The Japanese photographer who shrink-wraps entire families -- and their homes
Having
a family portrait taken by Haruhiko Kawaguchi comes with one unusual
condition: That he wrap your entire house in plastic and then
vacuum-seal you into an airtight bag.
From there, the Tokyo-based photographer has just seconds to capture the images he needs before setting his breathless subjects free.
The striking pictures, which Kawaguchi describes
as a "memorial photo for the family," form part of his ongoing series
"Flesh Love," an almost two-decade-long mission to explore human
intimacy by shrink-wrapping people in plastic.
"When
I started the series, I asked some of my closest friends to test how
long they could hold their breath for, and found it was about 15
seconds," Kawaguchi said via video call from Okinawa, Japan. "So, I
decided to set a '10-second rule' whereby I open the bag after 10
seconds, regardless of whether (I have taken the photo) or not."
Beginning
with intimate images of lovers trapped inside sealable bags, which were
once used to store futons, his photos have since grown in scale. The
latest installation of his series, titled "Flesh Love All," sees the
photographer encasing couples or families and the places most important
to them -- usually their homes, complete with trees, cars and motorbikes
-- in custom-made plastic sheets.
Going by the name Photographer Hal, a reference to the talking computer in Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey,"
Kawaguchi said his photos are primarily about love. And while his focus
has shifted from the sexual to the familial kind, his goal remains the
same: to depict human connection in its many forms.
"(The
newer photos) contain a message of connection with the outside world
and express love for everything equally," he said, adding: "We pack
everything in the background to represent the social connection that the
subjects have to the outside world, not just to themselves."
It
can take two weeks to create the custom wraps and set up a single
image, while the final photo shoot requires the help of around seven
people. An assistant is always ready to open the bags -- or cut them
open, in case of an emergency -- if the photographer is unable to do so.
He also keeps a portable oxygen tank to hand, as well as a spray to
keep subjects cool during hot summer photo shoots.
Kawaguchi
admitted that some people "feel claustrophobic" when looking at his
photos. And he is all too aware of how suffocating it feels to be
enclosed inside one of the airtight bags -- because he has tried it out
himself.
"When
I was in the bag, I felt that my life and death was completely
controlled by others," he said. "I could actually feel how my subjects
entrust their lives to me."
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