“On a tiny star in a galaxy, even tinier creatures continue to carry out their own roles. All under the light of the sun; All maintaining a fragile balance, like walking over thin ice; All while searching for beauty, as if in prayer; All protected, with each of their realms continuing to endlessly overlap with one another.” – Rinko Kawauchi
foto-forum shows Rinko Kawauchi’s (* 1972, Japan) latest work ‘Halo’ as part of a solo exhibition. In recent years, her work has started to develop further and further afield from her earlier endeavours focusing on delicate everyday occurrences and subjects.
With ‘Halo’ Rinko Kawauchi expands her exploration of spirituality that she started in 2013 with her series and book ‘Ametsuchi’. In these works, she mainly focused on the volcanic landscape of Japan’s Mount Aso – the Shinto rituals she observed there becoming her anchor for further explorations.
Another part of the series depicts the festival ‚DaShuhua’ in the Hebei province in China. The festival has been around for many centuries and originated when people began to throw molten iron against the city walls. The sparks coming off and forming a rain of light served as the poor people’s equivalent to beautiful yet expensive fireworks. „For those who live in poverty, every day is a battle in its own way – perhaps it’s only natural that this ritual reminds one of a struggle.“ Still today each one of us faces their own difficulties, invisible to the eye yet incredibly real to the affected person. „In spite of these dire conditions, we still find ourselves yearning to witness beauty.“
During the tenth month of the Japanese lunar calendar, the Shinto gods are absent from their usual spots around Japan – which is reflected in the month’s name ‚Kannazuki’. They come together in the Izumo region – the only region where the tenth month is called ‚Kamiarizuki’, meaning ‚the month when the gods are present’. During this time, a festival takes place in Izumo, called ‚Kami Mukae Sai’, where people welcome the gods with sacred flames lighting up the shores as spectators watch. „I fix my eyes on the pitch-dark sea, and feel as if the dark ocean was asking me: Did you find what you were looking for? I find no answer. Instead, I click the shutter button. The lights strobe and refract against the raindrops, and they glitter. The thoughts of the people in prayer, invisible to the human eye, too, take form and reflect in the drops.“
Kawauchi burst on the international scene in 2001 when she was awarded the Kimura-Ihei-Prize, Japan’s most important emerging talent photography prize, shortly followed by the simultaneous publication of three beautiful books, Utatane (Catnap), Hanabi (Fireworks), and Hanako, her very personal study of a young girl of the same name.
Kawauchi, currently one of the most famed contemporary female Asian artists, is a recipient the eminent Annual Infinity Award (2009) from New York’s International Centre of Photography, in the category Art, and similarly was shortlisted in 2012 for the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize. She has joined and held many group and solo shows both at home and abroad, with major exhibitions in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Fondation Cartier pour l’art Contemporain in Paris, Kumamoto’s Contemporary Museum, the Kunst Haus Wien in Austria, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, the Semear Museu de Arte Moderna de Sao Paulo, the Vangi Sculpture Garden Museum in Shizuoka, or Brussels’ ARGOS Centre for Art & Media.
Event organized under the patronage of the Consulate General of Japan in Milan.
Talk with Rinko Kawauchi: on May 16, from 7 pm
Read more at http://foto-forum.it/
Information
foto-forum / Südtiroler Gesellschaft für Fotografie
Via Weggenstein, 3, 39100 Bolzano BZ, Italy
May 16, 2018 to June 16, 2018