.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
01
02
03
04
   
05
06
   

What Happened to Japan’s Farming Villages?
Shinzo Hanabusa

JAPAN

Shinzo Hanabusa is yet another artist to be featured in the upcoming festival of photography, Chobi Mela III. Hanabusa’s work on Japanese farmers provides a fascinating insight into the cost of ‘progress’, in a nation like Japan.

"The Second World War had adversely affected farming in Japan. I began producing a documentary on farming in 1962. The farmers were not getting a fair price for their milk. Then Japan started importing powder milk and things got really bad. In 1966 I heard rumours that the farmers in Akita were setting up a resistance movement. Following newspaper leads I went over to the locality. I was very upset, when I saw them throw the milk from the bridge as a sign of protest, at the fact that they had been reduced to this. But a big publication, Ewanami Shoten, printed the photograph and it helped turn things around a bit, so I felt good afterwards. I have since become known as ‘The Milk Photographer’. I hope my work helps farmers around the world get a fair price for their produce."

- Shinzo Hanabusa, Japan

 
Secretariat
Drik Picture Library Ltd.
House-58, Road-15A (new), Dhanmondi R/A, Dhaka - 1209, Bangladesh
Phone: (880 2) 9120125, 8123412, 8112954; Fax: (880 2) 9115044
Contact e-mail: chobimelabd@bd.drik.net


Webdesign: Shahjahan Siraj, Webmaster: Abdullah Al Rajib@drik

Copyrights © Chobimela, 2004
  .