23 Feb 2023 - 23 Apr 2023 12:00-17:00 Weds-Sun Heong Gallery Book Now

Description

How does one photograph radiation? Trauma? Or the resilience of communities forced to contend with both? Picturing the Invisible brings together seven celebrated photographers to examine the lasting legacy of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster.

Declared the ‘worst crisis Japan has faced since World War II’ by Prime Minister Naoto Kan, the earthquake and tsunami killed more than 15,000 people and triggered a triple meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant – forcing 200,000 people from their homes. This exhibition captures how, even today, vast swathes of land remain uninhabitable: the contamination of plants and soil made visible to visitors through technical means. However, it also explores how efforts to decontaminate the region continue. The exclusion zone is slowly shrinking and as evacuation orders are lifted, residents are being incentivised to return home. Few choose to do so – and many of those who do are old. One village found that only a third of its residents chose to return and more than 70% of them are over the age of 65. Those who do return discover that few wish to buy food ‘made in Fukushima’, posing an additional challenge for traditionally agricultural communities. This exhibit provides an intimate portrait of the peoples rebuilding their lives in the affected territories. It examines their memories of disaster, their continued contact with radiation, and their efforts to reclaim their heritage.

The photographs are complimented by a series of short essays, provided by policymakers, experts, and activists united in their deep engagement with the “triple disaster” and nuclear issues. Contributors include: Sir David Warren (British Ambassador to Japan, 2008–12); Science and Technology Studies pioneers, Sheila Jasanoff (Harvard) and Brian Wynne (Lancaster); Japanologists, Richard Samuels (MIT) and Brigitte Steger (Cambridge); ICRP Vice-Chair Jacques Lochard; best selling author, Robert Macfarlane (Cambridge); and famed environmentalist, Aileen Mioko Smith (Director, Green Action and co-author of “Minamata: A warning to the world”).

Upcoming Events

Women: Makers and Muses
Exhibition

11 Oct 2022 - 25 Jun 2023

Women: Makers and Muses

Enslavement and Salvation
Exhibition

17 Mar 2023 - 31 Mar 2023

Enslavement and Salvation

Refugee Silver: Huguenots in Britain
Exhibition

2 Aug 2022 - 30 Jul 2023

Refugee Silver: Huguenots in Britain

Bearing Witness? Violence and Trauma on Paper
Exhibition
Island Identities
Conference

28 Mar 2023 - 30 Mar 2023

Island Identities

Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery
Exhibition

4 Mar 2023 - 25 Jun 2023

Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery

Signs for the Living
Exhibition

29 Jan 2023 - 23 Apr 2023

Signs for the Living

COLOUR: Art, Science and Power
Exhibition

26 Jul 2022 - 23 Apr 2023

COLOUR: Art, Science and Power

Picturing the Invisible: Earthquake, Meltdown, Memory
Exhibition
Islanders: The Making of the Mediterranean
Exhibition
Jill Swarbrick-Banks: Transcendental Landscapes
Exhibition
Radium Dreams
Exhibition

2 Mar 2023 - 3 Sep 2023

Radium Dreams

Defaced: Object Handling Session
Exhibition
Simulacra
Exhibition

4 Apr 2023 - 9 Jun 2023

Simulacra