These artists remember the Fukushima disaster through their photography

The World
Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore) 45 from the series Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore), 2012.

On March 11, 2011, an earthquake struck Japan. The subsequent tsunami swept through towns in the northeast of the country, destroying virtually everything in its path and irrevocably damaging the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

The disaster became a defining moment for Japan, and a number of photographers felt compelled to not only record the event's physical effects on the land but also interpret the overarching significance of the tragedy for the Japanese people.

The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, has curated an exhibition exploring the photographic response to the earthquake. Here we feature 13 of the 17 artists from the exhibit, some of whom are among Japan’s most celebrated artists. Their work explores the way art provides a powerful language for reflecting on tragic events and contributing to recovery.

"There's a lot of profound emotional subtext," says curator Anne Havinga. "There's deep resonance to this work. 

Havinga says a number of photographers were particularly drawn to the nuclear damage. She says they tried to express the invisible damage. "Because if you go to the exclusion zone you wouldn't necessarily see that it was a contaminated area,” she says. “It’s lush and growing and green. So a number of the photographers who have gone there wanted to interpret what they saw and somehow convey the invisible damage, the anxiety that people in Japan still feel about this nuclear disaster. The unease.”

Others had a personal connection to the destruction. Naoya Hatakeyama lost his mother and his ancestral home in the Tsunami. He’s taken it upon himself to photograph the evolving recovery of his town. He photographed both the cleanup and the rebuilding. “And in that community they are taking down a small mountain in order to use the earth to raise the level of the shore to protect them against the eventuality of another tsunami.”

And you can see that image is at the bottom of the page. 

April 26, 2011, Onahama, Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture, from the series Mirrors in Our Nights, 2011.
April 26, 2011, Onahama, Iwaki City, Fukushima Prefecture, from the series Mirrors in Our Nights, 2011.Arai Takashi/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Morning Glow, 2011.
Morning Glow, 2011.Kikuji Kawada/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore) 46 from the seris Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore), 2011.
Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore) 46 from the seris Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore), 2011.Shiga Lieko/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
'11 6 2, 2011.
'11 6 2, 2011.Nobuyoshi Araki/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
October 17, 2011, Ōfunato, Miyagi Prefecture, 2014.
October 17, 2011, Ōfunato, Miyagi Prefecture, 2014.Kitajima Keizō/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
2011:04:02, Minamisanriku, Motoyoshi, Miyagi Prefecture from North East Earthquake Disaster Tsunami 2011 Portfolio, 2011.
2011:04:02, Minamisanriku, Motoyoshi, Miyagi Prefecture from North East Earthquake Disaster Tsunami 2011 Portfolio, 2011.Miyoshi Kōzō/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
From the series Cesium, 2012.
From the series Cesium, 2012.Seto Masato/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore) 45 from the seris Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore), 2012.
Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore) 45 from the seris Rasen kaigan (Spiral Shore), 2012. Shiga Lieko/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Untitled from the series Site/Cloud, 2012.
Untitled from the series Site/Cloud, 2012.Daisuke Yokota/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Trace #16, Lake Hayama (Mano Dam) from the series Trace, 2012.
Trace #16, Lake Hayama (Mano Dam) from the series Trace, 2012.Shimpei Takeda/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Portrait of Cultivation, 2009.
Portrait of Cultivation, 2009.Shiga Lieko/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Life Scan Fukushima, 2013.
Life Scan Fukushima, 2013.Ishu Han/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
2013.10.20 Kesen‐chō from the series Rikuzentakata, 2013.
2013.10.20 Kesen‐chō from the series Rikuzentakata, 2013.Naoya Hatakeyama/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
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