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2024-09-05 ~ 2025-01-05
National Center of Photography and Images, Taipei Galleries 301-303
Exhibition Overview

Collection Unveiled: Taiwan in Photo Albums from the Japanese Colonial Period


During Japan’s fifty-year rule of Taiwan (1895-1945), the ruling and development processes were extensively documented through photography. These photographic images were compiled into numerous “Shashin cho,” which were essentially photo albums featuring actual photos pasted on paper or printed images. Some of them were accompanied by simple descriptive texts or background information. These photo albums, as products of the Japanese rule era, cover a diverse range of topics and content. However, their creation was inevitably influenced by the political reality of Taiwan under Japanese rule, reflecting the colonial discourses and exhibition intent of the ruling power, regardless of whether the photographers and publishers were public or private organizations. As a result, they demonstrate specifically curated and arranged “viewpoints of the authority,” making them instruments of propaganda for colonial and political achievements. On the other hand, the abundance of photographic images anthologized in these photo albums, as precious cultural assets, have become precious image archives of Taiwan’s historical, cultural, economic, and social developments, providing records and testimonies to Taiwan’s developmental journey.


In 2015, the Ministry of Culture launched the “Plan of Rescuing National Photographic Assets and Establishing a Center of Photography and Images” and has been systematically collecting and acquiring Taiwan-related photographic assets since 2016. Currently, the National Center for Photography and Images (NCPI) houses seventy-two photo albums from the Japanese Colonial Period. In addition to continuing the digitization of the photographic collection according to the collection schedule, the NCPI has collaborated with universities, research institutions, and cultural-historical workers since 2020 to conduct further research and study the photos in some of the albums while making efforts to analyze and interpret relevant photographic content. The results of this ongoing endeavor are now available as open online resources on the NCPI website to share with the public. 


Collections Unveiled: Taiwan in Photo Albums from the Japanese Colonial Period is an illuminating embodiment of the textual research, studies, and interpretations by several experts and scholars, namely, Chung Shu-Min, Shen Chia-San, Cheng Li-Ling, Hsu You-Hua, as well as Winston Chen (Wen-Sung) and his team. This exhibition, featuring more than 350 images selected from six themes across nine photo albums, comprises enlarged digital prints accompanied by detailed and compelling introductory guides accessible through QR codes, providing the audience with an expounding experience that includes image details and historical contexts. It is worth mentioning that the exhibition skillfully connects the people, events, time, and places depicted in these photo albums with the categorized photographic content. Through images, texts, and vivid introductions, the audience can gain insight into the social situations and everyday life in Taiwan under Japanese rule. This also includes the natural scenery, folk culture, and abundant resources of this period, as well as diverse aspects of colonial Taiwan, such as urban infrastructure, public health and endemic prevention, agricultural and hydraulic facilities, industrial development, and port and traffic constructions.


The Prince Regent Hirohito’s Visit to Taiwan—A Journey of Inspecting the Accomplishments in the Imperial Colony


Photo Album of Prince Regent Hirohito’s Visit to Taiwan comprises two volumes with 386 photographs documenting Prince Regent Hirohito’s twelve-day inspection journey in Taiwan from April 16 to 27, 1923. Prince Regent Hirohito arrived in Taiwan aboard the Japanese battleship “Kongō” and traveled on land by the “imperial train” specially prepared by the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office. Starting from Keelung in northern Taiwan, the Prince Regent then visited Taipei, Hsinchu, Taichung, Tainan, Kaohsiung, and Pingtung, and later crossed the sea to Penghu before returning to Taipei, which was the politico-economic center at the time. The visit aimed to inspect the accomplishments of the Japanese governance and the colony's construction while promulgating imperial power and enlightenment. In Japan, this journey is historically known as the “Taiwan Gyoukei” (the imperial visit to Taiwan).


