dark scene with rows on wooden boxes on shelves and vase with foliage pattern and bottom, LLQ; squatting man wearing a light-colored kimono, with his fingers splayed, touching either side of his head, in URQ

Copyright %C2%A9 Hosoe Eikoh

Kamaitachi #11, 1965

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Centered on the Japanese myth of Kamaitatchi, a mythical folkloric monster believed to have existed in rural Japan, these photographs were created collaboratively by the photographer Eikoh Hosoe and the choreographer and dancer Tatsumi Hijikata (1928-86) over several years in the late 1960s. The famed choreographer, who established the abstract dance style of Butoh, performed in front of Hosoe’s camera, enacting the movement of the monster Kamaitachi.

Hosoe captured Hijikata’s transformation into Kamaitachi as they traveled from Tokyo to a small farming village in Yamagata in the Tohoku region of Japan. Often thought to be a weasel, Kamaitachi appears in a whirlwind to cut its victims with a sickle, but his cuts neither draw blood nor cause pain. In the village, Hijikata ran around in a rice field, interacted with villagers and farmers, and played with children. The artists stated that their collaboration in the rural Tohoku region (where the both artists were born) was their symbolic departure from the increasingly modernized capital city Tokyo while they had worked professionally.

Details
Title
Kamaitachi #11
Artist Life
born 1933
Role
Photographer
Accession Number
2018.26.4
Curator Approved

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dark scene with rows on wooden boxes on shelves and vase with foliage pattern and bottom, LLQ; squatting man wearing a light-colored kimono, with his fingers splayed, touching either side of his head, in URQ

Copyright © Hosoe Eikoh

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