|
October 27 (sat.) - December 9 (sun.), 2007 10:00-18:00 (Admission until 30 minutes before closing Adults: 1,000 Yen (800 Yen) |
![]() Young Wooman, Omagari, 1953 |
||
|
![]() Morikawa-cho, Hongo, 1953 |
![]() Young Men, Niida Akita, 1952 |
| Ihei Kimura's Eye Yoshitomo Kajikawa |
|
The scenes of Japan in the Showa era captured by
and left to us by Ihei Kimura evoke in me a range of nostalgic feelings
fondly buried in my memory.
Although he keeps his distance from other people close enough to sense their inner feelings and body temperature, Kimura deftly avoids slipping into bad form. His manners are free, light and easy, but Kimura sees through others the moment he sets his eyes on them, and his eyes, full of elegant brilliance, never fail to leave a strong impression on those who meet him. A precious boy born and bred in downtown Tokyo, who frequented story-tellers’ halls and ballad-drama performances from a very early age, Kimura met a miniature camera “Leica”. Then, he showed an unique talent also in taking snapshots of old town in Tokyo and of scenes around the country including Okinawa and in producing portraits of the nation’s celebrities, thereby starting a new stream in the Japanese world of photography. In 1952, Kimura had a new opportunity to visit Akita. He ended up taking pictures of the people and scenes of Akita, claiming that “the area, as an epitome of the reality we live in, has a lot of facets that are particularly amenable to the art of photography.” Born of Kimura’s strong attachment to a single region in Akita, where he visited a total of 21 times before 1971, the series of photographs dealing with the area not only brings into sharp relief the subtle relationships and developments in a rural area but also presents in a nutshell and through a single farming village the entirety of Japanese culture and climate. The series remains the best of all Kimura’s documentary works. For Kimura, the camera was a far better tool than his own bare
eyes ? a tool with which to delve deep into the heart of his subject
matters. Kimura, who ceaselessly took pictures of the Showa era
with exceptional talent and tireless efforts, claims that his eyes
for his fellow beings became far clearer than before when he turned
60. His eyes definitely are those of a determined photographer who
does not hesitate to grapple with the root problems of life and
death and come up with the results to show for it. |
|
|
| Looking out the window at home 1972 |
| Biography |
||||||||||||||
|
![]()
|