A search for a non-existent image, a desire to create an image where there is none,“ leads to Rea Tajiri’s composition on recorded history and non-recorded memory. Framed by the haunting facts of the post-Pearl Harbor Japanese internment camps (which dislocated 120,000 Japanese Americans during World War II), Tajiri creates a version of her family’s story through interviews and historical detail, remembering a time that many people would rather forget. This video surveys the impact of images (real images, desired images made real, and unrealized dreams) on our lives, drawing from sources such as Hollywood, U.S. Dept. of Defense films, newsreels, memories of the living, and spirits of the dead. Relics of the camps, contrasted with human efforts to forget their existence, create a sense of taxonomic insistence that these camps were indeed real.
History and Memory
Rea Tajiri
1991 00:32:00 United StatesEnglishColorMono4:3Description
About Rea Tajiri
Rea Tajiri’s work plays with viewer expectations by employing strategies of media deconstruction to highlight the way images obtain meaning and how a viewer or reader supplies an image when one is lacking. Educated at CalArts and currently living in New York, Tajiri’s work draws on both American and Japanese images to explore issues of cultural representation, including material that is systematically obscured from these representations.