Exhibition/event has ended.
Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant, Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant, Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant from the series The Righteous Place 2020-2024 | archival pigment print | 297 × 210mm each ©︎ Hiroshi Ono, courtesy Kana Kawanishi Gallery

Hiroshi Ono "The Righteous Place"

Kana Kawanishi Photography
Finished

Artists

Hiroshi Ono
Hiroshi Ono is a photographer living in Amsterdam. In his first book, “Line on the Earth” (Edición Iman, 2007), he traveled to over 50 countries and connected the divided grounds of dystopias he confronted as one road. The scenes described in the book included, for example, the shocking sight of crossing the Afghan border wall (even visa holders were instructed to climb the wall because the slightest opening of the border would result in an avalanche of prospective immigrants), a restaurant in Belgrade during the civil war (prices were re-written every 30 minutes due to hyperinflation), and chatting with a survivor at the site of the Rwandan genocide (in front of a pile of human bones, the survivor laughingly told him, “I survived because I was fast on my feet”).

In his second book, “The Small Feasts Make the World” (Mochuisle, 2012), Ono introduced landscapes in the Netherlands and Japan on the equal vision of hope, consisting of essays about his frustrating everyday life in the oppressed Tokyo, and diaries of his peaceful days in Amsterdam where people from varied nations and backgrounds are naturally accepted as is. His unique and humorous point of view allowed the cultural differences between the Netherlands and Japan to appear but also the essential cores that humans share, regardless of one’s cultural sphere.

In his new work, “The Righteousness Place,” which will be presented at this exhibition, Ono presents a serene bird’s-eye view of the landscapes he has photographed over five years around the world. Today, when justice is being pretended all over the world, the multilayered divisions are worsening, memories of past despair are forgotten, and conflicts and suffocation seem to be running through the world at an accelerating pace, Ono’s straightforward viewpoint will flatly juxtapose this world.

​This exhibition examines the concepts of “righteousness” and “correctness,” developed by humans for survival in this time of deepening confusion.

Schedule

Aug 9 (Fri) 2024-Sep 14 (Sat) 2024 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
13:00-18:00
Closed
Monday, Tuesday, Sunday, Holidays
Closed from August 14 to 17.
FeeFree
Websitehttps://www.kanakawanishi.com/en-ex-ph029-hiroshi-ono
VenueKana Kawanishi Photography
http://www.kanakawanishi.com/
Location5F, 2-7-5 Nishiazabu, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106-0031
Access9 minute walk from exit 5 at Nogizaka Station on the Chiyoda line. 11 minute walk from exit A5 at Omotesando Station on the Ginza, Hanzomon and Chiyoda lines. 11 minute walk from exit 1a at Roppongi Station on the Hibiya or Toei Oedo line.
Phone03-5843-9128
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