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Mao Ishikawa: ROGUE, presented at Alison Bradley Projects from April 16 to June 6, 2026, brings the work of the Okinawan photographer to a United States audience in her first solo exhibition in the country. Gathering more than 30 vintage prints spanning three decades, the exhibition offers a focused look at a practice shaped by proximity, trust, and an unflinching engagement with lived experience.
Ishikawa’s photographs emerge from a deeply personal approach that rejects distance between photographer and subject. Her early series
Red Flower (Akabanaa), produced in the years following Okinawa’s reversion to Japan in 1972, captures the social environments surrounding U.S. military bases. Rather than observing from the outside, Ishikawa immersed herself in these communities, working alongside women employed in bars and documenting their relationships with African American servicemen. The resulting images convey a sense of immediacy and shared presence, where intimacy and complexity replace simplified narratives of occupation.
This relational method continues in
Life in Philly, created during her time in Philadelphia. There, Ishikawa photographs the everyday lives of people connected to her earlier experiences in Okinawa, tracing bonds that extend across geography. Scenes of domestic life, gatherings, and quiet moments reveal a continuity of connection shaped by migration and memory. In
A Port Town Elegy, her attention returns to Okinawa, focusing on laborers and marginal communities in Naha. These photographs highlight both the precarity of their conditions and the resilience found within shared spaces.
Later works, including
My Family, shift inward. Following significant medical procedures, Ishikawa turns the camera on herself, producing self-portraits that maintain the same directness present in her earlier work. The body becomes both subject and site, confronting vulnerability without mediation. Across all series, her images resist categorization, moving between documentation and personal narrative while remaining grounded in long-term relationships.
Presented alongside her inclusion in the Whitney Biennial,
ROGUE underscores Ishikawa’s enduring relevance. Her work offers a perspective rooted in Okinawa’s complex geopolitical reality, while speaking more broadly to themes of identity, power, and human connection that continue to resonate across borders.
Image:
Mao Ishikawa, Red Flower (Akabanaa), 1975-77 © Motohiro Takeda