This exhibition presents visual material from a volunteer-led project in Japan to salvage and conserve historic photograph collections after two museums and a library in Rikuzentakata, Iwate Prefecture, were destroyed in the 2011 tsunami. Once the flood waters had receded, and the recovery operation was under way, the damaged collections were transported to Tokyo, and subsequently to Yokohama, where specialist curators developed procedures for preserving as much of the rare material as possible, some of it badly affected by exposure to silt and salt water. A team of more than sixty volunteers continues to work on the Rikuzentakata Disaster Document Digitalization Project (RD3 Project), drying, cleaning, digitizing and documenting over 65,000 photographs, many of which record life in the Tohoku region over the last century.
This exhibition comes out of a visit which was made by Philip Grover, Curator of this Exhibition, to Japan last year. Since then he has been working with curators in Japan and the director of the RD3 Project, who has made the project materials available for exhibition at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Mr Keishi Mitsui will also be presenting a seminar paper on the RD3 Project at the Nissan Institute of Japanese Studies, University of Oxford. Full details are available via the exhibition webpage http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/rd3.html
See Pitt Rivers Museum website for opening hours.
Exhibition curated by Philip Grover. Organised in collaboration with the Rikuzentakata Disaster Document Digitalization Project.
Website of the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford
BBC Oxford’s gallery of photographs http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-24537133