Mizuwari – Bruno Labarbère

How to tell a country and even more a city as fantasized as Tokyo, if not by rubbing shoulders with those who live there? In the wake of the masters of Japanese photography of Provok and French humanist photographers, Bruno Labarbère offers a wandering to deep blacks in the streets and alleys of the capital of Japan, according to his encounters and to the rhythm of the mizuwari.

By photographing street scenes and episodes of daily life, he captured the extraordinary banality and the ordinary singularity of a country that does not hesitate to mix genres and its alcohols with water. Thus, whiskey, sake, shochû and umeshu can all be served mizuwari. A typically Japanese method of prolonging the intoxication and diluting an often heavy daily life, by multiplying the nomikai, “drinking meetings” organized between colleagues from the same company, these emblematic salarymen of the Archipelago.

Himself an actor in these encounters in the bars of Golden Gai, Yurakusho and Shibuya, Bruno Labarbère approached the faces, he tracked the gazes, he observed these sleeping bodies until dawn, he let himself bewitched by these shadows with blurred contours. A true immersion in Japanese society, this work offers a snapshot of its most typical features. All lovers of Japan will recognize it, all the others, whether or not they are fascinated by this elusive culture, will be able to discover it, without make-up or pretense, to consume without moderation.

This crowdfunding campaign is now over. The book is available to order on Hemeria.com here

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The genesis of the book

“Mizuwari” is not the name of a whiskey and even less of a distillery. “Mizuwari” literally means “cut with water” (and a few ice cubes). It is a typically Japanese way of serving strong alcohols in order to attenuate the power, develop the aromas and accommodate them to the local palate.

Bruno Labarbère went to Japan for the first time in 2011, a bit by chance and a lot out of love. He is conquered by this country as strange as it is familiar. This taste for Tokyo is confirmed when he begins to work with Japanese engineers. Back in 2013, during a karaoke evening, he discovered the mizuwari service: immediate crush and taste revelation. Thus, the water calms the whiskey burn, reveals the subtleties of the sake and accentuates the plum of the umeshu! A journalist at heart and by trade, he needed to go deeper into the subject and, for his third trip in 2017, initially wanted to make a documentary on the country’s distilleries. But the Golden Week of 2017 and a few logistical mistakes decided otherwise.

The abortive non-reporting drifts into a wandering in the streets and alleys of Tokyo, to meet not those who produced local alcohols but those who consumed them, mizuwari or not. He gets lost in the vapors of Golden Gai and the nights of Shinjuku until the early morning. He gets lost in multiple spaces and temporalities where yesterday, today and tomorrow overlap and cohabit with a disconcerting naturalness. From these friendships as intense as they last only a few hours and several drinks (sometimes the reverse), he brings back images that he will only rediscover a few years later, when the Covid-19 closes the bars and prohibits all strolling nocturnal. A dive back into this Japan that he loves so much but where he has not returned since the start of the pandemic. An extreme Orient that he would like everyone to (re)discover and appropriate through this book which is also a travel diary.


A word from Bruno Labarbère

This book is not a book about whiskey. It is rather that of a half-awake stroll through the alleys of Tokyo, from bar to bar, meeting, generally fortuitously, lovers of mizuwari, highballs, umeshus and sake sours who, at nightfall, glass after glass, recall that if Japan may be the country of temperance, the local nudge knows how to reach an Olympic level while forgetting all moderation.

This book is also not a book about drunkenness, but rather about drunkennesses. The one that invades you when you are brutally immersed in an unknown culture. The one that obsesses you when you begin to discern its contours, habits, customs. The one that paralyzes you in the face of the language barrier. The one that makes you dizzy when you touch all its delicacy and folds. The one that makes you shiver, with excitement and impatience, when you realize that you will never fathom its mysteries. But this book, above all, is a eulogy to life, to the so orderly chaos and to the shadows of Tokyo.


