Category Archives: Asia
Karatsu (part 4) – Takashima (高島)
There is a small oddly shaped island off the coast of Karatsu. It’s more like a little hill that sticks out of the tree and is aptly named “Takashima” or which means “Tall Island.” There are only a few dozen people living on it and a few ferries there and back each day.







Karatsu (唐津) part 3
Japan likes to look like a modern country, but it still has a lot of the old-world left in it


A slow afternoon in the shop



Karatsu (唐津) part 2
I spent a day shooting in Karatsu which is sleepy seaside town in the north-west corner of Kyushu.
The town in home to an amazing festival held at the beginning of November called Karatsu Kunchi. The festival is hundreds of years old and designated as an intangible cultural treasure. The town also produces beautiful Japanese-style ceramics.




A gloomy day in Karatsu (part 1)
I spent a rainy day photographing the sleepy seaside town of Karatsu (唐津).
These photos are a combination of a gloomy day, some influence from my favorite Japanese photographer Moriyama Daido, and some of my own style. When I first saw Daido’s work I didn’t like it because I couldn’t make out a lot of detail in it, it was so dark. But then I came to understand is aesthetic and technique. His photos make you look hard at them and that in turn draws you in and lets you imagine and experience the scene. It’s a somewhat Japanese astetic and one that is being lost with modern, sterile, digital photos which are always sharp and detailed.
I intentionally exposed and processed the negatives to achieve this particular look. By being committed to a single outcome (ie. not having the endless tweak-ability of digital), I can focus more on recording the feelings of a scene rather than making them up later.
Karatsu Castle
Karatsu Station

Karatsu Station


Lunch (local foods)

Anti-nuclear protest in Fukuoka from back in May
To learn more please click on the “Fukushima Nuclear Crisis Videos” on this site’s menu or visit my youtube channel.


Busy doing nothin’
This photo the perfect metaphor for me as of late…
I’m starting to feel some motivation again however and shot several rolls of film at a local festival. Once I get a little time I’ll develop and start posting them. In the meantime this is from a roll I randomly shot around the streets recently.

Racist bitch (差別的いけいけ)
Her sign reads: “The true color of Koreans living in Japan (using a derogatory term) is that of criminals and they mostly sneak into the country illegally. There is a project to return them to Korea, but they stay in Japan of their own will.”
It is written in rather difficult (for me as a foreigner to read), Japanese and was held by one of a very vocal, seemingly extreme, hateful group of pro-nuclear protesters who positioned themselves and screamed profanities and insults at a peaceful anti-nuclear protest as it walked by on May 8th in Fukuoka City, Japan.
The sign is nothing short of racist and comparable in my eyes at least, to a protester in the U.S. holding a sign saying something like “Let’s return negros* go back to Africa.” It is disgusting.
(*NOTE: I am half black and use the term to make an example and comparison, not to degrade my own race or anyone else.)
The sad thing is that there is a racist undercurrent in Japanese society. You just don’t notice it because the country is 98.5% Japanese. While strict social manners and a strong cultural fear of confrontation and a general desire for harmony (no matter how fake or superficial), keep people from overtly saying it, I have sensed more than a few times in my years here some people who seemed if they would be happy if no foreigners lived in Japan. Also remember, this is the country that closed it’s doors to the world for 200 years during a period of increasing contact between different parts of the world. Looking at this photo brings to mind the phrase “the more things change the more they stay the same.”
My Japanese friends and coworkers will have to pull some overtime undoing the damage that these closed minds from the 鎖国時代 (national isolation era) are doing to Japan in this modern age.

I spoke with a man from this group who had the balls to tell me that “We are REAL Japanese” and that “many Japanese are confused.” I have some educated, hard-working Japanese friends and coworkers who would beg to differ.
An ordered society
This scene is repeated daily at my local train station. Japan has gotten a lot of praise since the earthquake and tsunami for their incredible order. While it’s true that the obedient and orderly nature of the Japanese is an asset in trying times, in non-trying times it can be quite trying itself, especially if you dare step out of line.
(shot with my vintage Ansco Shur Shot and developed in coffee)



