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The Arts Intel Report

A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler

Akihiko Okamura: The Memories of Others

Akihiko Okamura, Street Street Memorial on Lecky Road, Derry, 1971.

Meeting House Square, Temple Bar, Dublin, D02 X406, Ireland

When Akihiko Okamura saw Ireland for the first time, in 1968, he likened the country to “a large cold black lump of soil.” Okamura, who had made a name for himself as a war photographer in Vietnam, soon found Ireland to be a haven. He relocated his family to Dublin and spent the next 16 years shooting everyday life on the Emerald Isle. Those photographs inevitably took in the Troubles, the violent ethno-nationalist conflict that destabilized Northern Ireland from 1968 to 1998. Okamura captures the surreal nature of the conflict: well-dressed women in kitten heels walking past burnt-out buildings; British soldiers in riot gear standing on the well-manicured lawn of a Derry estate; two little girls with purses approaching a makeshift shrine for a killed civilian. Stark, unsettling, poetic. —Paulina Prosnitz

Photo: © Estate of Akihiko Okamura