The photographic work
The Mizuwari series 

— Winner of the Summilux.net Prize 2021

  • A SNAPSHOT OF TODAY’S JAPANESE SOCIETY
  • A PERSONAL ESCAPE, ECHOING THAT OF THE JAPANESE HE MEETED

 

This wandering is a pretext to capture the Japanese soul, to try to capture its most salient features. A snapshot photography, the work of Bruno Labarbère is primarily interested in faces, in beings.

Through the choice of daring framing, with a particular taste for the vagueness that suits suspended bodies so well, he himself seems to be part of the decor, revealing along his journey the backstage of a world that can escape us if we do not have the codes.

By endeavoring to testify to this social practice of alcohol consumption with a typically Japanese intensity, Bruno Labarbère succeeds in bringing out a whole sociological aspect of Japan. From his nocturnal wanderings, he has extracted a summary, both in substance and in form, of the Japanese soul when it frees itself from the social shackles and the weight of traditions. Bodies and minds escape outside in the vapors of the night at the same time as the effect of alcohol spreads inside.

Completed in 2020, this series offers a dense and intense journey — as are its blacks & whites — at the heart of an intimacy unveiled until the greyed out bodies collapse in the early morning on the asphalt.

The combination of highly contrasting images with a few hidden color images makes it possible to play on different temporalities, and expresses the tension between the two sides of the same face, of a people torn between secular traditions and the quest for freedom, in a country as free as rigid, perpetually in motion, both at the forefront of modernity and frozen in time.


The photographic approach: an ode to the night, a declaration of love to Japan

As an Asian by birth, Bruno Labarbère has always been amused by the Western view of the Far East.

However, it is with these same clichés, influenced both by Lost in translation (Sofia Coppola’s film released in 2003), Stupeurs et tremblements (Amélie Nothomb’s French novel published in 1999 and adapted to the cinema in 2003) and Paprika (Satoshi Kon’s film released in 2006) that he took his first steps in Japan in 2011 and that he was in turn confronted with the dichotomy between his initial preconceptions and what he discovered about Japanese life, and especially its nightlife.

He observes this tendency to “be alone together”, this melancholy which is drawn on the faces. Visually struck by what he sees during his various travels, constantly returning to explore the same places, he thinks he has a look that is absent from any photographic reference.

It is once his images are produced that he begins to show them and understands that his work is imbued with a very Japanese aesthetic, oscillating between the Showa era or the Heisei era, named after the aesthetic currents corresponding to the last two imperial eras.

His street photography expresses his desire for an approach free of time constraints. It is first of all about letting yourself be carried away by chance encounters in a world of the night that is less aggressive, more open, where the light, subdued, no longer bothers the short-sighted person that he is. Through his images, he shares his own sensory and emotional experiences and gives us the key to entering a universe that is banal for the Japanese but capable of bewitching our Western imaginations.

Photography allows him to keep track of moments stolen from time, when those they encounter. “When people no longer pay attention to what they are, they are much more intense,” Bruno Labarbère tells us.

Candid tribute to a common practice in Japan elevated to the rank of an institution, fascination for this alcoholic nightlife of a country where relations between men and women remain complex, where office life requires valves to free oneself from stress and injunctions of presence and performance, MIZUWARI shows a society that is far from being just a robotized society and which remains deeply human. Bruno Labarbère managed to blend in with the decor. We forget its presence. Without any zoom, he approaches his subjects, he is part of their world for one night. Without judgement, he gives us access to this world of salarymen which seems so far from ours.

Curator Laura Serani understood the nostalgia and poetry emanating from these images. It is not surprising that she chose Bruno Labarbère to be part of the Tremplins Jeunes Talents during the 2022 edition of the Deauville Planches Contact Festival.

Mizuwari plunges us into the bowels of emotions and sensations where place and time have no more meaning than a fleeting afterthought. Images of the subconscious all seem to surface from memories coming from an unknown land. The black ink of night, the sweet nostalgic rise of dawn and the irrationally rational days of Tokyo all fuse together to create a confusion of past, present and future existences.”
Diana Lui
[extract from the foreword]


The book: a unique piece!

