
Blast (#0608)
<p>Writing recently in the Japanese photography journal IMA, writer Dan Abbe called Naoya Hatakeyama “one of the most cerebral Japanese photographers working today.” <em>Blast</em> is from his first project, which addressed limestone quarries around Japan, capturing in photography and video detonation and other excavation procedures that permit the extraction of limestone. Further projects have dealt with coal waste in France and the network of service tunnels in Tokyo—manifestations of a destructive human systematization of the natural landscape.</p> <p>This explosive image makes literal the impact of human behavior on the natural world. Hatakeyama began the Blast series in 1995 as an extension of an earlier project documenting limestone quarries and processing factories across Japan. The raw stuff of the built environment, limestone is the main ingredient in cement as well as Japan’s most plentiful mineral resource. As Hatakeyama describes it, “the quarries and the cities are like negative and positive images of a single photograph.” As in this photograph, detonating dynamite to extract limestone works like the shutter release of a camera, the moment of capture.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1995
- Medium
- Chromogenic print
- Dimensions
- 150 × 99.5 cm (59 1/16 × 39 3/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Naoya Hatakeyama
Artist

Photography
Naoya Hatakeyama is a Japanese photographer working primarily in black and white and color film. His practice centers on landscape transformation, industrial architecture, and the material traces of postwar Japan's rapid development. Working across series-based projects that span decades, he documents quarries, dams, construction sites, and urban erosion with a systematic, formally precise approach. His investigations of extraction and infrastructure reveal the geological and human costs embedded in Japan's postwar growth.
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Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Naoya Hatakeyama
- Year
- 1995
- Medium
- Chromogenic print
- Dimensions
- 150 × 99.5 cm (59 1/16 × 39 3/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1995-108237
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified
