Last weekend, I went to an exhibition of the art of Kazuo Oga in Tokyo. Oga drew the backgrounds for most of Hayao Miyazaki's animated movies beginning with My Neighbor Totoro. His are the images of the Japanese countryside in high summer with green rice fields, great trees, clouds piled up in the blue sky (from Totoro); a decaying shrine in the shadow of an enormous tree, its rusty tin roof dappled with sunlight (Totoro); a distant green landscape of hills and fields and farm houses, and in the foreground, the sun throwing the crisp shadow of a tree onto a mountain highway flanked by a white guardrail (Only Yesterday); a sun-bleached suburban road (Only Yesterday); a decaying farmhouse with sunflowers towering over the overgrown yard (Pom Poko).
Why do Oga's images stir the heart? Perhaps because he has really looked at something in a way we cannot or never bother to do, and so, being given new eyes by the artist, we thrill to feel, yes, that is how it is. Miraculously life, elusive and beyond control, has been captured and nailed to the page.
Stepping out of the museum into the old town neighborhood around it, when I looked at the road--a bicycle parked, a yellow plastic crate discarded on the sidewalk, the crisp new houses and behind, a run-down older one--I saw it as frozen and beautiful as a picture by Oga. And later back at home, if I paid a little attention to the leaves on the trees and the clouds in the sky, they took on some of the hyper-reality of his pictures.
For a little while at least, I gratefully borrow the eyes of Kazuo Oga.
The exhibition runs until September 30.
--Julian
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