Kyotographie: An International Photo Festival in Japan’s Ancient Capital

Culture

French photographer Lucille Reyboz launched the Kyotographie International Photography Festival in 2013 with Nakanishi Yūsuke as a way of drawing attention to the world of photography. Now in its second year, the festival is helping to raise the profile of photography in Japan and encourage dialogue among photographers around the world.

Lucille Reyboz

Born in Lyon, France, in 1973. Spent childhood years in Bamako, Mali. Renowned especially for portrait photographs and produces work in a range of fields, such as magazines and CD jackets. Lived in Tokyo from 2007 to 2011, when she moved to Kyoto, where she still lives today. Organized the first Kyotographie International Photography Festival in 2013, together with Nakanishi Yūsuke. Solo exhibitions of her work include Source (New York: Phillips de Pury, 2007) and Belles de Bamako (Tokyo: Chanel Nexus Hall, 2011).

Much Effort to Make It Happen

INTERVIEWER Kyoto is known to be conservative. Was it difficult to get permission to use traditional townhouses and temples as exhibition spaces?

REYBOZ When we first moved to Kyoto, we felt we were strangers. But that feeling made us want to create a place where we did belong. That’s the goal we had in mind and we went for broke to make the Kyotographie festival a reality—throwing ourselves headlong into the search for venues and everything else we had to do.

The fact that neither of us comes from Kyoto may actually have worked in our favor and helped us to win opportunities. It’s true that Kyoto isn’t always open to outsiders. But we had a firm desire to put on a high-quality festival. First, we chose photographers and then we looked for the ideal locations. I think that our unwavering insistence on prioritizing the photography connected Kyoto people to us.

In its second year, the festival displayed works by photographers from nine countries in fifteen venues throughout the city, including shrines, townhouses, and galleries.

Nature in Tokyo, consisting of works by 13 contemporary Japanese photographers selected by M, a magazine supplement to the French newspaper Le Monde. The venue for this exhibit at Kyotographie was the Kōdōkan, a school established by the Confucian scholar Minagawa Kien in 1806.


Still Crazy, with photos by Hirokawa Taishi of nuclear power plants in contemporary Japanese landscapes; displayed at Kyoto’s Shimogamo Shrine, a UNESCO World Heritage site, normally not open to the public.


Japanese Photobooks Then and Now (left), featuring photobooks from the period following World War II until today, at the Asphodel event space in Gion. (Right) Eternal Japan 1951–52 Werner Bischof (right), an exhibit of photos by the Swiss photographer presented at Mumeisha, a Kyo-machiya, or Kyoto townhouse, built in 1909.

INTERVIEWER Did you take inspiration from any other festivals?

REYBOZ In France there are two world-renowned photography shows: the Paris Photo fair, which is centered on commercial buying and selling, and the Arles Photography Festival, which focuses more on exhibitions. It would be great if Kyotographie could grow into something like an Asian version of the Arles festival. Like Kyoto, Arles is a city with a rich history, and the festival uses churches and other historical buildings as venues.

New Angles on the Environment

INTERVIEWER Last year’s exhibition featuring photography maestros Malick Sidibé and Hosoe Eikoh had an impact on visitors. Why did you choose the topic of “Our Environments” this year?

REYBOZ I think that there are few countries where people are so attuned to nature as in Japan, but a nuclear accident happened here and the country was forced to confront environmental issues. However, we didn’t want only to focus on the negative side, so we put together exhibitions examining the environment from a number of angles, including the animal world, nature, humanity, and space.

I first saw Tim Flach’s work in Victor, a magazine produced by the Swedish camera manufacturer Hasselblad. His animal-themed exhibit, More Than Human, appears at first glance to be just a collection of beautiful photos of animals, but in fact he is also denouncing humanity’s reprehensible treatment of animals. For example, his studio photo of a rooster with no feathers is based on the experiment for the commercial breeding of featherless chickens through genetic modification [photo below].

Tim Flach’s More Than Human exhibit. The venue, Shimadai Gallery, housed a sake wholesaler and raw-silk merchant from the mid-Edo period (1603–1868) before being converted into a traditional townhouse in 1883.

Last year at the Arles festival I saw Mars, a Photographic Exploration, and wanted to bring the photos from that exhibit to our festival in Kyoto. The photos were taken originally by NASA’s Mars probes and came to the attention of Xavier Barral, chief editor of the art publishing house Éditions Xavier Barral. He is a top photo editor, and we are honored that we could work with him closely.

Standing in front of the high-definition monitor used for the Mars, a Photographic Exploration exhibit are (from left to right) Oliver Franz, the exhibition designer; Xavier Barral, the curator; and Takatani Shirō, the artist who prepared the video installation.

We contacted the Kyoto-based artist Takatani Shirō and he agreed to prepare an installation piece using the photos of Mars. Takatani applied the technique called “toposcan” to display the high-definition images of Mars on a four-by-six-meter Sony monitor, one of the world’s largest. We created a new exhibit, different from the one at Arles. We hopes that this kind of exchange between Kyotographie and other photo festivals and fairs will expand in the future.

Kyotographie International Photography Festival official site:
http://www.kyotographie.jp/

(Interview conducted in Japanese by Yata Vattani Yumiko. Banner photo and portrait photo by Ogino Naoyuki. Photos of venues by Ōshima Takuya.)

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