..May 2012.. ..New York to Hiroshima..
..Packing the last prints for the exhibition in Hiroshima.
..May 2012.. ..New York to Hiroshima..
..Packing the last prints for the exhibition in Hiroshima.
..May 2012.. ..Hiroshima..
Signing and packing the prints for an upcoming exhibition in Hiroshima opening on June 15th.
..May 2012.. ..Hiroshima..
The venue my exhibition, From Above, will be shown in Hiroshima June 15th-17th.
..May 2012.. ..Tokyo..
Some of the remaining copies of From Above at Gallery EF in Tokyo. About 500 more books to be sold.
In the US and Europe they can be purchased exclusively at PhotoEye.com. In Japan they can purchased directly from Gallery EF in Tokyo.
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..April 2012.. ..Tokyo..
From Above, my book featuring portraits of atomic bomb survivors and fire bombing survivors from Dresden and Tokyo, was reviewed by the Japan Times on April 29th, 2012.
This is a link to the review.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fb20120429a2.html
or a copy of just the text:
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Portraits and memories of those who survived the horrors of war
By GIANNI SIMONE
FROM ABOVE, by Paule Saviano. Contents Factory, 2011, 256 p.p., ¥8,000 (hardcover)
The twentieth century had, among other things, the dubious distinction of being one of the bloodiest, deadliest times in world history. Wars, genocide, mass murders, etc, aided by the best technology available at the time, were responsible for the death of hundreds of millions of people. But who were these people? And what about the survivors? History books are invaluable sources of facts and figures, but all these data, while showing the sheer scale of those tragedies, hardly convey the suffering, hopes and desperation of millions of people caught up in the fight. In other words, the ponderous weight of History all too often ends up hiding the faces of those reluctant protagonists.
Some of those heartbreaking personal stories are now aptly shown in Paule Saviano’s book, “From Above,” a collection of photo portraits and memories of Japanese and German people who have experienced the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki; the fire bombings of Tokyo and Dresden; and the Bikini Incident. In the first half of this elegant big-sized book the photos are paired with fragments of memories, while in the second part short biographies are followed by the first-person tales of the atrocities those people somehow managed to overcome. All the texts are bilingual, Japanese and English.
Saviano used a Hasselblad camera with an 80mm lens to shoot his models the old-fashioned way, without any digital embellishments, in order to achieve a natural effect. At the same time, many of them were photographed from a low angle, giving them a distinguished air of solemnity. All the images are black and white and most of them only show the subject’s face and little else, so that the viewer is not distracted by the things in the background.
Some people might find Saviano’s choice of subject rather puzzling. After all, the American photographer is especially famous for chronicling the over-the-top and glamorous world of fashion models and rock stars. Indeed, those who have seen his loud color pictures are in for a big surprise. Whatever the subject, though, Saviano’s modus operandi and his ultimate goal are to capture people’s feelings and emotions. In this respect his humanistic approach is the same for both an American stripper and a Japanese 90-something granny. In this particular case, Saviano shows how all these people were united by similar tragic events, and yet they coped with their experiences in different ways. In Nagasaki he conducted the interviews at the Peace Park, while in Tokyo he actually visited each person’s house. In each case he spent hours talking to them and gaining their trust before finally shooting their portraits. Indeed, the whole project has a highly personal feeling, like a conversation between friends, or maybe old people and their inquisitive grandchild.
Even when shooting, the photographer never made his presence felt, letting instead his subjects speak for themselves. The result is a moving series of intimate portraits which are at the same time deceptively simple and very powerful. Except for some of the photos shot in Dresden, where a monument or a church hovers over the person like a symbol of History’s inescapable weight over our helpless lives, the blurred surroundings bring the faces to the foreground in all their deeply wrinkled beauty.
The stories at the back of the book tell of miraculous escapes, personal losses and survivor’s guilt. The Japanese hibakusha, for instance, remember how they had to endure rejection by their own people, and how those psychological wounds hurt them even more than nuclear radiations. In the end, though, one keeps going back to their portraits; those faraway gazes who seem to recall the past and, at the same time, cast a hopeful look at the future.
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“I was saved by a miracle.
And it was a miracle too, that I could find my mother and my friends.
I was miraculously allowed to live.”
-Mr. Tsukasa Watanabe, September 2008
I received the sad news, Mr. Tsukasa Watanabe, an atomic bomb survivor that I photographed on my first trip to Nagasaki, has passed away at the age of 79. The last time I saw Mr. Watanabe was at the Nagasaki Peace Museum when From Above was exhibited in July 2010. He had been in and out of the hospital but was still in good spirits. His wife accompanied him to the exhibition to see the other hibakusha (atomic bomb survivors) portraits.
