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Ken Domon

 
Art Encyclopedia: Ken Domon

(b Sakata, 25 Oct 1909; d 1990). Japanese photographer. He wanted to be a painter but in 1933, feeling his talent to be limited, he became a technician in the Kotaro Miyauchi Photography Studio in Tokyo, where he studied the techniques of portrait photography. In 1935 he joined the staff of the Nippon Kobo ('Japan studio') agency, headed by Yonosuke Natori, and took photographs for Nippon, a magazine designed to provide an introduction to Japanese culture for foreigners. In 1939 he left and began to photograph examples of traditional Japanese culture, such as bunraku ('puppet theatre') and the Buddhist temple Muroji near Nara. At the same time he began to take portraits of cultural figures such as painters, writers and musicians. He received the first ARS photography cultural award in 1943. From 1950 he became a judge of the monthly contest in the photography magazine Camera (Tokyo) and his advocacy of 'realism photography' was very influential on amateur photographers. His method of documenting the contradictions of society as directly as possible was perfected in the two collections Hiroshima (Tokyo, 1958) and Chikuho no kodomotachi ('The children of Chikuho'; Tokyo, 1960). From the 1960s he concentrated on photographing temple architecture and Buddhist images; these works are collected in the series Koji junrei ('Old temple pilgrimage'; 5 vols, Tokyo, 1963-75). In 1983 the Domon Ken Memorial Museum was founded in Sakata to commemorate his achievements.

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Domon, Ken (1909-90), Japanese photojournalist. Joining Nihon Kobo publishers in 1935 as staff photographer for Nippon, a magazine devoted to disseminating Japanese culture, he adopted a German-influenced style encouraged by the editor-in-chief, Yonosuke Natori. Domon's photographs are strong, even rigid, face to face with his human or architectural subject, aiming for truthfulness and clarity. In 1939 he resigned over a conflict with Natori. The year 1941 saw him photographing Bunraku puppet theatre. After the war he concentrated on the lower end of society, Japan's beggars, shoeshine boys, and marginal people. He judged amateur competitions for the magazine Camera intermittently from 1950 to 1955, and for other magazines for several more years. Through the competitions and his teaching he propagated photographic realism and encouraged amateur photographers to pursue the straight, unstaged image. His charisma and style influenced many. Amongst his books are Muroji Temple (1954); and Hiroshima (1958), focusing on the victims of the atomic bomb thirteen years later. Children of the Chikuho Coal Miners (1960), printed cheaply on pulp paper, sold over 100, 000 copies. Though partly paralysed by a stroke, he continued to photograph with a large-format camera from his wheelchair. The series Koji Junnrei (Temple Pilgrimages) and subsequent books of strong and reverent photographs of temples and Buddhist statues in Kyoto and Nara testify to his perseverance.

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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more