Fuminori Sato’s Artist Book “Rokkoku” now sold out!

The order receipt of Fuminori Sato Artist Book “Rokkoku” has been closed as the number of editions has been reached!
We are pleased to announce that we are now  accepting pre-orders for Fuminori Sato’s artist book “Rokkoku”.  This artist book is going to be launched upon the occasion of Sato’s exhibition “Rokkoku”  9/1-9/10

Fuminori Sato participated in the Photobook Masterclass workshop held in 2018 to work on this project.

The Great East Japan Earthquake struck on March 11, 2011. A powerful earthquake and Tsunami blasted the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power plant of Tokyo Electric Power Company, resulting in a catastrophic accident. Dangerous amounts of radioactive materials released from the nuclear plant were carried on by winds and contaminated a mountainous settlement 20 kilometers away. The peaceful life blessed by abundant nature the villagers enjoyed was gone. All residents were forced to evacuate, and their village, Tsushima designated as uninhabitable and difficult-to-return area.

National Route 6 runs north and south along the coast of Fukushima Prefecture. In the winter of 2013, he was taken to the Tsushima district by a villager who was on his return home. Radioactive materials without odor of color were eroding this village. The inside of his house was twisted into miserable chaos caused by wild animals that broke through the side entrance. Remnants of his family life remained as it was moments before the evacuation. There were drawing of child’s Chinese Character “laugh” and a certificate of commendation hung on the wall. The certificate was given to his late father, who was interned in Ukraine for three years after World War II. Generations of family history is engraved on the house.

On the other side of the village, the door of the old folks home was marked with a tag stating, “our family member was killed in action”.  Also, a monument to the pioneers stood in the village center, in remembrance of those returned from former Manchuria to resettle in Tsushima. The returnees, emerging from detention, starvation and witnessing the death of their comrades, cleared the wasteland to found a haven in Tsushima,  a  place to create home and safety to raise their families. The villagers of Tsushima are refugees from an unnamed, invisible war – nuclear catastrophe. They were once unwitting victims of a war driven by national policy and are now the mercy of a national policy promoting nuclear power plants. Their past and present suffering is intricately woven together by decades of unexamined history. 

After 10 years of working on ‘Rokkoku’, this project finally made into the artist book and now ready to get  pre-order prior to its official launch on Sato’s exhibition in September 2023.


Rokkoku

Rokkoku is the common name for National Route6. The strange sensations I experienced in Tsushima resonated in my head. One day, when checking on the disasters area including Tsushima I had visited on a map, I noted that many of them are connected by a single road from Tokyo – National Route 6, connecting Tokyo and Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture.  I sat out to drive the length of “Rokkoku” to trace the trajectory of open wound of past and present that led towards Tsushima. The people I countered along the road are chapters of a unexamined history of Japan: Koreans suffering from the Great Kanto Earthquake, a girl who lost five family members in the bombing of Tokyo, a preparatory student selected by the special attack corps “Kamikaze”, a 14 years old boy who went to the volunteer Pioneer Youth Army to Manchuria and Mongolia, a refugee applicant detained for years, and an elementary school student who wrote a slogan for promoting nuclear power, a rancher caring for cattle contaminated with radioactive materials, a man who resists against the construction of big seawalls. “Rokkoku” is not just road. It is a collective guide post to carve our past, replicate our present, and question our future.


Fuminori Sato’s artist book “Rokkoku”

163 pages
Language: English
Weight: 445g
Size: 200mm x 200 mm x 23mm
Editions:66 NOW ALL SOLD OUT!
Each edition will be signed and give the edition number by the artist
Photo / Text / design / Print / Binding: Fuminori Sato

The initial  concept, editing and art direction of this book were developed in Photobook Masterclass workshop in 2018, led by Teun van der Haijden and Sandra van der Doelen.
Concept, storyline, art direction: Yumi Goto, Reminders Photography Stronghold.


Your order will be completed once we have confirmation of the transfer of payment.
We will ship the book once the production is completed.
Please allow 1 to 2 months for the production period after the book launch in September 2023. Thank you in advance for your understanding.
Please check this list before placing your order, as your shipment will be delayed if the country you are shipping to is on the list.
International mail service availability chart

In case Paypal doesn’t work well or, any inquiries about a photobook, and for orders of two or more books, please email us at photobook@reminders-project.org.

Shipping costs vary depending on the shipping location due to postal conditions. Please be sure to check your paypal options before checking out.

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku

©︎Fuminori Sato / Rokkoku