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Masumi Hayashi
Photographer
1945–2006
Masumi Hayashi's photographic collages
work in much the same way as human memory. Fragments of information
are pieced together to form a recognizable whole. Shooting panoramic
landscapes and interiors in dozens of small adjacent increments
and then arranging the sequential fragments in grids, she collages
bits and pieces of her subjects back together as altered vistas.
While the form of the original is apparent, it has been changed
by the hand of the artist, just as memories are altered by the peculiarities
of our psyches.

Banteay
Srei Temple (10th century CE), Angkor Wat, Cambodia 2000panoramic
photo collage27" x 56"
The influence of David Hockney and
other artists who have used composite photography is clearly evident,
but Hayashi makes the style her own by shooting many variations
of each subject. This idea of the series is one of the essential
tenets of her art. Her subjects have ranged from beautiful gardens
to polluted U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Superfund sites,
and from urban views to abandoned prisons. It typically takes several
years to complete each series, and she often works on several at
once. Images of people are rare in these images, which share an
overriding sense of abandonment.

25th
Street Station, Cleveland, Ohio 1993
panoramic photo collage26" x 65"
Sometimes the alteration of the original
vista may be as simple as positioning the photographs in such a
way that their edges don't quite meet, resulting in a vague sense
of unease. But it can be considerably more complex. Some of her
works involve a mirroring or doubling of the image, achieved by
placing two prints opposite each other in the collage. Others create
a 360-degree panoramic view of the subject. Such a viewpoint is
impossible for any human to achieve without turning, and is especially
effective in the prison shots. It increases the sense of oppression,
because there's nowhere to hide.
The work for which Hayashi was best
known at the time she received the Cleveland Art Prize focused on
"American Concentration Camps," the desolate grounds in isolated
areas of Utah, Montana, Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado,
and Idaho where Japanese Americans were interned during World War
II. She was born in the Gila River Relocation Camp in Arizona in
1945, not long before the end of the war. Her family was released
from confinement and moved to the Watts district of Los Angeles
soon after she was born, but she was in the camp long enough to
absorb the sense of powerlessness felt by her mother during their
displacement. That, and the artist's determination to bring buried
collective memories to the surface, made the camps the perfect subject
for her.

Public
Square, Cleveland, Ohio 1994panoramic
photo collage30" x 60"
The project involved a lot of research,
and Hayashi became as much historian as artist. Because many Japanese
Americans are reluctant to remember the camps, her direct connection
to them was invaluable in gaining their trust. When exhibited at
locations as diverse as the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art
in 1997 or the Reed Whipple Art Gallery in Las Vegas in 1998, photo
collages of each of the ten camps were accompanied by family snapshots
from the era taken of each other by survivors, and by tape recordings
of their recollections of life in confinement. A professor of photography
in the Cleveland State University art department, Hayashi was able
to take enough time off from teaching to visit all ten camps.
With landscape and memory as her parameters,
Masumi Hayashi creates dreamlike spaces from the solid foundations
of the physical world.
- Frank
Green
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