
Photographer Yoshika Suzuki's photo exhibition "Invisible Worlds | Tokyo" will be held from August 5th to September 1st at the Epson Imaging Gallery Epsite in Shinjuku, Tokyo.
The works on display are composed of three sets of photographs: "Portrait of a person moving to Tokyo," "Scenery of the person's current location," and "Primitive Landscape for that person." Here, "primitive landscape" refers to a place that may appear as nothing more than a landscape to others, but that exists only in the eyes of each individual. To begin the project, Suzuki asked the models themselves to show their primeval landscapes using Google Maps Street View, which allows users to share locations. They responded with responses such as "There is no primeval landscape" and "There are many primeval landscapes." This led Suzuki to realize that there are "invisible worlds" that are only visible to each individual. This exhibition features works that explore the question: How can we truly capture a person's gaze?
A gallery talk will also be held from 4pm on August 6th by Kyoto Seika University Professor Nishitani Mariko, editor Ando Natsuki, and Suzuki Yoshika.
[Event Information]
"Invisible Worlds | Tokyo"
Venue: Epson Imaging Gallery Epsite
Address: Shinjuku Mitsui Building 1F, 2-1-1 Nishi-Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo
Dates: August 5th - September 1st
Hours: 10:30am - 6pm (until 3pm on September 1st)
Closed: Sundays, August 13th - 16th










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