| Description:
condition quite good, but there is some light separation of emulsion
in top right margin. From an archive of photographs
by Hirogane discovered in Tokyo during the mid 1990s. Condition
very good.
Yoshiro Hirogane
Born: 1894, died: unknown
Status: amateur
Hirogane was a talented pictorialist who financed his passion
for photography through his professional life. Such avocation
scenarios were commonplace with Japanese art photographers
during the 1920s and 1930s. A corporate accountant by profession,
Hirogane was born in Okayama City, the first son of Tamataro
Hirogane. In 1916 he graduated from Tokyo Shogyo Koto Gakko
(Tokyo Commercial High School) and upon graduating was employed
by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries at their Nagoya Aircraft Manufacturing
Division as a section chief accountant.
Hirogane is known to have resided in Nagoya as late as 1938,
but it's not known exactly how long he remained there. But
he was very fortunate to have been living in Nagoya which had
a thriving photo art scene during the 1920s and 1930s. This
was mostly centered around the Aiyu Shashin Club (Aiyu Photo
Club), which was founded by Japanese photo greats Chotaro Hidaka
and Matsutaro Ohashi. This group was dedicated to romantic
landscape pictorialism, often times employing the use of pigment
printing. It is possible (but only speculation) that Hirogane
was in contact with this group as he used both silver gelatin
and bromoil printing techniques. Many of the photos by him
are of rural scenics as well as industrial views. It is now
presumed most of these views were taken in and around Aichi
Prefecture, where Nagoya City is located, including the industrial
environs where he worked. |