wears more than shorty shorts and pasties. (She’s splattered in blood above.) Something about her grey eyes and attitude that grabs at me… she seems to live as if she’s pole dancing on the edge of a cliff!
Here’s another promise – I’m going to make it to Tokyo; to all four club nights. Maybe I’ll nab The Fashion Ramone’s award for Best Foxie.
Around this time of the year, I itch to be in Los Angeles (where I often spend the summer), and it worsens when I hear about the surreal parties I’m missing. Last Saturday, there was a double whammy: 1) a Gothic & Lolita book signing by Masayuki Yoshinaga; 2) the grand opening of Royal/T, a 10,000-square-foot art space, store, and maid café.
That’s right – Culver City now has a “meido” café, where waitresses in cute black and white dresses serve you tea and sweets. It’s possibly the only one in North America (Toronto’s version has closed). Feminists, put down your axes: the experience is far less intense than in Japan, where servers kneel on the ground and cry, "Welcome home, Master!" Here, they’ll just chirp, "Welcome to Royal/T!"
The story behind Royal/T? Art collector Susan Hancock wanted a befitting space for her collection of Japanese modern art, which includes works by my favorite neo-pop stars Takashi Murakami, Yoshitomo Nara, and Hideaki Kawashima. She hired Goto Design to transform a gigantic warehouse into a combination gallery, museum, shop, and cosplay restaurant. The firm did a stunning job. Paintings hang behind Plexiglass cubes that resemble anime display cases. The exterior façade is covered by fake boxwood leaves, in homage to a scene in Spirited Away (a favorite film of Ronan and mine). Nara’s iconic white dog sculpture happily guards the front window.
At the official opening, Yoshinaga signed copies of Phaidon’s Gothic & Lolita (reviewed here by yours truly). The gallery was covered floor to ceiling with photos of girls from his lookbook. WWD reports: “Life imitated art as partygoers donned their own kawaii looks. One fellow came in a skirt adorned with a map of Kansas. In case that wasn't enough of a statement, he brought a stuffed animal, too. Nearby was a young woman with a panda tattoo on her leg. But Katherine Moennig of The L Word said jeans and a T-shirt were just fine for her. "They're nuts," she said of those wearing the wackiest ensembles. "But I can appreciate it."”
Now I really wish I were there! I’m enamored with Katherine Moennig’s androgynous look – anyone else in the same boat? Her skinny ties and natty trousers are excellent inspiration for kodonas and dandies.
You can see more photos of the Royal/T event on Metromix LA. Hear me now - by the end of the summer, I’ll have visited the café in person.
ROYAL/T CAFÉ, GALLERY, STORE
† Address: 8910 Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232
† Hours: Café: 10 am - 6 pm † Shop: 10 am - 6 pm † Art Space: 10 am - 6 pm
† Closed Mondays † Metered parking in front, free parking in back
† Phone: 310-559-6300
† Fax: 310-559-6633
† URL: http://www.royal-t.org