Sohei Nishino

Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Paris

Diorama Map Paris
© Sohei Nishino courtesy Michael Hoppen Contemporary/EMON PHOTO GALLERY

Sohei Nishino

Light jet print on Kodak colour paper

156x135cm

Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Rio de Janeiro, 2011 Sohei Nishino - Yama, 2010 Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Tokyo Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Tokyo (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map New York Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map New York (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Paris Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Paris (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Hong Kong Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Hong Kong (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Shanghai Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Shanghai (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Kyoto Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map Kyoto (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map i-Land Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map i-Land (detail) Sohei Nishino - Night Sohei Nishino - Night (detail) Sohei Nishino - Diorama Map London

The Diorama Map project to date comprises nine cities: Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, Shanghai, New York, Paris, Hong Kong and London; plus two fantastical colour cityscapes: I-Land and Night. Not geographically accurate, but stamped with the mark of a wanderer of the city, Sohei says of his images: 'Through the eyes of an outsider it will be the embodiment of how I remember the city, and a diary of the streets I walk'.

The creation of a Diorama Map involves an intense month of location searching on foot; Shooting, developing and printing thousands of photographs; Several months of cutting, pasting and arranging of the re-imagined city; and finally re-shooting the completed collage to create the final image in photographic form.

His first 're-experience' of a city was his home town of Osaka. In 2005, he wandered the city for a month, shot over 150 rolls of film, then spent a further 3 months piecing the images of streets and buildings together with scissors and glue to re-shape the city as he remembered it. The result was an aerial view, lacking the precision of google maps, yet presenting the key elements of the city in a form closer to his own memory and understanding.

His imagination and first source of inspiration stemmed from a university portfolio review of his classmates’ work. Sohei realised he was far more interested in the mass of photographs not selected, than in the minority that were chosen as being a true representation of personality and character rather than the refined, final edit of one photograph. In essence, more was better. This, together with the influence of the map maker Tadataka Ino and his love of walking led to the creation of the first Diorama Map.

'I am deeply committed and passionate about photography. I believe that photography is a way of looking at the self. Rather than thinking about what I can do with photography, I take pictures in a quest to see what I can become through photography.'

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