Exhibition/event has ended.

Shoko Ahagon Exhibition

Shadai Gallery, Tokyo Institute of Polytechnics
Finished

Artists

Shoko Ahagon
Ahagon Shōkō (1901–2002) is well-known as the leader of the nonviolent land struggle against the US military on the island of Iejima in Okinawa. In 1955, ten years after the Battle of Okinawa, the US military seized land to expand its base on the island. Ahagon and others were forced from their homes and farms in the village of Maja; some died of starvation as a result. As a means of confronting the forced confiscation of land by “bayonet and bulldozer” and the oppressive treatment that followed, Ahagon began to document the days’ events with a twin-lens reflex camera. The photographic record became a means of resistance. Ahagon and others shared the camera—the only one on the island—to document damage caused by military drills and the violent crimes of the American GIs, as well as the “Beggars’ March,” a months-long tour of the main island of Okinawa to appeal for support. The photographs made visible events on the remote island that had been relegated to invisibility by the American occupation. Before long, the circle of support spread not only within Okinawa, but to the main islands of Japan.

Through his books, including GIs and Farmers (1973) and Life is Precious: The Antiwar Spirit of Okinawa (1992), and his only photobook, The Island Where People Live (1983), Ahagon left a detailed account, in word and image, of the struggle. Continuing his appeal for the importance of peace until his death in 2002, Ahagon became known as the “Gandhi of Okinawa.”

Tokyo Polytechnic University has added to its collection the prints that were kept by Harigaya Kōji, who edited The Island Where People Live. At the same time, we have digitized about 3,600 extant monochrome negatives and made new silver halide prints. The negatives include many snapshots of daily life on Iejima and portraits of the islanders, offering glimpses of the things that Ahagon sought to defend. Please take this opportunity to view this documentary record that stands apart within the history of photography.

Schedule

Nov 5 (Tue) 2024-Jan 31 (Fri) 2025 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
10:00-19:00
Closed
Thursday, Sunday, Holidays
Closed on December 26 to January 5 and January 16 to 19.
Open on November 23.
FeeFree
VenueShadai Gallery, Tokyo Institute of Polytechnics
http://www.shadai.t-kougei.ac.jp/
Location2F 5Bldg. Tokyo Polytechnic University, 2-4-7 Honcho, Nakano-ku, Tokyo 164-8678
Access7 minute walk from Nakanosakaue Station on the Marunouchi or Toei Oedo line.
Phone03-3372-1321
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