In
the wake of the 1941 Japanese attack of Pearl Harbor the United
States Government established Japanese Internment Camps and required
the relocation of all people of Japanese decent living on the Pacific
Coast. On February 19, 1942 President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued
Executive Order 9066, which provided the guidelines and rational the
subsequent internment of roughly one hundred and twenty thousand
Japanese-Americans. In the far reaching deserts of the West rough
military–like internment camps were constructed using military
barracks organized into rows and blocks. For an undetermined amount
of time these camps were to become the homes, businesses, school and
church for most of the Japanese-Americans on the West Coast of the
United States during World War II. Though their circumstances may
have been bleak and many if not most were harshly treated the stories
they share and the art work created provides evidence for the
resiliency that any group of people can choose to have when placed
under difficult conditions. This essay will examine the visual
aspects of a traditional Japanese garden created in the Manzanar Camp
located in central California and compare this garden with an acrylic
on canvas painting by Roger Shimomura from 1978 as a later response
to internment camp experience to show the importance of personal
memory and the role of cultural traditions in the historical
reconstruction of Japanese Internment Camp period.
In her book Visual
Account of Loss, author Jane Dusselier examines
the art made within the American-Japanese internment camps and the
culture, and their trials, they represent. The author presents the
American’s (of Japanese descent) as honest, respectable and
hardworking people who were wrongly interred but still managed to
make the best of the what they had. From this book figure
20 shows a monochrome photograph of
modest yet traditionally arranged Japanese rock garden; similar
gardens were common place throughout the ten internment camps. The
interned gardener, though photographed, is undocumented by the
photographer Dorothea Lange. Evidence for the location of the garden,
Japanese internment camp, is provided by the tar paper clad
military barracks stretching the whole width of the picture plane.
The walls of the barracks show the exposed evenly spaced vertical
wooden strips that hold up the long horizontal sheets of tar paper.
Though unintentional on the part of the United States Military who
constructed these barracks, this interplay between the vertical
wooden strips and horizontal bands of black tar paper is visually
reminiscent of the wooden lattice framework with translucent white
paper panels of the Japanese shoji screen. The rocks and desert
plant life is arranged in a pyramidal composition with a large Y
shaped tree stump at it apex. The remainder of the composition
consists of ten to fifteen large round and angular boulders with some
in smaller clusters and some on their own. Intermingled in the
boulders are a handful of desert vegetation and gnarled dry branches.
In contrast to the rough edges of the dry shrubbery and rough rocks
stands a pond of glassy water that provides a mirrored foundation for
the overall composition. In the memory of a young Nisei fisherman,
Mas Tanibata remembers his first views of the
Manzanar Camp a “miserable place”
however in time camp artists changed the landscape with such
traditional Japanese gardening techniques, adapted to the dry desert
climate that Tanibata would later say “these gardens made the camp
beautiful.”1
The
memory of the internment camp experience that this photographed
gardener or Mas Tanibata lived is far different than that of artist
Roger Shimomura. Though Shimomura was interned as a toddler
with the rest of his family the memories he embeds into his art are
supported by the written histories of his grandmother.
Roger
Shimomura's Minidoka, No.
1 (Notification)
from 1978 depicts a traditional patriarchal Japanese, in this case
Japanese-American, family as they receive the notification from the
United States Governments ordering them to forsake their belongings
and be transported to relocation camps. A wide range of emotions are
presented in the forms of the family members. The fleshy limbs of an
innocent toddle, Shimomura himself, cling to the billowing folds of
his mothers salmon and lilac colored kimono. The shocked mother's
loose limp body, while hidden in clothing, is evident by her bent
knees and upward arching arms held up by her two female, similarly
curvilinear, companions. In contrast to the downtrodden women the
rounded forms of the men, particularly the two foremost, present
emotions of both anger and the sturdiness of a family patriarch. The
largest figure in this acrylic on canvas painting is an
elderly
Japanese man, who's aged eyes are deeply focused of a large white
paper scroll. The wrinkles in his round face are constructed from
thin black lines, to create a wavy aged brow, crowfeet eyes and low
sagging jowls. These simple black line details not only help in the
patriarchal narrative but also harken back to the traditional art of
Japanese wood block printing. Behind the wrinkled face of the
grandfather stands a smooth faced mature male, possibly Shimomura's
father, his shoulders are angled and his right arm shoots to the sky
it fury over the notification. Other characters in the painting,
such as a mature man looking fore-longingly at the iconic Mount Fuji
in the distance or the woman on a simple geometric wooden patio while
another peeks out from a shoji-like glass sliding door, instill the
concept of the family unit and this lives displaced as a result of
the War Relocation Act. Much on the constructed space in this
painting is made up of grid-works, the yellow and brown tatami floor
mats and the wooden patio balustrade are not unlike the tar paper
background in the image of the Mazanar
Garden. This
historical aesthetic is made even more evident in later paintings by
Shimomura as the tar-papered barracks actually take the form of a
shoji screen such an
Enemy
Alien #2
from 2006 providing further evidence of the revived interest of later
generations of Japanese-Americans toward
the
internment camps through the process of art. In the essay
Internment
and Identity in Japanese American Art by
Kristine
Kuramitsu the author explains that though Shimomura had no direct
memories of his time in camp the process of interpreting his
grandmothers dairies into acrylic painting helped him understand his
own history.2
In
comparing these two mutually exclusive works it is important to
consider the time gap between the creation of each. While one depicts
the interned Japanese making the best of life though surround by the
conditions of the bleak camp and the other depicts a time just before
the creation of the camps but created long after their closing both
attempt to reconcile the memory of the tragic period.3
This idea of the links and gaps between history and memory is again
seen in Mine Okubo's Citizen
13660, a compilation of sketches drawn during the artists time in
camp and then later captioned with her memories of this time.
Like Shimomura, Okubo's ink-and-pen drawings use humor and graphic
narration to smoothly integrate the larger themes that surround the
interment camps.4
The
visual aspects of the
documentary style photograph of a traditional
Japanese garden
and Shimomura's
Minidoka,
No. 1 (Notification)
both demonstrate the importance of personal memory and the role of
cultural traditions in the historical reconstruction of Japanese
Internment Camp period.
1Jane
Dusselier (2008), “Visual Account of Loss,” pp. 1-13; “Remaking
Inside Places,” pp. 14-50; “Re-territorializing Outside Spaces,”
pp. 51-88
2Kristine
Kuramitsu (1995), “Internment and Identity in Japanese American
Art,” pp. 619-658
3Marita
Sturken (1997), “Absent Images of Memory: Remembering and
Reenacting the Japanese Internment,” pp. 687-707
4Xiaojing
Zhou (2007), “Spatial Construction of the ‘Enemy Race:’ MinĂ©
Okubo’s Visual Strategies in Citizen 13660,” pp. 51-73