Description:
jumbo sized vintage gelatin silver print of Mount Fuji,
signed by the artist in gold ink in the right recto.
Koyo Okada: born: 1895, died:
1972
Okada was born in present day Tokamachi,
Niigata Prefecture into a family of painters and
calligraphers. In 1918 he graduated with a law degree
from the Waseda University in Tokyo. During his college
years he visited Oshino village near Mount Fuji in
1916 where he became so enamored with the mountain
that he embarked upon a lifelong passion of photographing
the sacred mountain. After college Okada became a
professional photographer and in 1923 when the Great
Kanto Earthquake struck Tokyo he documented the devastation.
His series of images was used in the publication;
Kanto Daishinsai Kinnen Shashin-cho (Memorial Photographic
Album of the Great Kanto Earthquake). In 1924 he
opened his first studio, the Okada Koyo Shashin Studio.
Okada also spent time in Europe in 1926 and 1927
and published his second book in 1927 entitled Okada
Koyo no Fuji Hyaku Geishu (One Hundred Views of Mt.
Fuji). During the 1930s he photographed many of Japan’s
national parks which gained him notoriety at home
and abroad. In 1940 he established the Mount Fuji
Photo Association (Fuji Shashin Kyokai) as the group's
chairman. But during World War II Okada lost all
of his negatives and equipment which drove him even
more to photograph Mt. Fuji. In the late 1940s Okada
became better accepted into Japan's art community
and throughout the 1950s and 1960s carried on his
life's work of photographing Mt. Fuji. This resulted
in numerous exhibitions and book titles about his
beloved mountain, as well as garnering him many awards
and citations. His photographs are also used on Japanese
currency and postage stamps to this day. There is
also a photography museum dedicated to him in Yamanashi
Prefecture near Mount Fuji called the Koyo
Okada Photo Art Museum. |