Tag: silver print

Fracture: Daido Moriyama – Los Angeles – California

Daido Moriyama, Shinjuku #11, 2000, gelatin silver print, 13 1/4 x 9 in., courtesy of Gloria Katz and Willard Huyck. © Daido Moriyama


April 7, 2012–July 31, 2012 – Los Angeles County Museum of Art – LACMA
- Japanese Pavilion
Photographer Daido Moriyama (Japan, b. 1938) first came to prominence in the mid-1960s with his gritty depictions of Japanese urban life.  His highly innovative and intensely personal photographic approach often incorporates high contrast, graininess, and tilted vantages to convey the fragmentary nature of modern realities. Fracture: Daido Moriyama presents a range of the artist’s renowned black-and-white photographs, exemplifying the radical aesthetic of are, bure, boke (grainy, blurry, out-of-focus), as well as the debut of recent color work taken in Tokyo. A selection of his photo books—Moriyama has published more than forty to date—highlights the artist’s highly influential experimentation with reproduction media and the transformative possibilities of the printed page.  In total, Moriyama’s achievements convey the artist’s boldly intuitive exploration of urban mystery, memory, and photographic invention.

Beauty Parlor, Tokyo - Daido Moriyama c. 1975 - Gelatin silver print - 7 x 10 5/8 in. - Ralph M. Parsons Fund - © Daido Moriyama


B
orn in Ikeda, Osaka, Daido Moriyama first trained in graphic design before taking up photography with Takeji Iwaniya, a professional photographer of architecture and crafts. Moving to Tokyo in 1961, he assisted photographer Eikoh Hosoe for three years and became familiar with the trenchant social critiques produced by photographer Shomei Tomatsu. He also drew inspiration from William Klein’s confrontational photographs of New York, Andy Warhol’s silkscreened multiples of newspaper images, and the writings of Jack Kerouac and Yukio Mishima.

Museum Hours


Felice Beato: A Photographer on the Eastern Road – Los Angeles – CA

Felice Beato British, Kamakura, Japan, 1863 Albumen silver print 9 x 11 9/16 in. 2007.26.49


Until April 24, 2011 – The J. Paul Getty Museum

In a peripatetic career that spanned five decades, the photographer Felice Beato (1832–1909) covered a wide swath of East Asia. Following in the wake of Britain’s vast colonial empire, he was among the primary photographers to provide images of newly opened countries such as India, China, Japan, Korea, and Burma.

A pioneer war photographer, Beato recorded several conflicts: the Crimean War in 1855–56, the aftermath of the Indian Mutiny in 1858–59, the Second Opium War in 1860, and the American expedition to Korea in 1871. His photographs of battlefields, the first to show images of the dead, provided a new direction for that genre.

Catering to a Western audience, Beato produced an exceptionally diverse oeuvre: topographical and architectural views, including panoramas, as well as portraits and costume studies of the countries he visited or in which he resided.

In 1895 Beato opened a curio shop in Mandalay that quickly attracted foreign shoppers. In addition to photographs, he sold Burmese works of art in wood, metal, ivory, and silk, catering to the Western taste for souvenirs.

After a life of wandering, Beato returned to Italy, his birthplace, where he died in 1909.

Museum Hours


Olivier Meriel – In the footsteps of the Impressionists in Normandy – Giverny

June 4 to October 31, 2010 – Musee des Impressionismes, Giverny
Forty contemporary silver photographs seek to find the light of today through impressionistic landscapes of the past.
Like the impressionists in their time have left the workshop to regenerate in contact with nature, photographer Olivier Meriel crosses the landmarks of the coast of Normandy and the Seine. He takes his time and watches. He expects a certain correspondence between the time, place and his inner landscape.

Given the changing skies, the presence of nature in perpetual renewal, he wonders how to witness to the ephemeral. The day flees like a shadow said the sundial. Stay light, even since the dawn of time, the great subject of Olivier Meriel finally.

Some places photographed
The banks of the Seine: Giverny Jumieges The Andelys, Rouen, Villequier …
The Normandy coast between architecture and seaside cliffs wild: Asnelles, Cabourg, Deauville, Dieppe, Etretat, Fecamp, Le Havre, Yport …
The stations, symbols of the movement and departure into the unknown: Saint-Lazare in Paris, London Victoria …

Museum Hours


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