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Junko Takahashi Solo Exhibition "LOST WORLD "
Date : August 13 (Sat) - 26 (Fri), 2011
Veune : Three Shadows
Photograhy Art Centre@¨ Installation View
@@@@@155A Caochangdi, Chaoyang
District,
@@@@@Beijing, 100015, China
@@@@@+ 86 10 64322663
@@@@@URL
www.threeshadows.cn
Organized by : Three Shadows Photograhy Art
Centre
With the Support of : Japan
Foundation, The
Asahi Shimbun Foundation
With the Cooperation of : Canon Inc.
With the Assistance of : COLOR SCIENCE LABO inc.
Catalogue Design by : Azamino Zuanshitsu@¨ about Catalogue
Curated by : RongRong & Inri
Works : Photo / Lost World , Reflector , Untitled , Untitled - Transform
@@@@@ Video / Lost World , Tokyo Mid‡TE‡UE‡V
Opening Events / Saturday, August 13, 2011 2:00-3:30pm@@¨ about Opening
@@@@@@@@@@@ Lecture by Mariko Takeuchi (Photo Critic, Curator) ~
Junko Takahashi (Artist)
About the LOST WORLD Exhibition
When I first visited this area, it was like a
huge air pocket of nothingness. Before the city takes over
land marked for
redevelopment, like some ritual, the area becomes nameless and is abandoned for
a
period of time.
Looking at the scenes unfolding before me, I felt
a sense of deja vu. As a child growing up in a redeveloped
area outside
Tokyo, these scenes in Beijing recalled those memories imprinted deep inside me,
from a
different time and country.
I wonder if there is some
universal consciousness about issues of residence outside the city and the
transformation of localities. Can this be discovered by immersing yourself
in that environment? And can
this something be felt specifically by someone
who has left their country?
While visiting Beijing, a city that embraces
fluidity and change, many thoughts surface in my mind.
The subject of the photos is a vast area outside northeastern Beijing
currently being redeveloped. It's also
an area on the border of agricultural
lands and the city proper, about 7 or 8 km from Beijing Capital
International Airport. I stumbled upon a village while visiting the area
that looked like it had been bombed.
There were traditional buildings with
courtyards (Ch: siheyuan) that were in the process of being demolished.
I
inserted myself into this unique environment and found myself interacting with
the few residents that remained.
In spite of the brief sense of rapport, an
idea for a new photo series was born like some chemical reaction.
2,100 km away in Tokyo, areas are also being built and destroyed. This is not
the result of urban expansion,
but more of modernity forcing the upgrading
of city centers. The residents found there have already adjusted
to the
city, and perhaps my works may have some meaning to such areas that are supposed
to be complete.
They eventually are scattered throughout the city.
In these two cities I saw a drama that unfolded between the city and the people.
In this world, I wonder what
is born in everyday life and at the same time,
what is being lost. As a keyword to this cycle of life and death,
I named
this Beijing work and exhibition, LOST
WORLD.
TAKAHASHI Junko@July 2011