Hiroko Komatsu
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Hiroko Komatsu | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1969 (age 56–57) |
| Partner | Osamu Kanemura |
| Website | https://komatsu-hiroko.com/ |
Komatsu Hiroko (小松浩子) is a Japanese artist and photographer. She was born in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan in 1969. She has held exhibitions both domestically in Japan and internationally in countries such as Germany, Italy, and the United States. She received the 43rd Kimura Ihei Award for new photographers in 2018.[1] She has also received a grant from the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission.[2]
Komatsu started her creative career as an experimental noise artist and only picked up photography in the mid-2000s after participating in a darkroom workshop. Due to her late introduction into the medium, she felt that she needed to ‘catch up’ to other photographers and rented a space in Tokyo and began to produce one new exhibition every month from 2010 to 2011. This ambitious exhibition project was titled Broiler Space, and it was in this highly self-motivated rapid-fire production environment and its spatial limitations that Komatsu started to experiment with exhibit photographs in non-traditional experimental ways and developed into mixed media installations.[2][3]
Artistry
Installation style and development
Komatsu Hiroko has established herself through her singular experimental installations which utilize a magnitude of photographs more than traditional photography exhibitions. Where traditional photograph exhibitions present framed photographs spaced out in even intervals throughout the exhibition space, Komatsu plasters unframed black-and-white photographs across the walls, hangs them from the ceilings and spreads them over the floors so viewers must tread upon her photographs to access the exhibition space. In an example of the scale that she often works in, for a workshop with University of Hartford students, she developed 18 black-and-white photographs on a 50-foot roll of photographic paper.[4]
In another example of her non-traditional installations for her exhibition at the gallery dieFirma in New York City in October 2021, visitors were enveloped by countless photographs exhibited on the walls like wallpaper and even on the floor, which the visitors had to tread upon to enter the exhibition space. Komatsu states that many of the photographs of industrial sites for this exhibition were taken during the COVID-19 pandemic which coincided with a construction boom in Japan leading up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. The pandemic caused many projects to halt their construction, which allowed Komatsu to take many of her photographs of empty construction sites which she calls, “shiny ruins.” In an interview with photography curator Pauline Vermare, Komatsu describes how it is difficult to discern if these sites are in the process of construction or demolishment. She states that she was attracted to these sites not only because they were sites of construction for the country's infrastructure, but also because the working class human labor involved in the construction of such sites were a part of human infrastructure on which society is built.[5]
In 2021, MEM Gallery in Ebisu, Tokyo held an exhibition, Silent Sound, that exemplifies her non-traditional installations. Komatsu filmed three live music performances and projected these films simultaneously using three different super 8 projectors. The film passed through these projectors cut dynamically through the exhibition space going through a pulley system. Although the moving images were not accompanied by any sound, the exhibition space was filled with the sound of the film moving through the super 8 projector. In an adjacent room, Komatsu exhibited her "photographic sculptures" which were sheets of printed images and a DVD wrapped in plastic.[6] For the exhibition art critic Umezu Gen contributed an essay explaining the connection between Komatsu's work and his own.
Art objects
Komatsu is known for her handmade objects which go far beyond the conventional format of the photobook. For example Black Book #1 (2021) is a bottle that is filled with little pieces of cut-out paper from texts such as Greta Thunberg’s book No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference and Theodore Kaczynski’s Industrial Society and Its Future: The Unabomber Manifesto. She chose this format because she felt the conventional forms of photobooks that catalogue a curated selection of photographs was not sufficient to capture her installation. This format of cutting texts from a book and putting them into a bottle was also inspired by her conception of photographs as text. For Komatsu, a single photograph is like a single word in that it does not provide enough context to be understood; it is only though stringing them together that meaning can be discerned. Building on this idea, she states, “Also, when you take a picture, you frame a part of reality, and then you move the image to another place, such as an exhibition venue or bookstore. I thought the process was very similar to cutting out texts from a book and putting them into an object, in this installation, a bottle.” [7]