Description:
aerial view of Mount Fuji. This photograph was used
on the cover of Hamaya's 1978 book; Koho Fuji (Mt.
Fuji: a Lone Peak), Shueisha Publishing (see below).
It was also published in Hamaya's 1981 photo book "Hamaya
Hiroshi Shashin Shusei 1940-1980 Chi no Kao",
Iwanami Shoten Publishing, page 143.
This print was printed in conjunction for this book.
Print is unsigned.
Condition: Excellent.
Hiroshi Hamaya: 1915 - 1999
Born in Tokyo, Hamaya taught
himself photography at age 15. In 1933 he joined
Oriental Photographic Industries primarily photographing
trains and taking aerial views. From 1937 to 1945
he was a freelancer based in Tokyo and it was during
this period in 1939 when Hamaya met ethnologist
Keizo Shibusawa who strongly influenced him. This
led to Hamaya’s interest in traditional rituals,
agricultural life and daily life in Japan. In 1940
he began work on his Yukiguni (Snow Land) series
in Niigata prefecture and from 1945 to 1952 he
based himself out of Takada, Niigata Prefecture.
In 1954 he began work on his Ura Nihon (Japan’s
Back Coast) series. In 1955 Hamaya caught the attention
of Edward Steichen who included him in the Family
of Man exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in
New York. In 1960 Hamaya became the first Asian
photographer to join the photo cooperative Magnum.
It was during the early 1960s when he covered the
demonstrations and riots against the US-Japan Security
Treaty which caused him to take on an an anti government
view. This outlook caused Hamaya to return to aerial
photography, landscapes and nature photography
in both Japan and abroad. In 1986 Hamaya was honored
with a Master of Photography Award from the International
Center of Photography in New York. During his long
career Hamaya published numerous books and held
several major exhibitions, capping his life work
with a sixty year retrospective of his work at
the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography in
1997. That same year Hamaya was also awarded an
Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society
in 1997. |