FotoFirst — Living Small: Photos of Tokyo’s Incredibly Tiny Hotel Rooms












Perhaps you have already heard about capsule hotels, a very unique type of facility quite common in Japan‘s biggest cities, which consists of modular small rooms slightly larger than the size of a single bed. The rooms are stacked in rows one above the other, and offer very basic services like wifi and maybe a TV.
Capsule hotels were designed to meet the needs of those businessmen in town just for one or a few nights looking for a cheaper solution than a full-fledged hotel.
Incredibly enough, a sort of second class version of capsule hotels also exists in Tokyo. The images in South Korean photographer Won Kim‘s new series Enclosed: Living Small show the guests of one such facility, which takes up a whole floor of an office building. The tiny rooms are located along the floor’s hallways and are separated by unfinished plywood only, they have no windows and a curtain for a door.
These accommodations are mainly used by young people traveling or in between things who need a temporary stay – but temporary can mean weeks while they look for a new job or save money to afford a better place. Won’s intention in creating this series was to examine how these spaces, as tiny and uncomfortable as they are, can reflect the personality of those who occupy them:
“Some of the interiors are spartan, perhaps occupied by people who are staying only for a short time. Others are full of possessions, often complete with hanging wardrobes and improvised bookshelves – even ‘decorated’. Of these, some are neat and orderly and others are chaotic, with personal items strewn everywhere. In each case, the sharply-defined space and its contents tell something about its occupant’s personality, and his or her ability to function in such a strange, enclosed environment”.
Keep looking...

FotoCal — Photography Awards, Grants and Calls for Entries Closing in November 2019

“They Live and Work and Breathe and Die Right on the Edge” — Portraits by Tracy Chandler

FotoFirst — Tourism, Romance and Identity Come Together in Farah Foudeh’s Series ‘Just Because I Don’t Cry Doesn’t Mean I Am Strong’

Roselena Ramistella’s Lyrical Photographs Capture the Communities Living in Rural Sicily

Tomoya Imamura’s Photos Are Filled with Symbols Referencing Hungary’s History

In These Staged Images, Rydel Cerezo Explores His Relationship with the Catholic Church

We Are the Ones Turning — Ana Zibelnik Reflects on the Ideas of Death and Time
