Portfolio Pick Hiroshi Watanabe—Ideology in Paradise
Editorial Statement Renowned historian Orville Schell has likened the
experience of visiting Pyongyang, capital of the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea (DPRK), akin to that of “visiting a faraway museum
where we are able to commune with a series of carefully constructed
dioramas based not on life during some past period, but on a far
more fantastical world . . . a North Korean hallucination of the
future.”
In fact, the experience of looking at Hiroshi
Watanabe’s images is eerily like stepping into a Social Realist
painting: the ruddy-cheeked young girl playing the accordion, the
traditional gowns in brilliant pinks and greens of dancers swirling
beneath the omnipresent image of the dear leader and the DPRK flag.
One is quietly lulled into the sense that life in North Korea might,
in fact, be just as it appears within the frames of these
images—normal—instead of like the stories of kidnappings, military
posturing, and famine. To Watanabe, it is this sense of tension
between the news stories flooding the media in both Japan and in the
U.S. and his experiences traveling and photographing—under careful
surveillance of his two guides and assigned driver—that interests
him in this topic. The results, engaging, yet still mysterious,
bring us one side of this closed-off place, introducing us to a
vibrant, compelling set of individuals, but still leave us to
wonder. —LAM
Artist’s Bio Hiroshi Watanabe was born in Sapporo, Japan. He
graduated from the Department of Photography, College of Art, at
Nihon University, in 1975, and later received an MBA from UCLA
Business School in 1993. For many years he worked in Los Angeles as
a producer of Japanese TV commercials, before rediscovering
photography. In 2000, he committed to his photographic work
full-time. Since then, his work has been widely published. In 2006,
he received the top book award from Photolucida Critical Mass. To
view more of Watanabe’s work, go to http://www.hiroshiwatanabe.com/. |
.gif) |
|
|