The eighth Taiwan Governor-General, Den Kenjiro, was the key figure in facilitating this visit. In order to welcome the Prince Regent, the Japanese officials in Taiwan not only carefully deployed guards for tight security but also utilized massive manpower and resources to arrange the visit. The mobilization of the entire island, from the central and the local governments to the private sector, made the “Taiwan Gyoukei” a significant event island-wide a century ago. Meanwhile, to reinforce the propagandist campaign for its governance of and accomplishments in Taiwan, the Japanese colonial government arranged for photographers to document Prince Regent Hirohito’s visit at every stop, visually and thoroughly recording the entire process to display the results of its rule of Taiwan in terms of politics, economy, society, education, and culture. Various types of photos and circulation modes were used for the “Taiwan Gyoukei,” leaving multiple versions of photo albums. Photo Album of Prince Regent Hirohito’s Visit to Taiwan in the collection of the National Center for Photography and Images has become a vital historical material to study Japan’s politico-economic relations in colonial Taiwan and the journey of Prince Regent Hirohito in Taiwan. 


According to Photo Album of Prince Regent Hirohito’s Visit to Taiwan, the Prince Regent visited political and military organizations, attended formal ceremonies, and inspected important industries and production processes in Taiwan, including the camphor and sugar industries. Furthermore, he observed scenes and activities related to local customs, such as dragon boating and traditional duck-raising families. He also visited Japanese shrines and watched sumo wrestling, which was a gesture of promulgating Japan’s culture and tradition. The photo album also included images of massive crowds gathering to see the Prince Regent in places he visited. As archives, these photos evoke the historical reality and memories from a century ago.


The 1919 Cholera Pandemic in Taipei—Cholera Prevention and Control during Japanese Rule

In 1919, a cholera pandemic broke out in Taiwan, which became the origin of Overview of the 1919  Cholera Pandemic in Taipei. The Taipei Prefecture Hall under the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office, which was the pandemic prevention center at that time, compiled photographs taken during the prevention period into this photo album. It is now a precious archive documenting the administrative measures for public health and pandemic prevention during the period of Japanese rule.


The year of 1919 saw a global pandemic of cholera. As cases of cholera increased in China’s coastal regions, the Japanese colonial government soon became alert. However, in July, the ports in Penghu, Keelung, and Fengshan in Tainan Prefecture each reported one case. Subsequently, the pandemic started spreading via sea and land transportation systems in Taipei and Tainan. In northern Taiwan, hundreds of inspection officers (public health personnel) joined the prevention work, setting out from Taipei and then going to Keelung, Xizhi, Songshan, and Shilin to treat and prevent cholera. Despite their efforts, the pandemic resulted in an unprecedented death toll. From mid-August to early September, 62 Japanese and a staggering number of 1,296 Taiwanese patients were lost. Coping with the cholera pandemic, the Taipei Prefecture set up 345 checkpoints, 32 quarantine wards, and 21 shelters for healthy individuals. The other eight prefectures in northern Taiwan also lent a helping hand by sending manpower to assist with preventing the pandemic. 


This photo album shows the pandemic prevention measures implemented during the Japanese colonial period. These include maritime quarantine and inspection at seaports, specimen quarantine and inspection, public announcement, sanitation promotion, environmental sanitization, vaccine injection, quarantine, disinfection, lockdown, sheltering, and relocation. The album also contains images of downcast patients in quarantine and the burying of dead bodies. In fact, the actual situation of the pandemic might be even more tragic than what the photos could ever depict. In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, the photo album offers a cautionary comparison and historical lesson for contemporary people. 


Taiwan Shashin Tsuushin—A Guide to Southern Scenic Attractions


“Shashin tsuushin” is a form of journalism in Japan that mainly consists of photographs and texts. Taiwan Shashin Tsuushin is a photo album created based on this journalistic model and context. It contains 120 photos covering numerous topics such as scenic attractions, famous architecture, industrial facilities, unique flora and fauna, different terrains and topographies, and cultural customs throughout Taiwan. Each photo includes textual captions (i.e., titles, locations, descriptions). With both pictures and text, the photo album delivers a wide range of information about Taiwan. 


This photo album covers extensively Taiwan’s scenic attractions, special products, customs, and culture, ranging from historical sites from the period of Dutch rule, folk religious activities brought to Taiwan by the Han Chinese people in Qing dynasty, to traditional indigenous tribes. It also includes photos of modernized city streets and parks constructed during the period of Japanese rule, architectural landmarks embodying the ruling power, and government-encouraged industries, including agriculture, forestry, fishing, and salt industries. Moreover, the album contains the “Eight Views, Twelve Sceneries, and Two Special Sites” gathered through an open call and voting event launched by a newspaper in 1927 and finally selected by experts and government officials. It is especially worth mentioning that each photo in the album can be read independently. Among the various captions, some highlighted the beautiful landscape that was suitable for outings, whereas some gave a detailed account of the transportation and fees that required visitors’ attention. Some even ended with slogans promoting tourism, such as “a vista never to be missed” or “a must-visit destination.” 


