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Shomei Tomatsu: Skin of the Nation
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In 1960, Japanese photographer Shomei Tomatsu was commissioned to
photograph the survivors of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in 1945. Fifteen years after
the fact, Tomatsu was able to capture the horror of a nuclear holocaust with an immediacy
of emotionally wrenching effectiveness. His photograph of a beer bottle melted in the heat
of the explosion, an artifact that has the look of some grotesque, organic creature from a
science fiction film, is perhaps his most widely known image. As with the best of
Tomatsu's work, the photo is at once a coolly straightforward documentation of reality, a
surreal abstraction, and an image of evocative ambiguity.
Tomatsu, now in his 70's, is widely acknowledged as the preeminent
postwar Japanese photographer, one of the great photographers of the 20th century. Shomei Tomatsu: Skin of the
Nation is a comprehensive survey of five decades of his work, the first
ever retrospective exhibition of this modern master outside of Japan.
Tomatsu's career has spanned a time of cataclysmic change in Japanese
history, from the pre-war traditional society, to the reactionary nationalism that brought
Japan into World War II, to the U.S. fire bombings of every major Japanese city (including
Tomatsu's home city of Nagoya) and the ultimate unleashing of the atomic bomb, to the
post-war American occupation and westernization of Japanese culture. It is no wonder that
artists and intellectuals of the period expressed alienation and a defensively
dispassionate view of the world. The documentary objectivity of Tomatsu's work, combined
with an ineffably precise sense of the esthetic, results in a body of work that is both a
record of its time and a profoundly satisfying artistic accomplishment.
The exhibit is comprised of some 260 photographs arranged in thematic
groupings by curator Sandra Phillips. Since Tomatsu continually returns to themes
previously explored, the result is not a chronological presentation. At the same time, the
themes are so interrelated and overlapping that sometimes these classifications seem
rather arbitrary, an outcome that may be inescapable in attempting to organize the diverse
works of an intensely creative mind over five decades.
The section "Après-Guerre," for example, spans work from
1951 (the very beginning of Tomatsu's career) to 1963 and includes subject matter as
varied as a touching picture of a child leading a blind veteran by the hand; a timeless
study of the delicate tracery of a network of electrical transmission wires against the
Tokyo sky; and an elegant portrait of a prostitute exhaling smoke from her nose in a
manner evoking a traditional dragon. The strong graphic print of her kimono, the white
powder on her face, and the smoke create dramatic contrasts of light and dark against the
black background.
"The Americans" and "Americanization" sections
group work that explores the imagery of those who were conquerors and occupiers, but whose
cultural influence was widely absorbed into Japanese life. The images range from American
officers, ordinary sailors, and visiting civilians, to warships, jet aircraft and a
large-finned car. Tomatsu, with deceptive simplicity, shoots the airborne jet, and later
the warships, together with the traditional tiled roofs of Japanese houses, instantly
encapsulating the new and the traditional, the foreign and the native elements. An unusual
excursion into color is a subtle and arresting picture of ads for that most pervasive of
all American exports, Coca Cola, against a faded yellow wall. As superb as his mostly
black-and-white work is, Tomatsu's work in color is a revelation. Later work such as a
1973 shot of a red curtain billowing against a window; the 1970 "Japan World
Exposition," which pictures the buildings through a red paint-spattered glass; or the
later, quite traditional "Cherry Blossoms" establish Tomatsu's mastery of color.
For all the extraordinary achievements of Tomatsu's long career, it is
the images of Nagasaki that will likely continue to haunt the viewer, even when other fine
work has faded from memory. Scarred faces, maimed limbs, fetal remains, a wristwatch
frozen in time, and that transmuted beer bottle provide a record on an immediate and human
scale of a heartless and inhuman act of vast destructiveness, the totality of which eludes
comprehension.
September 27, 2004 - Arthur Lazere