Create a 16:9 highly detailed surreal Japanese sumi-e ink painting that blends ancient Edo-period aesthetics with futuristic absurdity. At dusk, under a vast sky filled with vermilion and indigo brushstrokes, an original round blue clockwork mascot pilot stands on the roof of a traditional pagoda reinforced with glowing fiber cables and neon scaffolding. The pilot operates a weathered patchwork mecha painted in faded indigo, shaped like a retro wind-up toy with exposed gears, silk banner decals, and steam venting from its shoulder exhausts. The mecha wears a digital loincloth panel displaying shifting abstract kanji-like runes, and the pilot has a serious yet comically determined expression while gripping a polished bamboo-and-chrome control lever.
On the opposite side of the composition, an original small white ceremonial mascot pilot with a ribbon-like crest appears inside a towering gold armored mecha resembling an ornate noh-inspired demon mask. Cherry-blossom-shaped LED lights flicker across its breastplate. Its stance echoes a sumo tachiai opening, with legs spread, palms extended, and toes pressed into the glowing tatami rooftop below. Tiny holographic cherry blossoms swirl through the air, catching the last ambient light from futuristic Edo lanterns suspended by anti-gravity rings.
Below, dozens of spectators in layered kimono and holographic hybrid garments cheer while waving glowing fans shaped like old kabuki masks. Some wear fox-spirit-shaped AR visors, their faces half-lit by flickering vending-machine light embedded in shrine walls. In one corner, an elderly monk with a bionic arm calmly sketches the scene on a floating washi scroll, his vintage round glasses glowing faintly.
Render the whole artwork with expressive ink-wash marks: chaotic splashes for motion trails, delicate dry-brush hatching for armor texture, and soft pale watercolor accents for the light sources. Use deliberate negative space around the duel figures to strengthen their presence. Place a red abstract artist seal in the lower corner as a decorative traditional mark. Keep the result original and public-safe: avoid protected characters, franchise likenesses, logos, brand marks, readable copyrighted text, watermarks, distorted machinery, low-resolution artifacts, and broken anatomy.