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Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataTry to imagine the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/20-million-tonnes-of-japanese-debris-spotted-en-route-to-hawaii/">20 million tons of debris and waste</a> jettisoned into the Pacific as a result of the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/japan-tsunami/">tsunami in Japan</a> last year. It's near impossible to fathom, but artist <a href="http://inhabitat.com/madison-square-tree-huts-tadashi-kawamata/" target="_blank">Tadashi Kawamata</a> did his best to envision the flotsam and jetsam as it makes its way towards hawaii. His latest installation, Under The Water at the <a href="http://www.kamelmennour.com/media/5224/tadashi-kawamata-under-the-water.html" target="_blank">Kamel Mennour Gallery</a> in Paris, attempts to show visitors what it would be like to be submerged below this layer of wreckage.1
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataAs the 20 million tons of wreckage slowly make their way to Hawaii from Japan, Tadashi Kawamata created Under the Water to envision what it must be like to be beneath all the debris.2
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataHis site specific installation makes use of old doors and reclaimed wood bits and parts.3
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataAs you enter the <a href="http://www.kamelmennour.com/media/5224/tadashi-kawamata-under-the-water.html" target="_blank">Kamel Mennour</a> gallery through the courtyard, you enter underneath a canopy of old wood doors and furniture floating about 12 feet about your head.4
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataThe sunlight filters through the gaps and the cracks between the debris, but largely the feeling is of being trapped.5
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataThe installation spills through the doors and into the gallery rooms where it knocks against the ceiling.6
Under the Water-Tadashi KawamataThe installation is a reminder of the devastation of the natural disaster and its effects in Japan as well as its effects on the rest of the world.7







