Tides & Moons: Herring Capital
12:37 minute multi-media installation, 2022
watercolour on paper and digital animation, porcelain, wood automaton, mixed media puppetry and archive materials from Nikkei National Museum and Cultural Centre
Tides & Moons: Herring Capital is a new animated art installation that shares memories and stories from Japanese Canadian fishing and boat building families who populated Nanaimo shorelines before World War II.
In the early 1920’s Japanese Canadian fishers lived and worked in Nanaimo at Hammond Bay (also known as Kujira Bay), Departure Bay, Shack Island (a way station for salmon and coho fishers traveling north), and Saysutshun. While Nanaimo had been known as a coal town for half a century, it also had 43 Japanese herring salteries. Due to the unexplainable abundance of this fish during a short window of time, and a demand for salted herring as an important export to Asia, Nanaimo became known as a herring capital.
Employing memory work, archival research, and oral histories, Tides & Moons: Herring Capital brings accounts of the past together with fantastical worlds to encourage new understandings. Animation, miniature sets, and storytelling props reimagine the complex relationships between salt, shorelines, and marginalized labour.
Animation Assistance and Composition, Puppet Assistance: Cherry Wen Wen Lu
Editor: Candelario Andrade
Sound Designer: Antoine Bédard
Voice Performer: Maiko Yamamoto
Taiko Drummers: Sawagi Taiko
Research Assistant: Jacob Willcott
Ceramic support: Julia Chirka
Carpenter: Minoru Yamamoto
Photo Credit: Sean Fenzl, courtesy of Nanaimo Art Gallery
Special thanks to the following individuals: Eiko Eby, Mas Fukawa, Tami Hirasawa, Frances Nakagawa, 7 Potatoes/ Nana-Imo, Bill Merilees, Jim Sawada, Jesse Birch, Shane Phillipson and Nanaimo Art Gallery, Linda Reid and Lisa Uyeda of the National Nikkei Museum and Cultural Centre.
Tides & Moons: Herring Capital was produced with the financial assistance from the British Columbia Arts Council as a solo exhibition at Nanaimo Art Gallery.