Where tradition
and modernity collide
For over fifty years,
internationally acclaimed Japanese photographer Eikoh Hosoe has been producing
cutting edge works demonstrating a unique mastery of the photographic
medium. Early on in his career he abandoned the documentary style prevalent
in the post-war years and produced photographs that breathed a sense of
experimentation and freedom into photography. By calling on mythology,
metaphor and symbolism he created images that broke the bounds of traditional
photography. Hosoe developed a unique style situated at the crossroads
of several different art forms, combining photography with elements of
theatre, dance, film and traditional Japanese art.
Hosoe
gained recognition in the late 1950s when he began to develop his close-ups
of the human body. Embrace, a series of black-and-white, abstract nude
photographs, encapsulates Hosoe’s strive for originality in this
photographic genre.
Through the novelist, Yukio Mishima, Hosoe was to meet Tatsumi Hijikata,
one of the founders of Butoh dance. After seeing Hijikata’s performance,
adapted from the novel Kinjiki (Forbidden Colours) by Mishima in a small
Tokyo theatre, Hosoe was inspired and began photographing the Butoh dancer,
a collaboration which continued for many years and culminated in the series
Kamaitachi (1965-1968). This series, shot on various locations in the
rural Tohoku region, integrated elements of dance, theatre and documentary
into a cinematic work that aimed to recreate and dramatise Hosoe’s
childhood memories.
Hosoe’s association with Butoh also led him to photograph the renowned
Butoh performer, Kazuo Ohno. Released in 2006 in celebration of Ohno’s
100th birthday, the series The butterfly dream is a poignant visual documentary
of Ohno’s artistic development over 46 years. While they retain
the drama intrinsic to Butoh, Hosoe’s photographs of Ohno focus
in on details of Ohno’s body, the curve of a wrist or a facial expression
caught between agony and ecstasy.
Hosoe’s latest colour work, Ukiyo-e Projections, revisits his early
work by linking it into ukiyo-e and Butoh dance. This series was born
when he found out that the experimental Asbestos Dance Studio, founded
by Hijikata and his wife, was to close in 2003 after forty years of activity.
Upon hearing about the closure, Hosoe felt the need to pay a photographic
tribute “to express gratitude for all that it had produced”.
Ukiyo-e Projections was completed on stage at the Studio during a series
of sessions in 2002 and 2003. For this series Hosoe created what he calls
a “photographic theatre”, projecting a mixture of his own
photographs with ukiyo-e prints on to the white-painted bodies of young
Butoh dancers. The series explores many of the themes that recur in his
work: sexuality, the human form and movement.
Eikoh Hosoe: Theatre of Memory highlights Hosoe’s mastery of photography
through his four seminal series, Embrace, Kamaitachi, The Butterfly Dream
and Ukiyo-e Projections, showing Hosoe’s sensibility for theatre,
performance and the human body. It further demonstrates his creativity
and mastery of photographic printing techniques. Throughout his career
Hosoe, a master printer, has experimented with both film-based and digital
techniques to develop new methods of photographic expression. In recent
years, he has combined new printing technologies with Japanese washi paper
to present his work on traditionally made silk screens and scrolls.
This is the first solo exhibition of Hosoe’s works in Australia.
Image: Ukiyo-e Projections
#2-36, 2003
© Eikoh Hosoe, Courtesy Studio Equis
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