(b Omuta, 3 Nov 1931). Japanese photographer. He studied art history at Waseda University, Tokyo (1954-9), and a one-man exhibition of his work was held at the Matsushima Gallery in 1956. His theme of man and the land gained him attention as a rising photographer. It was an intensely personal record of the life of the people of Hashima (popularly known as 'Warship Island'), an island in Nagasaki Prefecture created artificially for coal mining, and of the people of the village of Kurokami, Kagoshima Prefecture, suffering the fall-out of volcanic ash from Sakurajima. The works were later published as Ningen no tochi ('Man and his land'). From 1959 to 1962 he was one of the members of the Vivo group, which included EIKOH HOSOE and Shomei Tomatsu. He signed his prints 'Ikko'.
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