Restricted Residence

  • Author: Giles Price
  • Sewn booklet with embossed buckram cover, 80 pages, 42 photos printed with a custom experimental 5 colour profile
  • 197mm x 300mm (Portrait)
  • Published & designed by Loose Joints, January 2020, LJ130
  • Language: Essay by Fred Pearce in English & Japanese
  • ISBN: 978-1-912719-13-6
  • Price: £25 plus shipping
  • Available to buy HERE

Restricted Residence by Giles Price examines the relocation of Japanese citizens to Namie and Iitate, two towns exposed to extreme radioactivity following the catastrophic leak at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant after the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Despite the inconclusive scientific consensus of the long-term effects of radiation in the area, in 2017 the Japanese government began to reduce the exclusion zones and heavily financially incentivise residents to return to what were formerly bustling towns, with nearly 20,000 living and working there. Now, the area is eerily empty, with just a few hundred people brave enough to return. With the reactor still unrepaired and uninhabitable radiation hotspots scattered across the landscape, some believe these areas will not be safe for 50 years or longer.

Restricted Residence employs thermal technology often used in medicine and industrial surveying, to render the everyday landscapes of Namie and Iitate surreal and inverted. With an accompanying essay by environmental writer Fred Pearce, Restricted Residence attempts to illustrate the hidden stresses on those affected by the nuclear disaster, while raising questions about the broader impact of manmade catastrophes upon our fragile environment.

RR_BL_0100
1 of 20
RR_BL_0101
2 of 20
RR_BL_0102
3 of 20
RR_BL_0103
4 of 20
5 of 20
RR_BL_0104
6 of 20
RR_BL_0105
7 of 20
RR_BL_0106
8 of 20
RR_BL_0107
9 of 20
RR_BL_0108
10 of 20
RR_BL_0109
11 of 20
RR_BL_0110
12 of 20
RR_BL_0111
13 of 20
RR_BL_0112
14 of 20
RR_BL_0113
15 of 20
RR_BL_0114
16 of 20
RR_BL_0115
17 of 20
RR_BL_0116
18 of 20
RR_BL_0117
19 of 20
RR_BL_0118
20 of 20