Excellence Prize
A Child's Metaphysics
Short Animation
Artist : YAMAMURA Koji
(Japan)
A head full of figures, a zipped up mouth inside a zipped up mouth, a spooling face, two eyes supported by fish ―. In distorting children’s bodies, YAMAMURA skillfully captures their mode of life. This is a philosophical ‘YAMAMURA world’ that humorously and satirically depicts contemporary conditions surrounding children.

YAMAMURA Koji
Born in Nagoya, 1964. Mt Head received six Grand Prizes at animation film festivals including, Annecy, Zagreb, and Hiroshima, as well as being nominated for an Academy Award. Also Franz Kafka's A Country Doctor won seven Grand Prizes including Ottawa. He has received more than 50 international awards. He is sub-chairman of the Japan Animation Association (JAA) and a professor of the graduate school of Tokyo University of the Arts.
Thank you very much for selecting my work for this award. I enjoyed coming up with a lot of ideas for visual play while thinking about the recent state of children. I would be happy if this work attracted people’s attention on this occasion and many people enjoyed watching it.
The artist is now one of the best-known Japanese animation artists and his works have also received high acclaim in other countries. He is consistently and energetically produces outstanding works, several of which have been entered in this year’s Japan Media Arts Festival. All of them were equally appealing and brilliant. In particular, however, this unique animation presentation examines the world of children and the inside of children’s heads with philosophical humor. One child commuting between regular school and cram school always has numbers floating inside its head. The face of a child who is a bookworm turns into a book. Another child is literally trying to kick its feeling of oppression while shouting "Waaaaaaaa!" A child is forced to smile despite feeling sad, though the unhappy face remains. One mysterious child hides various faces, and another conceals sad tears on the inside. A child tries to fit into fixed frames. Another gets lost while looking at things and listening to others. We smile at those children but realize it is a satire of all human beings. This is an excellent piece of work characterized by the sharpness of both the artist’s gaze and presentation techniques.
What makes you create a work?
My impetus for becoming an animation artist was that I had seen a retrospective screening of Ishu PATEL’s films at the International Animation Festival Hiroshima. Since becoming an animation artist, my motivation for every work has been the feeling that “I want to create this.” Regarding A Child's Metaphysics, it was an illustration drew as a poster for a children’s film festival in France.
What tools do you use the most at present?
Paper, ink, pencils, pens, Macintosh (RETAS!Pro, Adobe Photoshop and Final Cut Pro).
What do you place greatest value on in your work?
To pursue possibilities of animation presentations. I aim to create works that will expand the thinking of the people who have viewed them.
What personal concept runs through your creative activities?
I have different themes for each work but I would venture to say it would be to become aware of my own self and the world.
When you create a work, in what way do you think of a presentation using technologies or media as a means to communicate?
I start with a theme to present and then technology is a tool to realize it, in my opinion. As for media, I am not so conscious of them when I create my works, but I need them to be able to present the image that I want to create to the utmost extent.
Could you name a person, a work, or an event that you have been most influenced by?
For animation, the works of Yuriy NORSHTEYN and Priit PÄRN. For literature, it is Jorge Luis BORGES.
What kind of work would you like to create in the future?
I would like to create a work that stimulates the scope of the unconscious in human beings and is able to make them feel true freedom.
What is the meaning or importance of creating for you?
A method of philosophical speculation.
![2008 [12th] Japan Media Arts Festival Award-winning Works 2008 [12th] Japan Media Arts Festival Award-winning Works](/english/festival/images/h1_jusyousakuhin-en2008.gif)







