| Description: Shoka no Arashiyama (early summer at Arashiyama) near Kyoto. Single sided gravure supplement for King magazine, Vol. 9 no. 3. Dated March 1, 1933 (Showa '8). In the lower margin is the publishing information in very fine print.
Photogravure plate printed via the rotogravure process on heavy paper stock with photographer's credit and publishing information in the recto. Condition very good.
Suizan Kurokawa (1882 - 1944):
Often considered the father of Japanese pictorialism
photography, Kurokawa was born in Kyoto with his birth name being
Tanejiro Kurokawa. The son of a Kyoto textile merchant, he worked
in his family's business until the age of thirteen. In 1900, due
to heavily incurred debts, the family firm went bankrupt. This
event had great impact on Kurokawa and as a result he began to
pursue photography. In 1906 he entered a photo competition at the
Sensho Kinen Hakurankai Exposition, held to commemorate Japan's
victory in the Russo-Japan War. His work entitled Ame Ato (After
the Rain) showed a view of Mount Hie which garnered him a silver
award. This became the spark that launched his career.
Kurokawa was regularly published in the Osaka based
magazine Shashin Reidai-shu (lit. Photo Example magazine) around
1910. He was also employed in the photo department of the Hakubun-kan
publishing company's Kyoto office. His photographs were also published
in photography journals, as well as kabuki magazines during the
1910s and 1920s. He is best known for ethereal views of landscapes
and cultural landmarks, portrayed in a style heavily influenced
by sansui-ga. This traditional style of Japanese painting interpreted
through photography became Kurokawa's trademark. As a result, his
concepts had a strong influence on many Japanese pictorialist during
the peak years of 1910 to 1925.
Additional notes:
A major holding of Kurokawa's work is kept in the permanent collection
of the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.
He has also been published in:
- Shashin Kai (Photographic Journal), Vol. IV, no. 3, plate 4,
Mar. 1, 1909, S. Kuwada & Sons., Osaka.
- Geijutsu Shashin-hen, Vol. 4, page 14, ARS Publishing, Tokyo,
1929-1930.
- The Pictorial Landscape in Japanese Photography, plates 1-5,
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo, 1992.
- Japanese Photography-Form In/Form Out Part I, plate 30, Tokyo
Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo, 1996. |