Although the content of Taiwan Shashin Tsuushin is diverse and expansive, its arrangement is quite loose. It can be inferred that the images and text in this photo album were edited continually with a structure of news reports. A comparison to other photo albums from the 1930s reveals almost identical images and text or pictures of the same themes. So, it is likely that this album was published in the 1930s. This also indicates that these “sceneries” of Taiwan that appeared in different albums were repeatedly shaped by various types of media in the later period of Japanese rule to reinforce their “representativeness.” Thus, these images, whether intentionally or unintentionally, were imbued with the function and meaning of publicizing Taiwan as a colony to Japanese citizens and the effectiveness of colonial governance.






  • Images of the Imperial Rule

    Images of the Imperial Rule

    Images of the Imperial Rule

    The “Taiwan Gyoukei” was the imperial inspection of the colony of the highest standard. Therefore, the venues and places of the inspection inevitably conveyed the imperial gaze to uphold the imperial power, consolidate the colonial regime, and foreground the ruling power. The photographic images in this section are divided into four types: military facilities and strongholds highlighting the ruling power; public buildings such as prefectural halls and official organizations that symbolize political power; shrines manifesting the heaven-given imperial power and the emperor’s absolute rule and majesty; and massive crowds lining the streets to welcome the ruler. 

  • Images of the Imperial Rule

    Images of the Imperial Rule

    Images of the Imperial Rule

    The “Taiwan Gyoukei” was the imperial inspection of the colony of the highest standard. Therefore, the venues and places of the inspection inevitably conveyed the imperial gaze to uphold the imperial power, consolidate the colonial regime, and foreground the ruling power. The photographic images in this section are divided into four types: military facilities and strongholds highlighting the ruling power; public buildings such as prefectural halls and official organizations that symbolize political power; shrines manifesting the heaven-given imperial power and the emperor’s absolute rule and majesty; and massive crowds lining the streets to welcome the ruler. 

  • Transportation, Industries, and the Economy

    Transportation, Industries, and the Economy

    Transportation, Industries, and the Economy

    As the colonial government aimed to promulgate the effectiveness of its governance in Taiwan, it arranged the route of the imperial visit to pass the main business streets of important cities and chose the railway – one of the government’s accomplishments – for land transportation, thus showcasing the economic progression and prosperity, people’s livelihood, and social development. Meanwhile, to demonstrate the results of integrating Taiwan’s agriculture with commerce and the systematization of the colony’s industries, the industries inspected during the visit were the most successful and large-scale ones in Taiwan at the time, including the sugar, forestry, and salt industries, as well as the monopoly businesses.

  • Results Achieved through Education Policy

    Results Achieved through Education Policy

    Results Achieved through Education Policy

    The Japanese colonial government used education as a vital means to rule the colony. It allowed them to discipline people, control ideologies, expedite assimilation, and strengthen people’s identity with the regime. Schools thus became ideal tools when implementing the state’s colonial policy. This made various schools a focal point in Prince Regent Hirohito’s imperial visit to Taiwan. The Taiwan Governor-General’s Office arranged for the Prince Regent to visit “the best schools” in different fields in numerous destinations. These included the Taihoku Specialist Medical School, the Normal School, the Higher Commercial School, the Higher Agriculture and Forestry School, and various middle schools and girls’ high schools in Taiwan. In addition, the Prince Regent also watched the “Joint Sports Meet for Schools Island-wide” at the newly inaugurated Maruyama Stadium (now part of the Taipei Expo Park) in Taipei.

