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SHISHIMAI Lion Dance Demo & Workshop | Eien Hunter-Ishikawa & MI Shishimai Kai

  • Rudolf Steiner High School (gym) 2230 Pontiac Trail Ann Arbor, MI, 48105 United States (map)

Great Lakes Taiko Center (GLTC) Taiko Arts collective presents:
Fall 2025 Free PUBLIC Events featuring
guest artist Eien Hunter-Ishikawa with Michigan shishimai Kai

  • SAT 11/8 in Novi-Wixom (Shishimai & Ryomen Odori performances and presentation)

  • This SUN 11/9 in Ann Arbor (Shishimai performance and interactive workshop)


SUN 11/9 performance & workshop: Shishimai

Traditional Japanese Lion Dance

Shishimai has been performed for hundreds of years in Japan to bring good luck to communities and chase away evil spirits. It is believed that getting bitten by the shishi will bring good fortune for the rest of the year. Our shishimai is the Edo Kotobuki Jishi, the traditional celebratory shishimai of Tokyo. The dancer is accompanied by three musicians - taiko drums, shinobue flute, and atarigane percussion. Seeing a shishimai performance is very rare outside of Japan and our mission is to introduce this fascinating cultural art form to as many people as possible.

shishimai performer on stage with musicians

Eien Hunter-Ishikawa is a musician, dancer, and educator based in Portland, Oregon. He started learning shishimai in 2001 and has performed and taught all around North America and Japan. He has studied with his teacher Kyosuke Suzuki for 20 years and founded the Portland Shishimai Kai in 2022.

Smiling performer standing in lion dance costume holding the shishi head

A Note from Michigan Shishimai Kai

Michigan Shishimai Kai is part of the Great Lakes Taiko Center, a taiko arts collective based in Southeastern Michigan. We are now raising funds to purchase the mask, cape, and instruments we will need to acquire when we are ready to perform, which we hope will be in 2026.

Michigan Shishimai Kai was founded in 2024 by students learning the Japanese lion dance, Shishimai, and the Edo Kotobuki Jishi musical accompaniment, with the mission of preserving this celebratory tradition from Tokyo. The style we play is the tradition taught by Kyosuke Suzuki, an integral member of Wakayama Taneo Shachu which is designated in Japan as a Nationally Important Intangible Cultural Asset in Folk Arts. Our players have studied this form with our sensei, Kyosuke Suzuki in Japan and Eien Hunter-Ishikawa in the United States.

We would greatly appreciate your donation of any amount! Thank you for your support!

Give Lively for MI Shishimai

Michigan Shishimai Kai founding members with sensei Eien Hunter-Ishikawa: Kyoko Johnson, Noriko Maidens, Rieko Muroi-Bowman, Akiyo Fisher, and Olga Ehrlich. [2024-09-08 photos by GLTC member Romeo Diccion]