Major Japanese Photography at Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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| Saturday, 15 September 2007 15:15 |
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LONDON - The Michael Hoppen Gallery, in collaboration with Studio Equis, is delighted to announce a major exhibition of influential Japanese photography dating from 1945 to the present day. These photographers illustrate the diversity and virtuosity of the unique Japanese visual language. EYES OF AN ISLAND on exhibition 4th October – 10th December 2007. This exhibition will bring together some of the most important and iconic images by recognised masters including Shomei Tomatsu, Daido Moriyama, Hiroshi Hamaya, Shigeichi Nagano, Hiromi Tsuchida, and Eikoh Hosoe. Whilst much of this work has been exhibited at major museums worldwide: this exhibition is a rare opportunity for this work to be re-examined face to face. Eyes of an Island also integrates more recent work by well-known photographers such as Hiroshi Sugimoto, Ryuji Miyamoto, Naoya Hatakeyama and Nobuyoshi Araki amongst others. We will chart three stages of development in this period of Japanese photography: from post-war documentary bearing witness to the destruction of war; turning inward to personal and subjective interpretations of the rapid changes in Japanese society; to a contemporary movement which consistently pushes the boundaries of the photographic medium.
Guiding Light publications and Studio Equis will be producing a limited edition 100 page hardback book to accompany the exhibition. All prints in the exhibition will be available for sale. To view images from the exhibition please visit www.michaelhoppengallery.com. For further information and press images contact Eleanor Macnair 0207 352 3649 / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it Visit Michael Hoppen Gallery, 3 Jubilee Place, London, SW3 3TD www.michaelhoppengallery.com Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |


Japan has been at the forefront of photography throughout the 20th century: photography was both a product of and a driving force in modernisation. With the post WWII economic boom Japan began to mass-produce the highest quality equipment and film in the world leading to a staggering photographic output. However, the main platforms for Japanese photography were magazines and books, and as a result very few exhibition quality vintage prints have survived. This, coupled with cultural and political distance and the time taken to assemble photographic histories within Japan, means that much of the work produced in the decades immediately following WWII has not previously been seen in Europe and the US. 
