Between light and silence

Five photographs from the bamboo forests along the Shikoku Pilgrimage route in Japan.

Rhythmic lines in cool, natural tones – ICM Photography: Between Light and Silence by Marion Rockstroh-Kruft

Zwischen Licht und Stille zeigt fünf Momente im Bambuswald

Bamboo grows quickly. It bends without breaking. It rustles when the wind blows through it. And it stands still in a way that almost nothing else can.

These five photographs were taken on the Shikoku pilgrimage route in Japan, amidst bamboo forests that muffle every sound and slow every breath. It is not a place one simply passes through. Rather, it is a place that holds you.

The pictures do not show what bamboo is. They show what it evokes: the feeling of stepping out of the rhythm of everyday life for a moment, and into something older.
Schwerer. Stiller.

All five works are colour photographs created using the ICM technique directly in the camera. The images do not follow a chapter structure. They form a narrative that moves from the first moment of pause to the moment of letting go.

Connection in the moment

Die Linien atmen.
That is the first impression that sticks. Not bamboo as a plant, not the forest as a place, but movement as something you find yourself doing without even meaning to.
The photograph was taken in a moment of complete presence, when body, wind and light were briefly in sync.
If you stop here, you’re already in.

Bars of time

Overlapping lines that refuse to align. The image carries a sense of unease, but an unease that does not press upon the viewer.
More like one that asks: When was the last time you stopped keeping track of time?
In the bamboo forest, this eludes us. No two moments are alike; none can be held onto.
The picture isn't either.

Sound lines

Bamboo rustles when the wind blows through it. Not loudly. Rhythmically.
Like something that has always been there, just waiting to be heard.
This photograph does not merely convey that sound; it becomes the sound itself: vertical lines that repeat, vary and soothe. An inner metronome attuned to nothing but the moment.

Light strips

Light refracts differently in the bamboo forest. It doesn’t shine through openly, but in streaks, through gaps that are always in different places.
The composition captures this interplay of light and shadow exactly as one experiences it: not as an image, but as a state of being.
For a moment, you know where you are. Then the light shifts again.

Whispers in the wind

The final image is the faintest. Soft streaks that are barely distinguishable from the air through which they move.
It came about in a particularly quiet stretch of the pilgrimage route, where the rustling of the leaves was the only answer to a question that had not even been asked.
Sometimes that's enough.

Available Works

All five photographs are available as limited original prints.

Each work exists in an edition of 1/1 plus a maximum of 2 Artist Editions. Minimum size 80 cm long edge, printed on museum-quality materials by WhiteWall.

Prices from €1690; bespoke advice and custom-made items available on request.

About the Technique

All the images in this series were created using Intentional Camera Movement (ICM):
The camera is deliberately moved during the exposure, so that light and form overlap in the photograph.

ND filters were used as an analogue solution, allowing for longer exposure times in daylight without the need for digital manipulation.

There is no post-processing of the movement. What you see was captured at the moment the shot was taken.

Bamboo doesn't need a lot of light to grow. It finds it anyway.

You never forget bamboo forests.
These pictures either.