Diary

iLost & Found Projectn/a

This diary isn't directly related to figures or collecting but I think it's safe to say that fans of anime who collect anime figures will also have some degree of interest in Japan, which is essentially what this diary is about.

Tonight I went to an exhibition opening at a local gallery. This exhibit has been shown in Tokyo, New York and my town here in regional Australia is very lucky to have this exhibit on display. It is called Lost & Found. The exhibition showcases photographs salvaged from the 2011 tsunami. The photos have been carefully recovered, cleaned and digitized to be reproduced and displayed to tell the story of the silent survivors and the victims of this disaster.

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound1.png

Here's some information about the exhibition from the Lost & Found Project website: (ext link)

Until the day of March 11th 2011, all the photos we have here today were in people’s homes.

After the earthquake hit, a massive tsunami swept away houses, and everything that was inside them. Coastal towns were buried in rubble. Cars, clothes, refrigerators, photo albums: everything was swallowed up and turned to waste as people stood speechless.

As the search for survivors ended and attention turned to the clean up mission, Self-Defense forces, firemen, and policemen who were in Tohoku to help survivors began to pick up photos they found in the mud, and to store them in an elementary school gymnasium. They were not asked to do it, nor did they have a clear sense of their objective. Perhaps they were just desperate to find something in of the rubble that could be saved. Over time, the gymnasium began to fill up with salvaged photographs.

Two months after the earthquake hit, a group called the “Memory Salvage Project” began to sort out the photos and prepare them for return to their owners.
The images were cleaned and digitized by volunteers who came from Tokyo and other parts of Japan.

The images varied in condition, from relatively clean to damaged beyond recognition. Some of the photographs you see here were so badly eroded by bacteria that they could not be cleaned, and therefore could not be returned. But each of these images, kept in a drawers or cabinet, was someone’s treasured memory until that fateful day.

We all take photographs. A few special ones are cherished, and the rest forgotten. We take pictures when we are having fun, when we want immortalize a moment shared with another person. The photographs you see here were also taken under those circumstances. The depth of emotion might vary from snap to snap, but each one captures a point in time that somebody wanted to keep.

What are we supposed to feel and think when we look at these pictures?
Should we be happy that they were found at all, or sad that they will never be returned to their owners? Or should we simply mourn for the dead? The more I struggle to find answers, the more missing pieces I seem to find.

But without looking at the pictures, I don’t think we’ll see anything at all.


It was a rather moving exhibition which is why I wanted to share it with the members of this website. I went along with my best friend who is into anything Japanese just like me and she enjoyed it as much as I did. We did two laps through the exhibition and found new things we hadn't noticed the first time around. We found ourselves talking about who these people were and if they were still alive or not. As I said, it was quite emotional.

I hope you enjoy these few photos that I snapped with my phone.

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound2.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound3.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound4.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound5.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound6.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound7.png

http://i19.photobucket.com/albums/b190/boneyards/lostandfound8.png



If you don't find this interesting please just move on without being nasty or negative, please be respectful.
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Comments (9)

02 years agoNeko_OniNeko_Oni
Amazing exhibition: was not aware that something like this was being done. Incredibly moving, especially knowing that these are all memories of a time and place that will take many years to return to "normal".

Thank you for sharing this.
02 years ago (2 years ago)Amphy64Amphy64
jena (2 years ago) #1077715I'd love it if you linked them to this, the more people that know about this amazing project the better!

Thank you, I've done so just now, after seeing your reply. : )
I do think the project is a good idea, too, photographs can be very powerful, and each hold a story.
02 years agojenajena ☆ mahou shoujo ☆
Amphy64 (2 years ago) #1077645Thank you for sharing the pictures you took of the exhibition. It's really very moving to see them. I'll never forget watching the news at that time, and on the language learning form I use (Kanji Koohi), speaking with people who were in Japan, many of whom were waiting to hear if friends and host families were Ok. May I link to this there? I think they might be interested to see, as well.

I'd love it if you linked them to this, the more people that know about this amazing project the better!
02 years ago (2 years ago)Amphy64Amphy64
Thank you for sharing the pictures you took of the exhibition. It's really very moving to see them. I'll never forget watching the news at that time, and on the language learning form I use (Kanji Koohi), speaking with people who were in Japan, many of whom were waiting to hear if friends and host families were Ok. May I link to this there? I think they might be interested to see, as well.
02 years agoDasFrogDasFrog
Thank you for sharing. Powerful stuff.
02 years agokhattkhatt
Interesting what survives disasters. Thanks for sharing this. Went to their website to see if it might come to my area and, darn it!,it's already been here. Would love to have seen these in person. the watercolor surrealist feel gives them a certain sadness of half remembered memories of the lives that were lost.
02 years agoZeroParadigmZeroParadigm Loli Breakfast Machine
Who's the jerk who found this uninteresting??
02 years agoheatsignatureheatsignature
These are some really interesting photos! It's a really well-done concept, thank you for sharing!
02 years agoalex_valex_v
Thanks for sharing this, I enjoyed reading and looking at the pictures you've taken. It's quite touching how photos can hold such meaning and importance.

JPF Sydney also held a photo exhibition in their gallery relating to the recovery efforts: (ext link)
I didn't get to go myself but after viewing these photos you've shared, I definitely regret not having gone ><

On a related note, did you by any chance watch the BBC documentary "Children of the Tsunami" that was aired on the ABC channel earlier this year? It gives some insight into the perspectives of some children and parents who experienced the disaster and survived, how they've been coping with the effects of it, etc. It was quite a moving doc and I would definitely recommend it for a watch if you haven't.

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