Truth is stranger than fiction

Shin Noguchi

March 5, 2021

The Japanese artist Shin Noguchi captures reality as he sees it – in its most everyday, most colourful and most beautiful moments. He wants people to understand that these extraordinary moments can happen anywhere and at any time, and that they are sometimes more beautiful and full of human touch, than carefully choreographed movies.
LFI:They say life writes the best stories…
Shin Noguchi: I think you're right; because there are as many lives as there are people, and there is no theme or page limit to the unpredictable stories that continue to be written.

Where do you find your ‘stories’?
In the contact between my life and the lives of others. That is why I never proceed on a project with a theme. The theme only becomes visible after I put aside the ‘reason’ for clicking the shutter, and simply continue taking pictures for a certain period of time.

Do you find your motifs by chance?
I just listen to the voice of our society. People's lives are full of humanity – sometimes very sad, sometimes with unreasonable situations. The subjects tell me the meaning and value of life. To take a picture is to affirm the existence of people – the existence of human karma – and it's also an opportunity to affirm my own existence and accept it as it is.

To what extent is your photography linked to your home country, Japan?
Most of the pictures were taken in Japan, especially in Kamakura and Tokyo, where I divide my time. Kamakura is a very old-fashioned town, with a lot of old temples, the beautiful sea and mountains; as well, off course, as old people, children, and so many good and kind people. In Tokyo there are lots of people and cars; it’s the busiest city in Japan. I always find it easy to move freely between the modern and classical perspectives of this mixed environment.

How important to you is humour, the humorous angle, in your contemplation of the world?
Of course, I also think that capturing those extraordinary elements is important to attract the reader to the medium of photography; but my past experience, travelling to America and other Asian countries and listening to people talk about their everyday lives, has given me a bird's eye view of national identity. And this has led me to treat the constant/immutable elements, rather than the captivating elements, with particular respect.
Katja Hübner
ALL IMAGES ON THIS PAGE: © Shin Noguchi
EQUIPMENT: Leica M-P analogue and Leica M9-P with Summicron 35 f/2 Asph

LFI 2.2021+-

Find out more about Noguchi’s work in LFI Magazine 2/2021. More

Shin Noguchi+-

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© Shin Noguchi

Shin Noguchi was born in Shinjuku, Tokyo, in 1976. He focusses on Japanese culture, capturing its complexity in discrete, poetic and enigmatic pictures. Solo exhibitions have taken him to Russia, France and China, among other places. His work has been presented in The Guardian and The Independent on a number of occasions, and he has had assignments published in Die Zeit and Libération. His book, In Color in Japan, was published in 2020. More

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Truth is stranger than fiction

Shin Noguchi