Gorilaspain Fashion and Art Magazine – Culture Independent Magazine

Manabu Koga’s Underwater Girls merges fashion, futurism and liquid fantasy

Manabu Koga’s Underwater Girls submerges models in dreamy aquatic worlds, blending ethereal movement with futuristic, mecha-inspired aesthetics. The result is a hypnotic fusion of fashion, art and sci-fi fantasy that reimagines how bodies and garments exist beyond gravity.

In the liquid silence of water, Manabu Koga found a universe where the rules of reality loosen their grip. The Japanese photographer transformed the pool into a stage, a refuge, and a visual laboratory. With his “Underwater Girls” series, he has crafted a singular world: girls suspended beneath the surface, ghost-mecha figures, and bodies shifting between flesh, dream, and metal.

Koga didn’t arrive at underwater photography through trend or aesthetic whim, but through creative accident. After filming submerged scenes for a film project in the early 2010s, he discovered that water didn’t just distort light — it reframed narrative. Down there, gestures slow down, the body learns a new language, and the tiniest movement becomes choreography. That was the point of no return: the photographer traded the studio for the depths.

But Koga refused the soft-focus sensuality or zen-like calm of traditional underwater imagery. He brought with him a lifelong obsession: mecha. Before photographing, he designed packaging for model kits and sci-fi worlds. That visual universe seeped into his work: futuristic suits, biomechanical extensions, accessories evoking armor or robotic creatures, skin appearing to converse with wires and metallic textures. In his images, the underwater girl is no mermaid or nymph — she is a body-machine mid-metamorphosis.

His creative process is profoundly collaborative. Koga works with a steady circle of models — a kind of underwater troupe — developing trust and a unique physical awareness beneath the surface. The result isn’t a photo shoot, but a shared ritual: breathe, submerge, release, let the water rewrite your body and your mind.

Koga’s imagery vibrates with a delicious paradox: stillness and tension, serenity and strangeness. The water softens edges, but the mecha aesthetic injects sharpness and futurism. His characters float in a temporal limbo: are they humans sunk into their own dream, or prototypes of an amphibious future?

In a world smothered by instant imagery, Koga offers the opposite: slow looking. His photographs invite you to hold your breath for a few seconds, feel the weight of water against skin, and let imagination rust and shimmer at once. To dive into his work isn’t merely to watch — it’s to learn a new way of breathing.

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