FotoFirst — Yota Yoshida Roams the Streets Looking to Answer to Life’s Big Questions
















Premiere your work on Fotografia! Submit your new, unpublished project and get featured in FotoFirst.
For today’s Cameo we’re having 35 year-old Japanese photographer Yota Yoshida who shares with us his street photography series From Somewhere, to Elsewhere. See here for all the photographers who previously made a cameo in Fotografia.
Ciao Yota, how are you?
Hello and thank you, it’s a great pleasure for me. I really appreciate you giving me this opportunity.
What is photography for you?
Photography for me is écriture – it’s like writing. When I’m out shooting, I decide what to photograph, how to frame and compose the image, at what distance I should be from my subject, and most importantly, whether what I’m seeing is relevant to my feelings and experiences.
What is From Somewhere, to Elsewhere about?
I started working on From Somewhere, to Elsewhere only recently – it’s an ongoing project that will take a long time in the making. It’s a short little story, an urban quest for the answer to the questions that make up the title of a Gauguin’s painting: “Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?” The theme of my series is based on those universal, fundamental questions. The pictures also explore the changes in my consciousness and views on society, but I’ll let the photographs speak – if you look at them carefully, I believe you will understand what I’m trying to say.
Where can you be found online?
At my website, on Flickr, Tumblr and Twitter.
Keep looking...

Julia Morozova Wins the 3-Month Mentorship Offered by Wren Agency for #FotoRoomOPEN

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Open Calls Closing in August 2019

Jason Koxvold’s Photobook ‘Calle Tredici Martiri’ Was Inspired by His Grandfather’s World War II Diaries

Valentina Casalini Explores QT8, a Once Futuristic, Now Declining District in the North of Milan

Mark Griffiths Photographs the Wild Swimmers of the U.K.

FotoFirst — André Viking Documents the Healing Practices of South African Shamans

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Open Calls Closing in July 2019
