Butoh histories: Seminal and forgotten figures of 1950&1960s Japan

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Fem Poem
  • filmghosts60tiesjapan
    58:24
audio
16:52 мин.
An exploratory cultural and theoretical history of mermaids
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54:19 мин.
Invisible People: an exploratory, experimental film on Butoh
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1 ч. 40:06 мин.
Stephen Barber on Zoo Hotel Delirium
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1 ч. 25:25 мин.
Butoh, Film, Archives, Memories
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1 ч. 01 сек.
Imagination und Bewegung in Butoh
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58:03 мин.
Tatsumi Hijikata: Entstehungsgeschichte des Butoh
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1 ч. 11:52 мин.
Vom Datenkapitalismus zum Tech-Faschismus
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1 ч. 00 сек.
Chinas grüne Wende- WIE MACHT CHINA KLIMAPOLITIK?
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1 ч. 04 сек.
Minako Seki: about life, dance and Butoh

In this episode, Romina Achatz speaks with writer Stephen Barber, author of Films Ghost: Tatsumi Hijikata and the Transmutation of 1960s Japan, about seminal and forgotten figures who shaped the Japanese avant-garde of the 1960s. The conversation focuses especially on filmmakers and the remarkable collaborations between Butoh dancers, photographers, writers, philosophers, and choreographers surrounding Tatsumi Hijikata and Kazuo Ohno.

Drawing on his personal encounters, Stephen Barber reflects on meeting many of these extraordinary artists while they were still alive. All of them have since passed away, making his memories a rare first-hand testimony to a generation that profoundly transformed postwar Japanese culture.

The episode explores figures including Akiko Motofuji, Hironobu Oikawa, Eikoh Hosoe, Donald Richie, Takahiko Iimura, and Nobuo Ikemiya, as well as key works such as Rose-Coloured Dance, Anma the Masseur, Hiroshi Nakamura’s Super 8 film Revolt of the Body, Donald Richie’s Sacrifice and War Games, and Eikoh Hosoe’s Navel and A-Bombs. The conversation also revisits the Osaka Expo film Birth, filmed on the volcanic landscape of Mount Io in Hokkaido.

The episode concludes with a conversation about the importance of archives in preserving the history of Butoh, as Stephen Barber asks Romina Achatz about her own experience visiting the extraordinary private archive and dancestudio of Nobuo Ikemiya during her recent research in Japan.

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