A true object, the MIZUWARI book relies on cutting-edge manufacturing with a system of flaps that open to create a dialogue between the images in several ways and play with the surprise effect of new image associations that are created.

In a game of unveiling, new stories are told, showing all the complexity of this social game. The spiral gives this book its notebook dimension and frees itself from the codes of the classic photography book to make it an everyday object, a research notebook, a tool for personal reflection.

Like Tokyo city, this book is not set in stone and everyone can browse it at will, in the Western direction (from left to right), or Japanese (from right to left), each reader being able to discover a different story according to how he browse, unfold, fold, combine and explore.

 


Who is Bruno Labarbère?

Born in Thailand in 1987, living in France since 1992, Bruno Labarbère first intended a career as an automotive designer engineer. His life took a radical turn when he bought, by chance, his first camera in 2007. Realizing that applied mathematics were not made for him and that he could just as well find in photography this mixture of art and technicality that fascinates him, he left his university in Bordeaux and enrolled in a BTS in photography in Paris… but never finished his studies, preferring to wander the streets of Paris, his camera in hand. Thanks to chance encounters, often in bars, he was, from 2010 to 2020, in turn salesman in Leica Store, head of the photographic section of the site LesNumériques.com, journalist for the French magazines Réponses Photo then Monde de la Photo. A decade on the technical side of photography stopped radically by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The first confinement is an opportunity to take the time to finally sort out his photographic archives, where Parisian nights rub shoulders with the streets of Japan, where he went for the first time in 2011 and which he has since considered his third adopted country. Locked up like millions of others, the (re)discovery of these pictures gives him the impression of traveling in this nocturnal Tokyo whose doors will remain closed to foreigners for several years. From images to memories, a story is reconstructed. Bruno Labarbère then shows his work to photographers, booksellers, journalists, publishers, and assimilates each of the criticisms. While the shots were not premeditated, everyone sees a different artistic reference in them: Daido Moriyama for the spontaneity, William Klein for the scenes of life, Ed van der Elsken for the shadow play. Over the returns, the project evolves to become this book to be published by Hemeria editions.

Admitted in residence at the Festival Planches Contact 2022 as part of the Tremplin Jeunes Talents, he exhibited last fall at the Franciscaines museum in Deauville: a nocturnal stroll through the bars of the city…

 


Exhibitions and partners

Bruno Labarbère’s work is supported by the Echo 119 Gallery (which represents Araki Nobuyoshi in France).

Two new exhibitions of MIZUWARI are to come in 2023:
– Echo 119 Gallery (May)
– Leica Store Paris 8e (June).

For more information:
Meeting with Bruno Labarbère, two-part documentary directed by Vincent NVan
> https://youtu.be/WatiGNqYhuA
> https://youtu.be/NienlDrDfR0
Interview with Bruno Labarbère, directed by Emmanuel Pampuri
> https://youtu.be/Y4rWpK8qhKg

 

A presentation of the project is organized on Thursday February 16 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Écho 119 gallery >>


Prints available as rewards >>> choose from photo A to photo N

 


 

Considerazioni

€45

You will get the book Mizuwari at a preferential price (45€ instead of 55€), delivered to your home or by hand at the signature evening at the ÉCHO 119 gallery or at LEICA

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€85

You will get two books Mizuwari at a preferential price (85€ instead of 110€), delivered to your home or by hand at the signature evening at the ÉCHO 119 gallery or at LEICA

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€120

You will get one book Mizuwari + 1 print size 15x20 cm on Hahnemuhle paper, not signed, not numbered (photo A)

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€250

1 day in group with the photographer for a work session in Paris around the Leica cameras (10 contributors maximum per session, 2 sessions) - 1/2 day at the Leica Academy and 1/2 day shooting with Bruno Labarbère (lunch not included)

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€450

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You will get the book Mizuwari in its head edition (30 copies) + A signed and numbered print in 20x30 cm format, numbered from 1 to 10. Please indicate the choice of your photo during checkout between Photo B, C and D

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€850

14 Ricompense rimaste

You willget the book Mizuwari + A signed and numbered art print in 30x40cm Hahnemuhle Baryta 310g paper, Piezography inkjet print 5 photos to choose from, each numbered 1/3, 2/3, 3/3 Print by Guillaume Geneste / La chambre noire Delivered with certificates of authenticity Please indicate your choice of photo between E, F, G, H and I during checkout.

