
Source: @p_man_wktk
Japanese Noh Mask Attached To Circulating Fan Chills The Room In More Ways Than One
Related Article
-
Japanese Twitter celebrates Olympic reporter discovering greatest convenience store ice cream
-
Japan’s First Female Sento Artist Hopes To Revitalize Public Baths With Soothing Murals
-
Nightmare Fuel Godzilla: Resurgence Mask Already Terrifying People In Japan
-
Open Your Own Themed Cafe With The Rilakkuma Cafe Recipe Book
-
Baby Star Ramen Chicken noodle ice cream bars now available in Japan
-
Cat’s expression the moment they realize they can’t have a rice ball is right out of a manga panel
While beautiful and steeped in rich tradition, the cypress wood masks worn by practitioners of classical Japanese performance art Noh can sometimes have an eerie quality to them, as we saw when someone covered an entire car windshield with snow molds of them.
Japanese illustrator and Twitter user P-MAN (@p_man_wktk) has set a new spooky standard for Noh masks. After their fan broke, P-MAN bought a circulator fan--and then shared the haunting movement of a Noh mask attached to it.
Because of the circulator's rotation, the Noh mask appears almost like a dismembered head or spirit floating around the room, and has been spooking many on Japanese Twitter. While many let P-MAN know that it seemed like something out of their nightmares, the creator responded that they simply wanted to let people know the cuteness of Noh masks, and had no intention of anything horror related.
Perhaps as a peace offering, P-MAN offered up these funnier takes on the moving mask.