Description:
By photographing street scenes and episodes of everyday life, he has captured the extraordinary banality and ordinary singularity of a country that does not hesitate to mix genres and its alcohols with water. Whisky, sake, shochû and umeshu can all be served as mizuwari. This is a typically Japanese way of prolonging the intoxication and diluting the often burdensome daily routine, by increasing the number of nomikai, 'drinking get-togethers' organised between colleagues from the same company, the emblematic salarymen of the Archipelago.
As a participant in these meetings in the bars of Golden Gai, Yurakusho and Shibuya, Bruno Labarbère got up close to the faces, tracked down the glances, observed the sleeping bodies until the early hours of the morning, and let himself be bewitched by the blurred shadows. A true immersion in Japanese society, this work offers a snapshot of its most typical features. All lovers of Japan will recognise it, and all others, whether or not they are fascinated by this elusive culture, will be able to discover it, unvarnished and unpretentious, to be consumed without moderation.
Review Quotes: "Mizuwari plunges us into the bowels of emotions and sensations where place and time have no more meaning than a fleeting afterthought. Images of the subconscious all seem to surface from memories coming from an unknown land. The black ink of night, the sweet nostalgic rise of dawn and the irrationally rational days of Tokyo all fuse together to create a confusion of past, present and future existences. Bruno's fractal images of Tokyo's multi-layered worlds seem to suck us into a whirlpool of fragile kimonos and high heels, urban waste, sandwiched subway bodies, umbrellas floating among gravity-defying architecture, 1 dancing children, slurping noodles, lovers' embrace, smoking cigarettes, a towering sea turtle and Godzilla, naked manga girls, luminous faces glued to mobile screens ..." -- Diana LUI