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€1200

8 Ricompense rimaste

You will get the book Mizuwari + A signed and numbered art print in 40x60cm Hahnemuhle Baryta 310g paper, Piezography inkjet print 5 photos to choose from, each numbered 1/2 & 2/2. Print by Guillaume Geneste / La chambre noire Delivered with certificates of authenticity Please indicate your choice of photo between J, K, L, M and N during checkout.

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€1800

5 Ricompense rimaste

You willget the book Mizuwari + A signed and numbered art print in 60x90cm Printed on Hahnemuhle Baryta 310g paper, Piezography inkjet print by Guillaume Geneste / La chambre noire Signed, numbered and delivered with a certificate of authenticity - delivery in France for free PHOTOS AVAILABLE : FROM PHOTO E TO PHOTO N EACH NUMBERED 1/1

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3500 €

Offer for private donators (companies, institutions, etc) Japanese alcohol tasting evening (Sake Wakase workshop) + 10 books offered during the evening (10 people for one evening) Contact us for more details and specific demand

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Anonymous 850,00  June 16, 2023
Gauthier Chovin 45,00  June 16, 2023
Anonymous 450,00  June 15, 2023
martine zimmermann 45,00  June 04, 2023
Stefano De Luigi 50,00  May 31, 2023
Vincent Tchou 45,00  May 24, 2023
Christophe DALEM 45,00  May 24, 2023
ARIANE DUBOIS 45,00  May 23, 2023
Damien Rietz 45,00  May 20, 2023
Edouard Bierry 45,00  May 06, 2023
Nicolas Bauclin 45,00  May 05, 2023
Philippe Hardy 45,00  May 04, 2023
Tanguy Mendrisse 45,00  May 04, 2023
Anonymous 70,00  May 03, 2023
Anonymous 100,00  May 01, 2023
Bernard Champeau 45,00  April 28, 2023
Armelle Le Maréchal 45,00  April 27, 2023
Robin Jafflin 45,00  April 24, 2023
Anonymous 25,00  April 24, 2023
Olivier SAINT-LAURANS 45,00  April 21, 2023
Céline CIROT 45,00  April 18, 2023
Anonymous 25,00  April 16, 2023
Dominique Peninon 262,00  April 16, 2023
Jean-Baptiste Peninon 262,00  April 16, 2023
Eric Bascoul 45,00  April 16, 2023
Davide Moretti 45,00  April 15, 2023
Michel Malecot 45,00  April 14, 2023
HOSY FRANCOIS 65,00  April 13, 2023
Miguel Moquillon 45,00  April 07, 2023
Diana Lui 120,00  April 07, 2023
Thomas FAIVRE-DUBOZ 45,00  April 06, 2023
Marc Nolin 65,00  April 06, 2023
Mirinda Mirin 45,00  April 05, 2023
Anonymous 45,00  April 05, 2023
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Anne-Charlotte Moulard 45,00  April 05, 2023
Anonymous 45,00  April 04, 2023
Anonymous 0,00  April 04, 2023
Adrien BERAUD 70,00  April 04, 2023
Bertrand CHARLOU 45,00  April 03, 2023
Florian Legagneux 120,00  April 01, 2023
Pierre Champion 45,00  March 29, 2023
thibaut godet 45,00  March 29, 2023
Julie Abahouni 120,00  March 29, 2023
Dominique Janvier 45,00  March 29, 2023
Michèle Labarbère 120,00  March 26, 2023
Anonymous 0,00  March 26, 2023
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Robert Rochette 65,00  March 25, 2023
Takashi Fukukawa 70,00  March 25, 2023
Aurelie Kahn 45,00  March 24, 2023
Nicolas MORVAN 45,00  March 24, 2023
Bertrand Bernager 45,00  March 23, 2023
Claude MARTIN 45,00  March 23, 2023
Hien Ngo 45,00  March 23, 2023
