Back from a few days away – happy to see some comment on this thread, particularly too as it challenged me to as why I thought this was `great work`.
I started my viewing with the Japan page, as this is familiar to me and where I start with my work. As a few noted, I too make a study of similar people in similar situations with my Polaroids. In establishing this type of observational work with my subjects in Japan, it was a conscious rebellion against the stuff that makes me want to toss my cookies;
yukata-clad girls using their
keitai,
maiko trawling for tourists in Kyoto, cosplay Goths in Harajuku,
shinkansen speeding past Fuji-san… You’ve all seen it 1000 times before, and it is not Japan. Though you see these regurgitated images constantly, and I see a stream of photographers and TV camera crews filming the same stuff over-and-over again, there is so much more, and so much more to life than mass consumable pap.
I imagine his results from France, Nederland, Belgium
et al to be the same; normal, with not a whiff of the Eiffel Tower, windmills, tulips, and such…
For every tulip, or speeding shinkansen, there are 1000 individuals sitting in their homes and shops going about their normal lives. This is the stuff that should not be forgotten, and this is the stuff that is the hardest to capture accurately with any scale to it. I try and take the normal, and while it does indeed look normal; to me it is special.
So, having undertaken similar work to the URL above, I know the barriers, I know the difficulties, and because of this, I can appreciate while the photographs all look just so normal, it is this that appeals to me. The photographer here has captured the utter normalness of these scenes, without intrusion, without false lighting, and in each photograph I look at, I see the people and imagine their lives.
I know this type of work is not appreciated widely, as I get comments on my work constantly about why the heck I bother to waste film on such mundane stuff, the people I stop in the street often tell me the same thing, and I have to explain to them the reason:
http://www.filmwasters.com/grabs/v/13/skorj/ More information than necessary perhaps, and I am not quite sure it makes too much sense either… Skj.