Tokyo’s many faces - as seen by Magnum Photographers

The photographs on display in this exhibition are a valuable documentation of Tokyo’s history, capturing the meaning in moments of a continually changing reality; it is a kaleidoscopic collection of post-war Japan from the 1950s up to the new millennium.

poster for

"Tokyo seen by Magnum Photographers" Exhibition

at Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
in the Nakameguro area
This event has ended

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In Reviews by Meg Kaizu 2007-04-29 print email

Werner Bischoff, 'Meiji Jingu' (1951)

One of Bruno Barbey’s photographs from the 1950s shows a man with no legs playing music in Tokyo Station. I’m told that back then, seeing soldiers who had returned from the war having lost arms or legs was a common sight; the photo shows us this time when the scars of the war were still very fresh in Tokyo.

Barbey said it is interesting to shoot at stations because you can observe the lives of ordinary people. Indeed, the photos in the exhibition present very ordinary fragments of memories in the city, making you feel as though you have lived them yourself. In René Burri’s Tokyo 1961, which shows two Japanese lovers on a train listening to a radio, audiences can feel the affection, tenderness, sweetness and nostalgia of the moment; through the photographer’s eyes, mind and heart audiences can re-visit the moment.

Robert Capa, 'Tokyo Station' (1954)

I was particularly fascinated with Antoine d’Agata’s schizophrenic Tokyo, in which he has presented a series of chaotic images of this illusional city, a realistic capturing of the city’s dark side. The collages of raw images of blood, human bodies and strangers’ faces, dark red and black colors are presented with smell of sex, danger and violence. He follows the shadowy goings-on of Kabukicho and creates hypnotic images that entrap you in their horror. His observation of contemporary Tokyo – its technology, fast pace, isolation, corruption and cold human relations – struck a chord with my experience of the city. From time to time, Tokyo reveals its violent face, overwhelming people with its speed, drowning them in its material affluence and tempting them with the poison of its beautiful fads.

Meg Kaizu

Meg Kaizu. Her passion is traveling around the world, meeting new people, observing different cultures and experiencing interesting phenomena. While studying Art and Community Arts at University of Oregon, she started to see the importance of combining the arts and social work. Her focus is painting, performance arts and writing. She also worked in a theater in Alaska, in which she cultivated her appreciation and understanding of native arts. Currently, she is developing community art projects and artist residencies, combining social work and art in Tokyo. » See other writings

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