  • Local Customs and Cultural Landscape

    Local Customs and Cultural Landscape

    Local Customs and Cultural Landscape

    To help Prince Regent Hirohito understand Taiwan’s ethnic and cultural characteristics, which were vastly different from those of Japan, the compact schedule created by the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office included traditional Taiwanese folk and cultural activities that embodied local customs, as well as sceneries representative of Taiwan and the south, such as Han Chinese duck-raising families, traditional court music, celebratory lantern processions, dragon dances, General Hsieh and General Fan, Nanguan and Beiguan music, float parades, dragon boating, etc.

  • Administration of Pandemic Prevention Quarantine Office

    Administration of Pandemic Prevention Quarantine Office

    Administration of Pandemic Prevention Quarantine Office

    To counter the cholera pandemic in 1919, the Taipei Prefecture under the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office established a quarantine office responsible for pandemic inspection and prevention affairs. Since it was a temporary establishment and the police department was in charge of sanitation affairs, the quarantine office was placed within Taipei Prefecture’s police department.

  • Pandemic Prevention Measures Seaport Quarantine, Specimen Collection Quarantine, Sanitation Promotion, Environmental Cleaning, Vaccination

    Pandemic Prevention Measures Seaport Quarantine, Specimen Collection Quarantine, Sanitation Promotion, Environmental Cleaning, Vaccination

    Pandemic Prevention Measures Seaport Quarantine, Specimen Collection Quarantine, Sanitation Promotion, Environmental Cleaning, Vaccination

    When the cholera pandemic broke out in Taiwan in 1919, the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office immediately established a central agency and devised a comprehensive pandemic prevention plan to be implemented by seaport inspection stations and local governments. The plan stipulated that if any patient was discovered, preventative vaccination should be carried out as much as possible, with the patient’s movement route as the center. Vaccination was mandatory for travelers and sailors traveling between mainland Japan and Taiwan. When ships were to leave or enter ports, inspection personnel were required to examine if there were carriers of the disease or if the personnel onboard had vaccination certificates. If suspected cases were discovered in Taipei Prefecture or the neighboring, inspection personnel would deliver specimens to the health department of the Industrial Research Institute of Taiwan Governor-General’s Office or the bacteria test lab under the police department’s health division for bacteria culture testing. Furthermore, the government’s pandemic prevention measures were made known to the public via announcements, and people were asked to comply when cleaning was required. Also, the primary prevention measure was to promote and popularize vaccination to avoid the spread of cholera. Vaccination was mandatory for maritime personnel and those in close contact with patients and highly encouraged for others. 

  • Pandemic Control Measures Sanitization, Quarantine and Lockdown, Sheltering, and Relocation

    Pandemic Control Measures Sanitization, Quarantine and Lockdown, Sheltering, and Relocation

    Pandemic Control Measures Sanitization, Quarantine and Lockdown, Sheltering, and Relocation

    After a cholera pandemic broke out, inspection and sanitation personnel had to carefully handle cases of carriers or infected persons by following protocols. At the time, the protocols entailed moving patients/deceased persons in a specific way to avoid the further spread. Patients were to be relocated and quarantined in medical facilities designated for the pandemic, and temporary quarantine wards and shelters for healthy persons were built. Moreover, regarding contracted patients, houses where patients still lived should be isolated, blockaded, and locked down under 24-hour monitoring by designated personnel in shifts. In the event of a patient’s demise, it is imperative that the body should be thoroughly sealed and sanitized before it should be moved and buried at the designated cemetery. The authority also assigned personnel to inspect if any patients were concealed to prevent the pandemic from spreading.

  • Famous Landmarks and Ancient Sites Historic Monuments and Culture in Taiwan

    Famous Landmarks and Ancient Sites Historic Monuments and Culture in Taiwan

    Famous Landmarks and Ancient Sites Historic Monuments and Culture in Taiwan

    Throughout history, Taiwan underwent the Dutch, Ming-Zheng (Kingdom of Tungning), and Qing Dynasty rule, as well as the cultivation of different settlers. This, together with the traditions of the island’s indigenous peoples, created Taiwan’s diverse culture. During the Japanese colonial rule, these cultural genealogies were investigated and recorded through field research. This photo album includes a plethora of photos and reports of Taiwan’s landscapes and attractions. In terms of historical sites, it also contains many historic monuments in Taiwan from the past four centuries, such as the ruins of Fort Zeelandia and Fort Provintia (Chikan Tower) from the period of Dutch rule, Kaizan Temple (Koxinga Temple) from the Ming-Zheng period, as well as Longshan Temple, Taishan Temple, Dalongdong Baoan Temple, Lin Ben Yuan Family Mansion and Garden, Zuoying Old City, and Shuncheng Gate in Penghu’s Magong City from the period of Qing rule. 