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Christelle Chatelain 45,00  March 23, 2023
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Benjamin Favier 45,00  March 20, 2023
Camille Binelli 45,00  March 20, 2023
Matthieu Baudeau 45,00  March 19, 2023
Michel MALÉCOT 120,00  March 19, 2023
Raphael ASSANTE 45,00  March 17, 2023
antoine milgram 45,00  March 17, 2023
Anthony Ngo 45,00  March 17, 2023
Estelle Kammerer 45,00  March 17, 2023
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Rolf Kammerer 45,00  March 14, 2023
Sandrine Lazcano ahumada 120,00  March 13, 2023
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Jessie MESTRE 45,00  March 10, 2023
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Cuong Nguyen 45,00  March 09, 2023
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Olivier Léger 45,00  March 08, 2023
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Jean-Clement Guisiano 45,00  March 08, 2023
vareecke sylvain 45,00  March 08, 2023
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Pierre CROCE 45,00  March 07, 2023
Victor Pirès 45,00  March 07, 2023
Francois Berland 45,00  March 06, 2023
Damien ROUE 45,00  March 06, 2023
Julie Rezeau 135,00  March 05, 2023
Margaux Beaughon 45,00  March 05, 2023
Marc Mitrani 45,00  March 04, 2023
Cédric Roux 45,00  March 04, 2023
renan peron 45,00  March 04, 2023
Jean-Francois LE MOUEL 45,00  March 04, 2023
Guillaume Stutin 45,00  March 04, 2023
Victor d'Allant 45,00  March 03, 2023
Christophe DALEM 45,00  March 03, 2023
Camille Binelli 20,00  March 03, 2023
Stanislas Augris 45,00  March 02, 2023
Emile Garçon 25,00  March 02, 2023
Etienne Franck 45,00  March 01, 2023
Vincent Goumont 45,00  March 01, 2023
Nicolas Datiche 45,00  March 01, 2023
Guillaume Etievent 45,00  February 28, 2023
FABRICE DEKONINCK 45,00  February 28, 2023
Chloe Liban 45,00  February 28, 2023
Paul Napoleoni 45,00  February 27, 2023
VuThéara Kham 45,00  February 27, 2023
Morgan Renard 45,00  February 26, 2023
anne-laure maison 45,00  February 26, 2023
Franck Mée 45,00  February 26, 2023
Ciro Battiloro 60,00  February 26, 2023
Hugo Perrin 120,00  February 25, 2023
Thomas Hammoudi 45,00  February 25, 2023
Maarten Moerman 57,00  February 24, 2023
Hanna Salhab 45,00  February 24, 2023
Damien DIJOUX 45,00  February 22, 2023
Tony Zenere 45,00  February 21, 2023
Timothee Feillu 45,00  February 21, 2023
Laurent Bouchard 45,00  February 20, 2023
Lise Guillon 10,00  February 20, 2023
Vinciane Jacquet 45,00  February 18, 2023
Thomas Esnee 45,00  February 18, 2023
Vincent Bihler 45,00  February 17, 2023
Marie Abeille 99,00  February 17, 2023
Guy CHARTIER 45,00  February 16, 2023
Anonymous 1.200,00  February 15, 2023
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Rachel Bourse 45,00  February 13, 2023
Philippe BLAYO 45,00  February 13, 2023
Bertrand Garnier 85,00  February 13, 2023
Alice Bouvet--Garnier 45,00  February 13, 2023
Jonathan ANKOU 120,00  February 12, 2023
Luc Pham-Vigier 45,00  February 12, 2023
Antoine Zabajewski 45,00  February 10, 2023
Oriane Touffet 60,00  February 10, 2023
Clemence Courdavault 45,00  February 10, 2023
Patricia Kammerer 45,00  February 10, 2023
Estelle KAMMERER 1,00  February 10, 2023
Camille Dellerie 45,00  February 09, 2023

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