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Ikkō Narahara

 
Art Encyclopedia: Ikko Narahara

(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'.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



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Photography Encyclopedia: Ikko Narahara
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Narahara, Ikko (b. 1931), Japanese photographer. His career began during his graduate studies with a one-man show, Human Land (1956), about the man-made industrial island of Gunkanjima. The critical response led him to become a freelance professional. With Shomei Tomatsu, Eikoh Hosoe, and others he participated in the Eyes of Ten exhibition (1957), and co-founded the VIVO agency in 1959. He spent 1962-5 in Paris and travelling in Europe, publishing the resulting photos in Where Time Has Stopped (1967). On his return to Japan, he focused on the arts of Japan (Japanesque-Zen, 1970). Where Time Has Vanished (1975) documents four years travelling the USA from his base in New York, where he was included in the MoMA exhibition New Japanese Photography in 1974. He photographs with a critical eye and a strong personal aesthetic, has significantly influenced younger photographers, and has received important awards.

— Osamu Hiraki

Bibliography

  • Innovations in Japanese Photography in the 1960s (1991)
Wikipedia: Ikkō Narahara
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Ikkō Narahara (奈良原一高 Narahara Ikkō?, b. 1931, sometimes "Ikko Narahara" or simply "Ikko") is a Japanese photographer. Born in Fukuoka, Narahara studied law at Chuo University (graduating in 1954) and, influenced by statues of Buddha at Nara, art history at the graduate school of Waseda University (from which he received an MA in 1959).

He had his first solo exhibition, Ningen no tochi (Human land), at the Matsushima Gallery (Ginza) in 1956. In this Narahara showed Kurokamimura, a village on Sakurajima. The exhibition brought instant renown. In his second exhibition, "Domains", at the Fuji Photo Salon in 1958, he showed a Trappist monastery in Tobetsu (Hokkaidō), and a women's prison in Wakayama.

In the meantime, Narahara had shown his works in the first (1957) of three exhibitions titled The Eyes of Ten; exhibited in all three, and went on to co-found the short-lived Vivo collective.

In 1962-5 he stayed in Paris, and after a time in Tokyo, from 1970-74 in New York.

Narahara's work often depicts isolated communities and extreme conditions. He makes much use of wide angle lenses, even hemispherical-coverage ("circular") fisheye lenses.

In 1967 Narahara won the Photographer of the Year Award from the Japan Photo Critics Association. He has won numerous other prizes.

From 1999 to 2005, Narahara was a professor at the Graduate School of Kyushu Sangyo University (Fukuoka).

Contents

Works by Narahara

Booklength collections

  • Yōroppa: teishi shita jikan (ヨーロッパ・静止した時間, Where time has stopped). Kajima, 1967.
  • Supēn: Idai naru gogo (スペーン・偉大なる午後) España gran tarde. Kyūryūdō, 1969.
  • Japanesuku (ジャパネスク, Japanesque). Tokyo: Mainichi Shinbun-sha, 1970.
  • Ōkoku (王国) / Man and his land. Tokyo: Chūōkoronsha, 1971.
  • Shōmetsu shita jikan (消滅した時間) / Where time has vanished. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun-sha, 1975.
  • Ōkoku: Chinmoku no sono, kabe no naka (王国:沈黙の園・壁の中). Tokyo: Asahi Sonorama, 1978.
  • Chikakute haruka na tabi (近くて遥かな旅). Tokyo: Shūeisha, 1979.
  • Hikari no kairō: San Maruko (光の回廊:サン・マルコ, Arcade of light: Piazza San Marco). Tokyo: Unac, 1981.
  • Shashin no jikan (写真の時間). Tokyo: Kōsakusha, 1981. With Seigow Matsuoka (松岡正剛).
  • Narahara Ikkō (奈良原一高, Ikkō Narahara). Shōwa shashin zenshigoto 9. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbun-sha, 1983.
  • Venetsia no yoru (ヴェネツィアの夜) / Venice: Nightscapes. Tokyo: Iwanami, 1985. ISBN 4-00-008027-X. Most of the text is in Japanese only, but the captions and an essay by Narahara are in English as well as Japanese.
  • Shōzō no fūkei (肖像の風景). Tokyo: Shinchōsha, 1985. ISBN 4-10-357501-8.
  • Ningen no tochi (人間の土地), Human land. Tokyo: Libroport, 1987.
  • Hoshi no kioku (星の記憶, The memory of stars). Tokyo: Parco, 1987.
  • Venetsia no hikari (ヴェネツィアの光) / Venetian Light. Tokyo: Ryūkō Tsūshin, 1985. ISBN 4-947551-93-3.
  • Burōdowei (ブロードウェイ) / Broadway. Tokyo: Creo, 1991. ISBN 4-906371-05-1.
  • Dyushan dai-garasu to Takiguchi Shūzō shigā bokkusu (デュシャン大ガラスと瀧口修造シガー・ボックス) / Marcel Duchamp large glass with Shuzo Takiguchi cigar box. Tokyo: Misuzu, 1992. ISBN 4622042428.
  • () / Emptiness. Tokyo: Libroport, 1994. ISBN 4-8457-0898-1.
  • Takemitsu, Tōru and Giovanni Chiaramonte. Ikko Narahara: Japanesque. Milan: Motta, 1994. ISBN 88-7179-087-1. In Italian
  • Tokyo, the '50s. Tokyo: Mole, 1996. ISBN 4-938628-21-X.
  • Narahara Ikkō (奈良原一高, Ikkō Narahara). Tokyo: Iwanami, 1997.
  • Poketto Tōkyō (ポケット東京) / Pocket Tokyo. Tokyo: Creo, 1997. ISBN 4-87736-010-7.
  • Ten () / Heaven. Tokyo: Creo, 2002. ISBN 4-87736-078-6
  • Mukokuseki-chi (無国籍地) / Stateless Land: 1954. Tokyo: Creo, 2004. ISBN 4-87736-097-2.
  • Jikū no kagami (時空の鏡) / Mirror of space and time. Tokyo: Shinchōsha, 2004. ISBN 4-10-357502-6.
  • En () / En: Circular vision. Tokyo: Creo, 2004. ISBN 4-87736-102-2.

Other books with work by Narahara

Sources

  • Tucker, Anne Wilkes, et al. The History of Japanese Photography. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-300-09925-8.

External links


 
 
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Ikko
Vivo (photography)
Shōji Yamagishi

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