  • Taiwan’s New Image Eight Views, Twelve Sceneries, and Two Special Sites

    Taiwan’s New Image Eight Views, Twelve Sceneries, and Two Special Sites

    Taiwan’s New Image Eight Views, Twelve Sceneries, and Two Special Sites

    In 1927, the Taiwan Nichi Nichi Shinpo (Taiwan Daily News) organized an open call and voting event for the “New Eight Views of Taiwan.” Apart from the objective of discovering Taiwan’s natural sceneries, the event embodied the authority’s intent to reshape the “Eight Views of Taiwan” from the period of Qing rule and replace the old ones with the new eight views that demonstrated the progression and civilization created through the management of the imperial colonial government. Such an endeavor was intended to reinvent the image of Taiwan and package it in a fresh way to promote tourism to Japanese, the international society, and the inhabitants of Taiwan. The Taiwan Governor-General’s Office actively utilized the communicative power of the authority and the media. With the propelling forces of advanced development of photography and printing technology, the images and descriptions of the “Eight Views” and the “Twelve Sceneries” of Taiwan frequently appeared in different types of media after the voting event of 1927 and became the iconic landscapes of Taiwan. 

  • Southern Spectacles Taiwan’s Exoticism in the Eyes of Japanese People

    Southern Spectacles Taiwan’s Exoticism in the Eyes of Japanese People

    Southern Spectacles Taiwan’s Exoticism in the Eyes of Japanese People

    During the time of Japanese rule, everyday scenes in Taiwan, such as riverbank laundry, duck-raising families, water buffaloes tilling fields, and even bedroom decorations, which were ordinary and natural in Taiwanese people’s daily life, presented cultural spectacles to the ruling Japanese. As a result, these intriguing sights and spectacles from Taiwan were portrayed through an exotic lens and gained immense popularity. Through the eyes of the other, the sceneries, customs, and everyday lifestyle of colonial Taiwan were depicted vividly using ample pictures and words, promoting Taiwan as a place worth visiting and “cannot be missed” from a commenting and guiding perspective. 

  • An Island of Abundance Local Products and Resources of Taiwan

    An Island of Abundance Local Products and Resources of Taiwan

    An Island of Abundance Local Products and Resources of Taiwan

    The focus of colonial governance was economic development, driven by the colony's abundant natural resources and products. From staple foods like rice and salt to cash crops such as sugar, fruit, tea, tong cao (Tetrapanax papyrifer), and orchids, and strategic resources like wood, camphor, and natural gas, all were valuable to the colonizers. Through significant investments of both public and private capital, the agricultural, forestry, and mineral industries benefited from new technologies and modernized factories, resulting in increased production and improved quality. Additionally, the improved infrastructure for irrigation and transportation allowed the profits from the colony to support the industrial development in mainland Japan. The colonial government also utilized various communication channels, including photographs and media coverage, to promote Taiwan as a land of abundance, displaying the success of colonial governance and flourishing industries.

  • Construction and Governance Achievements Building Cities and Public Facilities

    Construction and Governance Achievements Building Cities and Public Facilities

    Construction and Governance Achievements Building Cities and Public Facilities

    City and large-scale public construction projects and administrative agencies in the colony were key focal points for the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office to demonstrate its ruling power and governance competence. During Japanese rule, the colonial government implemented urban planning and city improvement projects to address issues such as narrow, winding streets and poor sanitation in traditional Taiwanese cities. In the early modern era, public facilities such as wide and straight roads, roundabouts, parks, and sewers were introduced in cities, alongside regulations for building houses. This essentially reinvented the public spaces and environment of cities in Taiwan. City streets and public spaces, and buildings representing the authority’s power, such as the Taiwan Governor-General’s Office, prefectural halls, and residences of central and local officials, were frequently featured in photo albums, postcards, and newspapers, conveying an inviting message and portraying Taiwan as a well-managed, progressive, and habitable place suitable for tourism.