Chieko Shiraishi’s (b.1968) SHIMAKAGE is literally translated as ‘Island Shadow’ and this work brings together varying images taken from Japan’s surrounding islands and coastal areas. These images are an old retouching technique known as ‘zōkin-gake’ which was previously popular amongst amateur photographers in Japan during the 1920s and 30s. As a result, the images beautifully evoke a faded memory, the landscapes appear and disappear within the image from the photographers own memory, standing as faint silhouettes against the backdrop of an obscured memory.

Chieko Shiraishi
Born in Yokosuka City, Shiraishi began her career as a photographer in the late 1990s, and has exhibited at Gallery Kaido and Gallery Tosei. In recent years, she has also held a solo exhibition at Galerie Echo 119 in Paris. Shiraishi is known for her work using a technique called “Zokin-gake (rag wiping)” which became popular among amateur photographers in the 1920s and 1930s in Japan. She received the Jury Prize at the Benrido’s Hariban Award and her books include “Cactus and Tails”(Toseisha), “SHIMAKAGE’’(Seikyuusha), and “SHIKAWATARI” (Seikyuusha)’.