Japan in Colour - The Wonderful World of Albert KahnIn 1908, the French banker and philanthropist Albert Kahn launched one of the most 
ambitious projects in the history of photography. A pacifist, internationalist and 
utopian idealist, Kahn decided to use his private fortune to improve understanding 
between the nations of the world. To this end, he created what he called his Archive 
of the Planet. For the next two decades, he dispatched professional photographers to 
document the everyday lives of people in more than 50 countries all around the world. 
Kahn's wealth enabled him to supply his photographers with the most advanced camera 
technology available. They used the autochrome - the first user-friendly camera system 
capable of producing true-colour photographs.
Some of the most important of all the 72,000 colour images in Kahn's Archive were shot 
during three separate visits (in 1908, 1912 and 1926) to Japan. As an international 
financier, Kahn had established a network of contacts that included some of the most 
prominent members of Japan's business, banking and political elites. Consequently, 
Kahn's photographers were granted privileged access to places that would have 
otherwise been off limits - including some of the royal palaces, where they shot 
colour portraits of the princes and princesses from Japan's Imperial family. But some 
of their most fascinating images capture moments from the lives of ordinary Japanese 
people at work and play. This film showcases Kahn's treasury of films and autochromes 
of silk-farmers, Shinto monks, schoolchildren, porcelain merchants, Kabuki stars and 
geishas - pictures that were recorded at a time when this fascinating country was 
going through momentous changes.