3 December 2024 to 31 January 2025
Hotel Indigo Tokyo Shibuya
This Must Be the Place
A Photography Exhibition
by Lisa Knight
Charity fundraising exhibition supporting cancer research
3 Dec 2024 to 31 Jan 2025
Shibrewya, Hotel Indigo Tokyo Shibuya
This collection is my love letter to Japan—a country that has transformed me over the past five years.
Through these images, I hope you’ll feel the pull of Japan’s spirit and feel inspired to explore deeper.
About the exhibition
💌 100% of proceeds from exhibition print sales, workshops, and event tickets, as well as 25% of online print sales during December and January, will be donated to Love Your Sister, an Australian charity dedicated to funding precision medicine for all cancer patients.
Events
Opening party and photo walk dates to be confirmed!
Hold tight for details!
💌 Explore the beauty and stories of Japan while also supporting a cause close to my heart.
Love Your Sister is Australia’s hardest-working cancer vanquishing charity, and since its inception in 2012 has raised nearly $20M for medical research. Founded by Gold Logie-winning actor and Victorian Australian of the Year 2018, Samuel Johnson OAM, Love Your Sister is a million-strong village of everyday Aussies committed to vanquishing cancer with hard science and the best new technologies.
Love Your Sister supports Precision Medicine for ALL cancer patients, whatever the cancer, regardless of location, age, income, or status. Love Your Sister strive for the right treatment for every cancer patient, first time, every time, and proudly pass on 100% of every donation received to scientific research.
Read more about their mission here.
The exhibition is located inside Shibrewya, a gorgeous cafe space within Hotel Indigo Tokyo Shibuya.
Sip on some delicious specialty coffee, enjoy some photography and savour the view over Shibuya.
About Lisa
I spent most of my adult life studying law and working my way up the corporate ladder. About ten years ago, after a fierce and brave battle, my beloved Aunty Julie died of cancer. Passionate, adventurous and full of life, her death was unfair. I needed to carry on her legacy for adventure.
I quit my stable finance job and, on a complete whim, decided to move to Tokyo with my husband. For so long I had felt a strange feeling that I was looking for something, but I didn’t know where I would find it. After arriving in Japan I knew somewhere, somehow, that this must be the place.
I also found that thing I had been searching for my whole life: photography.