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Lotus
Lotus © Hitomi Watanabe

Hiroshi Watanabe »

Lotus

Exhibition: 26 Apr – 18 May 2024

Zen Foto Gallery

6-6-9 Roppongi, Minato-k
106-0032 Tokyo

+81-3-6804 1708


www.zen-foto.jp

Tue-Sat 12-19

Zen Foto Gallery is pleased to present “Lotus”, an exhibition of photographs by Hitomi Watanabe from 26 April to 18 May. This will be Watanabe’s fourth solo presentation at Zen Foto Gallery, following her previous exhibition “Tenjiku in Colour” (2022). The exhibition will also celebrate the recent publication of her latest photography book, under the same title, published by Yasosha on 8 April.

Watanabe began travelling in Asia during the early 1970s, just as the student movement was coming to an end. Until then, she had been taking photographs to document the “Todai Zenkyoto” — student protests organized by the All-Campus Joint Struggle Committees at the University of Tokyo. This body of work is one of Watanabe’s most representative works and is currently on display in the “Absolute Chairs” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, Saitama through 12 May. Upon returning to Japan, Watanabe began taking photographs of lotus flowers that symbolize her encounter with the original home of her soul during the journey. This exhibition showcases a carefully curated selection of images from her photobook, a compilation of the series she spent many years capturing.

Once upon a time, in Bodh Gaya, India —
Hot season, hot place where the temperature reaches 50°C during the day.

One early morning in May,
I was sitting by a lotus pond in the grounds of a temple.
I could faintly hear the sound of petals opening —
There was also a gentle fragrance in the air.

As I was enveloped by the faint fragrance,
The lotus forest in front of me shook heavily.
A village girl appeared, paddling a long, narrow canoe.
I wondered if she had come to offer flowers —
She picked the flowers that were still in bud,
As if she was weaving her way through the lotuses —

Years have passed since then —
When I first saw the native lotus at the Usa Jingu Shrine,
Memories submerged at the bottom of the water began to overflow —
I heard the signal for the beginning.

— Hitomi Watanabe