SHUNSAKU HAYASHI //

SHUNSAKU HAYASHI //

Shunsaku Hayashi is one of the most unique and original filmmakers among the already peculiar and distinctive creators in the field of auteur animated and experimental films. Primarily a painter, Shunsaku-san gradually specialised in bringing his painting masterpieces to life. All we see in his films is created in an analogue way, by him drawing on a canvass or paper. And that is precisely his authorial charm. In the digital world surrounding us, Shunsaku persists in hand-painting and/or hand-drawing each individual frame, which he then photographs with a digital camera, scans and edits in After Effects. He thereby manages to preserve the texture of hand-drawn characters in a digital format. 

When I was at Animafest in Zagreb I watched his debut feature Invisions (Monument) (2025), which he based on his memories of the time and space of his volunteer work after the destructive earthquake and the subsequent tsunami in Fukushima (the Great East Japan Earthquake of 11 March 2011). I was amazed by how excellently the sound, colours and abstract narrative work together. In his feature, he combined drawing, photos and videos to show fragments of the post-earthquake environment. 

Even though all Shinsaku’s stop-motion animated films are improvised (they are made without a script, storyboard and animatic), they are characterised by a special feel for rhythm and time. Focusing on the different temporalities between painting and the moving image, he creates paintings in which time has a linear progression and creates animation with those materials. The movement of time in the moving image is substituted in the painting by the physical movement of the viewer’s body, and at the same time, all the time within the moving image is stored within a single space in the painting.

In one of the rare interviews, Shunasaku explains that his obsession with animation is a consequence of his encounter with the films by the Czech surrealist Jan Švankmajer. Even though, as a young man at the time, he did not understand Švankmajer’s films, they aroused in him an overwhelming desire to animate the inanimate. Through studying painting, he came to the conclusion that his path in life is to seek a new artistic direction at the intersection of painting, experimental film and animation. Since then, he has taken immense pleasure in creating an intertwinement of various art forms within every drawn frame for his films.

Igor Prassel

Invisions (Monument)

Shunsaku Hayashi, Japan, 2025, DCP (shot on mini DV), colour, 74', no dialogue

Shunsaku Hayashi’s first feature film, Invisions, unfolds over less than a day, moving from sunrise in one place to sunrise in another on the same planet. The story weaves together memories of individuals spanning both the past and the future. Cracks that appear in one location ripple across other places and times. Through the lens of magic realism, the film intertwines these chains of cracks with the inner worlds of those observing them, striving to craft a modern mythological imagination.

The animation begins with an absurd scene: a sunrise viewed through a wire fence. As sunlight filters through the barrier, the sun appears fragmented, transforming from a singular entity into multiple forms. As the sequences progress, the point of view shifts between subjects, with each perspective rooted in a different place and time zone. These shifts are marked by changes in color and animation style. Each chapter connects to a symbolic landscape, event, or recurring motif. The memories carried within bodies drive their transformation into new entities. The story unfolds by linking these individual memories— etched in the body—with touches of violence and the traces left behind in the wake of oblivion.

Screening in the presence of the author.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Shunsaku Hayashi (1992) is a painter and filmmaker. He studied Fine Art at Goldsmiths, University of London, under a fellowship granted by the Agency for Cultural Affairs in Japan from 2012 to 2015. His first stop-motion animation, Remember (2015), won the Golden Horseman for Animated Film at the 28th Filmfest Dresden. In 2017, Interstitial won the Grand Jury Prize for Animated Short at the 23rd Slamdance Film Festival, and Railment received the Chris Frayne Award for Best Animated Film at the 55th Ann Arbor Film Festival. In 2019, Leaking Life was selected for the Generation 14plus section at the 69th Berlin International Film Festival. In 2020, Hayashi served as an award presenter for the Student Academy Awards. His short film Our Pain (2023) received the High Risk Award at the Fantoche International Animation Film Festival and the Jury Special Award at Animafest Zagreb.