Like all the other atomic bomb survivors I have photographed, Mr. Watanabe was committed to telling the world about the importance of eliminating nuclear weapons. The compassion he demonstrated while speaking about life immediately jolted me.
He had a unique way of telling his story. He performed a one-man play about surviving the atomic bombing of Nagasaki and rescuing his mother under the debris of their destroyed home. During the last 14 years of his life Mr. Watanabe performed this play more than 100 times to audiences ranging from school children to adults.
The portrait I took of him in the courtyard of the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum is a photograph that makes me feel there is hope. Mr. Watanabe’s expression immediately draws me into the image along with the mosaic background.
It was an honor to have known Mr. Watanabe. I miss him. I will always admire his sense of compassion and optimism. His voice is now silent. But I hope through this portrait his spirit will be everlasting.
Mr. Watanabe appears in this documentary about From Above, 7 minutes and 40 seconds into the video.
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..February 2012.. ..Nagasaki..
Sad news from Nagasaki. Mr. Akio Sakita, an atomic bomb survivor I photographed for From Above, passed away earlier this month from pneumonia. He was 83 years old.
Mr. Sakita was the last portrait I photographed on the initial trip to Nagasaki. An hour after I snapped his photograph I was on a train back to Tokyo. I wanted my memories of Nagasaki to be the eleven people I photographed during the trip. I started photographing in Nagasaki as soon as I arrived and photographed until the last minute I was there.
Mr. Sakita was soft spoken. At times his voice could barely be heard. He paused often for long moments to finish sentences. But the smile in his portrait was one of the most welcoming images of the project.
When I returned to Nagasaki a year later to present From Above as an exhibition at the Nagasaki Peace Museum, Mr. Sakita was the first person to greet me at the gallery opening. He arrived even before the press. I wasn’t sure he was going to attend because he was in fragile health. When I saw him at the gallery it was like seeing an old friend I hadn’t expected to see. We were able to speak for a while and look through the photographs together. This was the first time any of the atomic bomb survivors were able to see the other portraits in the project. They had only seen their own portraits before.
I said good bye to him at the exit of the Nagasaki Peace Museum. I watched him walk alone through the pouring rain of Japan’s famous “rainy season.” When he disappeared out of sight into the horizon I gave my last bow out of respect. This was the last time I saw Mr. Sakita. The moment was captured by a Community Media cameraman shooting a documentary about From Above. I’ve attached the documentary at the end. Mr. Sakita makes his exit at 8:30 into the documentary. It’s moment I will always remember. Almost half of the hibakusha photographed for From Above have now passed away.
From Above By Paule Saviano from paul saviano on Vimeo.
..February 2012.. ..Berlin..
Sad news. Mr. Hideto Sotobayashi, an atomic bomb survivor from Hiroshima, passed away on December 27, 2011. I photographed Mr. Sotobayashi in Berlin during May 2011. He was the only hibakusha I have photographed who moved to Europe later in life.
Mr. Sotobayashi was born in Nagasaki but moved to Hiroshima during his childhood. He was 16 years old, attending school one and a half kilometers from the epicenter when the atomic bomb was detonated over Hiroshima.
In the 1960’s he moved to West Berlin to teach at a university and lived in Berlin the remainder of his life.
I photographed Mr. Sotobayashi around the Brandenburg Gate. It was a typical temperamental spring day in Berlin, warm one moment than interrupted by a cold breeze the next moment. Threatening battleship gray clouds cut through the regal blue sky. He spoke poetically about living in Berlin, experiencing all the changes in the city and the fall of the Berlin Wall. Berlin sounded like his second home.
He didn’t start speaking about his experiences in Hiroshima until a couple of years ago. After the March 11th earthquake and tsunami resulting in the disaster at the Fukushima Diiachi nuclear power plant, Mr. Sotobayashi spoke more frequently throughout Europe about his experiences in Hiroshima and the dangers of radiation.
Recently Mr. Sotobayashi was responsible for helping get a small monument built in Potsdam, Germany remembering those who perished in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
He was one of the most passionate hibakusha I photographed for From Above. He understood the urgency to speak out about the dangers of nuclear weapons and catastrophe.
Even though his portrait isn’t included in the From Above book because I photographed him after it went to print, his portrait in Berlin will be included in future From Above exhibitions.
I tried to contact him a couple of times this autumn to see how he was feeling. But wasn’t able to connect. Today I received the sad news he passed away on December 27th, 2011.
..February 2012.. ..Tokyo..
A story written by Colin Buchan Liddell for Metropolis Magazine about From Above being released as a book.
http://metropolis.co.jp/features/feature/the-unforgettable-fire/
From Above features my portraits of atomic bomb survivors and fire bombing survivors from Tokyo and Dresden.
The book is available in Japan through Kinokuniya book store and Amazon.com.jp. In the US and Europe, it’s available by contacting me directly and soon through PhotoEye.com.