Asako Narahashi “half awake and half asleep in the water”

Recently someone asked me about Narahashi’s series “half awake and half asleep in the water” and this reminded me that I was looking for publications with the series last year in Tokyo.

Asako Narahashi: Bentenjima, from the series: ‘half awake and half asleep in the water’, 2001

 

I am very fond of this series which was photographed by Asako Narahashi at several places around Japan in 2000-2003. The curator Michiko Kasahara (today working at the MOT) was instrumental in promoting the series when she included the series “half awake and half asleep in the water” in the exhibition Kiss in the Dark: Contemporary Japanese Photography.

Asako Narahashi: Zeze, from the series: ‘half awake and half asleep in the water’, 2005

The title of the series […] is very cleverly expressed. Her works, while betraying the stereotyped images of resort areas, somehow make visible as a shared recognition the image of the sea that people embrace. Therein, an uncomfortable felling like seasickness and a pleasurable feeling of floating and entrusting yourself to the sea lodge side by side.[…] They call forth an ambivalent feeling.
[Quote: Michiko Kasahara: Kiss in the Dark. Tokyo 2001]

Momochi, from the series: ‘half awake and half asleep in the water’, 2003

 

Not in the water, but the water´s edge. The resulting photographs were of a sort that I couldn’t tell wether they were not wanting to go over to the other side (= other world), but standing on this side (= this world) and peeping over a the other side, or looking over at this side from the other side.
[Quote: Asako Narahashi]

 

Asako Narahashi: Ueno, from the series: ‘half awake and half asleep in the water’, 2003

By the way, besides being published in group exhibition catalogues some images from “half awake and half asleep in the water” are included in Narahashi´s book “Funiculi Funicula. Photographs 1998-2003”, Tokyo 2003, and the series is very well printed in the exhibition catalogue “Imagine”, Tama City Cultural Center 2003.

———

Recommended books:
Asako Narahashi: Funiculi Funicula. Photographs 1998-2003
Michiko Kasahara: Kiss in the Dark: Contemporary Japanese Photography

14 Comments

  1. Wqas directed here from Warrenellis.com and so glad I clicked the link. They look beautiful pictures and its such a good idea.
    Good luck for the future.

    Paul

    Reply

  2. Absolutely love her work ever since i saw them at photographers gallery; looked better in small space; but don’t quite know why; maybe suffocating feeling i get from them.

    Reply

  3. Hi Miwako,
    I have not seen the original prints yet, only the small images in the publication. But I hope to see them in the near future.
    The photo of Fuji-san is my favorite..

    Ferdinand

    Reply

  4. Hi all,

    guess I was the one mentioned by Ferdinand on june, 16th. On july, 4th, I will hold in my hands a c-print of “Bentenjima” – made by Narahashi a few days ago -my favourite piece of the series; it’s the one with the “tori”. Fully coincedentially I choose this one as my favourite, not knowing the quote of Narahashi mentioned by Ferdinand. And now I’m glad that it maybe meets most the quote of Narahashi that Ferdinand mentioned above (in my opinion the series takes a bit of a look on the other side while looking on a scene of this sit(d)e. In other words: the drowner just looking at a e.g. a tori while began to drown and maybe seconds just before passing river styx …

    My other favourites are the lengthway-“Makuhari” and of cause Fuji-san. In spite prints of this series are unbelievably expensive (don’t ask) I think me and my wife are in need also of the other two motifs I mentioned as my favourites number 2 and 3 – because it makes life better to look at these pictures.

    Regards

    Malte

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Another take on seeing the urban landscape | street + urban Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.