Kayako’s Photography Exhibition
“Conversations in Early Spring”
Hanakotoba 花言葉 (Japanese flower language)
Spiritually Tulips symbolize perfect love, Reborn and new beginning.
Layers like Passion(red tulips) Cheer(yellow tulips) enthusiasm (orange tulips) often representing life’s cycles and spiritual purity.
As a Japanese photographer living in Washington State, I am drawn to the quiet dialogue between seasons. Each early spring, when daffodils and tulips rise from the damp earth of the Skagit Valley, I am reminded of renewal, tenderness, and the fleeting nature of beauty.
Here, spring arrives softly. Tulip fields stretch across the valley, their colors unfolding like cheerful conversation beneath a wide northern sky. Daffodils flicker in pale gold, blooming all at once to form a luminous carpet across the landscape. Their fragile brilliance lasts only briefly. Seeing them gathered in full bloom speaks to togetherness — how individual lives, like individual flowers, create fullness and meaning when experienced as a whole, even as the moment inevitably fades.
I returned to the Skagit Valley over three different years, each visit a gentle invitation to notice what had shifted: the light, the weather, the fields, and myself. Through these repeated journeys, spring revealed itself not as a single moment, but as an ongoing conversation between memory, place, and time.
Photographer: Kayako Sareen
Curator: Katsuko Takahashi
The location of an exhibition - 84 Yesler
