Mayu Kanamori
Mayu Kanamori is an artist working mostly in photography, documentary photography, and still photography video art, often using photographic projection and story telling with emphasis on performance using interviews and narration.
Kanamori's earlier works deal with themes relating to subculture and minority groups, especially within Japan and Australia. Her later works deal with Australian and Japanese cross cultural and migrational issues, and her more recent works further these concerns by her attempt to spiritual connections with people and landscapes of both Australia and Japan.
Photography
In 1996 at Japan Foundation Sydney Gallery, Kanamori first exhibited her series of documentary photographs of Japanese subcultures, Unseen Faces of Japan: photographs taken during her previous thee years in Japan, whilst working for Australian publications, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age and The Good Weekend (Sydney Morning Herald). Whilst working as a freelance photographer and writer based in Sydney, Kanamori continues to document and exhibit photographs.Performance and photographic projection
Kanamori began creating her narrative works utilising audio interviews with The Heart of the Journey when she collaborated with ABC Radio National to produce a radio documentary about an Bardi-Jawi woman Lucy Dann from Broome, Western Australia, who was seeking to find her biological father Tamotsu Tsutsui. This radio feature programmed on Radio Eye received commendation in the 2000 United Nations Association of Australia Media Peace Awards in Promotions of Multicultural Issues. The Heart of the Journey was later produced in a performance context including projected photographs and live narration by the artist, and was presented by arts festivals throughout Austral-Asia.Chika: A Documentary Performance, a story about a Japanese tourist, Chika Honda, incarcerated in Australian prisons for a decade, combined sounds from Kanamori's radio documentary Chika, live narration, projected photographs, live original music and dance. The radio feature Chika was finalist for 2004 Walkley Awards.