JP Tower Museum INTERMEDIATHEQUE

Documentary Film Screening “Japan Rediscovered – Ishikawa Prefecture"

2014.05.09
ACADEMIA

Date & Time: Friday, May 9, 2014 6:30 p.m. (expected to end at 7:20 p.m.)
Venue: Intermediatheque 2F Lecture Theatre ACADEMIA
Admission free (no reservation required)
Language: Japanese (no subtitles)
The number of seats limited to 48. We request your comprehension.
* Photographing, filming and recording are strictly prohibited.
* Please refrain from eating and drinking in the museum.


【Screened Films】

“Ishikawa Prefecture” (From the Japan Discovered series)
1961 / 28 min 57 sec / Digital version of original 16mm film / BW
Produced by Iwanami Film Production Co. / Producer: Takeji Takamura / Director: Kyoichi Akiyama / Scenario: Junpei Yoshihara / Camera: Yuji Okumura

“Kanazawa – A City Living in the Tradition”
1959 / 17 min / Digital version of original 16mm film / BW
Produced by Iwanami Film Production Co. / Producer: Teizo Oguchi / Director: Takashi Fujie / Scenario: Susumu Hani, Hideyuki Inubushi, Junpei Yoshihara / Camera: Mitsuji Kanau

   During Japan’s rapid postwar economic growth, as the government was implementing economic development based on industry on a national level, the city of Kanazawa was somewhat of an exception: it strongly preserved its identity as a castle town, exploiting it as a touristic asset. Such a policy was made possible by the ancient cityscape and the surrounding nature, but these were significantly damaged by the region’s modernization. The films presented in this screening, while recording such transformations, take a nostalgic look at how popular classes preserve their local identity through traditional arts and crafts as well as a lifestyle inherited from the past.

【On “Japan Rediscovered”】

   From 1961 unto the following year, the educational series “Japan Discovered” presenting each region of Japan was broadcast on Nihon Educational Television. Produced by Iwanami Film Production Co., the series was filmed by major directors of the era, and offers a sociologic perspective on postwar Japan as it undergoes rapid economic growth. This is not to say that the series is simply an outdated educational material. Not only is it characterized by calm but poetic narration, as well as experiments on framing and editing which are common to the feature films of the same era, but it also offers a unique portrait of Japan at the time. The particularities of each region, but also the faces of the Japanese before they underwent globalization, and the landscapes of Japan as it is transformed by industrialization, are admirably recorded.
   Starting in 1957 and for ten years, artist Taro Okamoto traveled Japan as it underwent rapid economic growth, visiting sites of memory representative of Japan, in the continuation of his quest for what he saw as Japanese traditions. He collected the photographs he took then, accompanying them with his own texts, and eventually published Japan Rediscovered. This series of documentary films constituting the first episode of our “Archaeology of Image” cycle is precisely Japan Rediscovered in its filmic version.

Organization: The University Museum, the University of Tokyo + Centre for the Conservation of Documentary Film
Cooperation: Yoshimi Laboratory, Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, the University of Tokyo
Program Conception: Intermediatheque Department, The University Museum, the University of Tokyo


【On “The Archaeology of Image”】
   Since the invention of film, a colossal amount of documentary images ranging from educational films to news programs have been produced. Nowadays, these are instantly reproduced, edited and shared, as if this were an evident process. However, as far as their conservation and access to the public are concerned, the images constituting this colossal documentary corpus have not been treated equally. Among them, historical images everyone has seen form a tiny minority, and most documentary films have now fallen into oblivion. One of the main reasons accounting for this is the fact that most films having been commissioned, they were neglected or even destroyed just like consumable goods, once their initial function was fulfilled.
   As far as it activates objects from the past in order to produce new interpretations for the future, this cycle of projections is particularly significant. By excavating, collecting, preserving and digitalizing film which records human activity throughout the 20th Century, and by showing it to the public, we can preserve part of the colossal image heritage in danger of extinction. At the same time, through documentary films diverging from the mainstream images we have been used to watch, we can reevaluate the evolution of 20th-Century Japan.
   The Intermediatheque constantly produces new resources by preserving and reevaluating academic heritage in all its diversity, from scientific specimens to furniture, part of it was abandoned. For images alike, through an archaeological excavation of a corpus which is a trove of filmic memories of the 20th Century, we expect new discoveries.
   The present cycle of projections will be held regularly, with the cooperation of the Centre for the Conservation of Documentary Film.

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