An exhibition of fascinating works of Japan's satoyama is now underway at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum. It is on works by the country's top nature photographer Mitsuhiko Imamori
who popularized the term and concept of satoyama
the exhibition is titled "Satoyama: Harmony with Nature and Resilience in Japan." With more than 190 photographs
it is one of the largest of his many photo exhibitions
Many of Imamori's latest works are being shown for the first time.
Beautiful scenes and landscapes of satoyama in his home area around Lake Biwa in Shiga Prefecture are on display
He has photographed these areas for more than 30 years
His works include satoyama at more than 200 locations
shot as he traveled throughout the country over the last 20 years.
The photographs are fascinating and attractive – and many of them are thought-provoking
They have also captured wonderful scenes and moments of people and living things in the natural environment
These give us insights into the delicate relationships between people and nature living in harmony
Before he popularized satoyama
the term was used in the forest ecological lexicon
It describes the agricultural environment spreading between the areas people inhabit and the mountains beyond
Imamori says he has expanded the concept more freely to cover "all spaces where living beings
This concept of satoyama soon caught the hearts and minds of many Japanese
It was popularized through his photographs and writings as well as serialized television programs
All of them speak to the synergy of beautiful landscapes of rice fields and flowers
together with the insects and other critters living there
It has become a household term in Japan today.
Imamori was born in 1954. He started his career as a freelance photographer in 1980, shooting landscapes of the natural environment around Lake Biwa. His images were filled with rice paddies
his images showed people living and working there.
In 1992 he began the photo serial "Satoyama Monogatari" (Satoyama Story) in a nature-focused magazine
he defined satoyama as: "[A] traditional Japanese agricultural environment where people and living things coexist." Satoyama
consists of not only mountains and farmlands but also fishing areas of the sea and lakes.
Many of the photos in his "Satoyama Monogatari" – and in the current exhibition – were taken in his own satoyama in Ohgi on the western side of Lake Biwa
More than 35 years ago he purchased a deserted satoyama
with a total area of 1,000 tsubo (some 3,300 square meters)
He then restored it as satoyama with a forest
He replaced a hinoki (Japanese cypress) forest with deciduous broad-leaf trees like oak and other varieties. These allow plants to grow under the trees and insects to inhabit them. Beetles like those trees. Every year he selects more trees and plants, adding them to make it a more livable, sustainable environment for insects
Imamori named his satoyama "Aurelian Garden," meaning "butterfly lover's garden." He says some 70 different species of butterflies have now come to inhabit it alongside many other insects
he is still busy working year-round to improve and maintain it.
From his childhood, Imamori was a bug-loving boy who collected butterflies and all other kinds of insects
He began photographing insects in his home area around Lake Biwa in his early years
Then he expanded his range throughout Japan and the world
Wonderful volumes with illustrations of butterflies in Japan and of the world are among his many award-winning books
in 1995 he won the highly coveted Ihei Kimura Award for his photography in "Satoyama Monogatari" (published by Shinchosha).
visitors are greeted by a huge photo panel of village women picking katakuri (Erythronium Japonicum
It is a very typical satoyama scene symbolic of what the visitors will see throughout the exhibition
That is the relationship between people and nature
These women collect katakuri to eat by breaking the blossoms off from the middle of the stems
They don't pick the whole plant and intentionally leave its roots in the ground
the woodland plant will come out to bloom again the next spring
This is the lifestyle of satoyama people who utilize natural resources without depleting them.
The exhibition is divided into four seasonal sections – Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter – plus a slide show booth. At the outset of the Spring section, there are three large photos of beautiful, snow-clad mountains. One shows rapeseed flowers in bloom in the front. Another with fresh verdure vegetation, and a third is filled with cherry blossoms
They immediately catch visitors' eyes.
One of them is titled "The gods have descended from the mountain." Imamori says in the exhibition catalog that when he was photographing satoyama
he "was particular about landscapes with mountains." He adds "The people of satoyama see mountains as sacred
Japanese people have worshiped mountains as they believed gods dwell in the mountains
Those gods would then come down to their farmland or satoyama
A wide variety of mountains in Japan are captured in his satoyama photos with different seasonal colors
In addition to the katakuri picking, the exhibition features many photos of people working in satoyama picking tea leaves, collecting sansai (edible wild plants)
Scenes of people's labor in satoyama make particularly beautiful photographs in the exhibition.
Another feature is a variety of about 20 photos of critters that are all important players in satoyama
There is also a Japanese serow (goat-like mammal)
visitors may sense the warmness of Imamori as a naturalist as he presents these living things
One especially compelling photo in the Spring section is titled "Gifu butterfly (Luehdorfia japonica) visiting dogtooth violet." It is shown next to the photo of women collecting katakuri
The image captures a beautiful scene of a butterfly visiting purple katakuri flowers
with snow-clad mountain ridges in the distance
you could also read a deeper story of life in it
emerges in around April after spending about 10 months through the summer and winter as a pupa
It lays eggs on the food plant before dying only about two weeks after emerging
This life cycle must have been in his mind when Imamori pressed the shutter toward this winged insect called "the goddess of spring" visiting katakuri
The plant is also known as a "spring ephemeral" for its beautiful but short life.
displayed along with two more photos – one "Gifu butterfly hatches" and the other "Princess Gifu butterfly (Luehdorfia puziloi) eggs laid on a wild ginger leaf" – says much about the severity and wonder of their lives.
particularly tanada terraced rice paddies dominate
we cannot imagine satoyama without rice paddies
many scenes of tanada in different seasons – with water-filled paddies
and with golden-colored grains waiting for harvesting – are abundant
Most impressive among them is a fantastic scene of the celebrated tanada in Toka-machi
titled "Morning mist at terraced fields."
Imamori says "Tanada terraced fields or terraced rice paddies are an exemplary environment
space that is the prototype for my satoyama story." He says
[And] they are not important merely as farmland that connects the mountains with human habitation
They also have ecological functions as water systems." He points out "They are important for virtually all biological diversity."
These works remind us of the relationship between people and nature and how to live in harmony with our environment
Imamori seems to be challenging us to decide how we can help preserve satoyama
his beautiful satoyama works remind us of what could disappear soon unless we attend to them.
What: "Satoyama," photographs by Mitsuhiko Imamori
Where: The Tokyo Photographic Art Museum,in Ebisu Garden Place
350 yen for junior and senior high school students
For additional information: Contact the museum:Tel. 03-3280-0099 or check its website(English) or (Japanese)
(Read the report in Japanese.)
Author: Yoshikazu Ishizuka
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