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Hiroh Kikai

Hiroh Kikai (鬼海 弘雄, Kikai Hiroo[n 1], 18 March 1945 – 19 October 2020) was a Japanese photographer best known within Japan for four series of monochrome photographs: scenes of buildings in and close to Tokyo, portraits of people in the Asakusa area of Tokyo, and rural and town life in India and Turkey. He pursued each of these for over two decades, and each led to one or more book-length collections.

Hiroh Kikai, in 2011
Kikai interviewed during the press preview of his exhibition Tokyo Portraits at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 12 August 2011

Although previously a respected name in Japanese photography,[1] Kikai was not widely known until 2004, when the first edition of his book Persona, a collection of Asakusa portraits, won both the Domon Ken Award and Annual Award of the PSJ.[2] In 2009, the ICP and Steidl copublished Asakusa Portraits for an international market.

Early years edit

Kikai was born in the village of Daigo (now part of Sagae, Yamagata Prefecture) on 18 March 1945 as the seventh and last child (and fifth son) of the family.[3] He had a happy childhood, from the age of 11 or so preferring to play by himself in the nature that surrounded the village.[4] He graduated from high school in 1963 and worked in Yamagata for a year, and then went to Hosei University in Tokyo to study philosophy. As a student he was keen on the cinema—he particularly enjoyed the films of Andrzej Wajda, who would later contribute essays to some of his books, and Satyajit Ray—and said that he would have worked in film production if it did not require writing, a task he never enjoyed, and money, which he lacked.[5]

Immediately after his graduation in 1968,[6] Kikai worked for two years as a truck driver and for two in a shipyard.[7] Meanwhile, he stayed in touch with his philosophy professor from his university days, Sadayoshi Fukuda, whose interests extended to writing a regular column for the magazine Camera Mainichi; he introduced Kikai to its editor, Shōji Yamagishi, who showed him photographs by Diane Arbus that made a great impact on Kikai.[8] Kikai started to take photographs in 1969. At that time (when somebody fresh out of university could expect to earn ¥40,000 per month), a Hasselblad SLR camera normally cost ¥600,000; Kikai heard of an opportunity to buy one for ¥320,000 and mentioned this to Fukuda, who immediately lent him the money, with no interest, and no date or pressure for repayment. (The loan was eventually repaid.) This Hasselblad 500CM, with its 80 mm lens, was what Kikai used for his portraits thereafter.[9]

Career edit

Kikai thought that work on a boat might be photogenic, but, having no experience, could not get a job on one. He was eventually accepted on a boat fishing for tuna when he displayed the scar from an unneeded appendectomy as evidence of one risk fewer that his presence might force the boat into port.[10] He worked on the boat in the Pacific from 6 April until 9 November 1972, with a stop in Manzanillo (Mexico) for provisions. It was during this time that he took his first photographs to be published, in the May 1973 issue of Camera Mainichi.[11] In 1973 he won a prize for his submission to the 14th exhibition of the Japan Advertising Photographers' Association.[12] But Kikai decided that in order to be a photographer he needed darkroom skills, and he returned to Tokyo to work at Doi Technical Photo (1973–76).[13] He became a freelance photographer in 1984, a year after his first solo exhibition and the same year as his second.[14]

Living close to Asakusa (Tokyo), Kikai often went there on his days off, taking photographs of visitors. He stepped up his visits in 1985; a number of collections of his portraits taken there have been published.[15]

Kikai's other long-term photographic projects are of working and residential neighborhoods in and near Tokyo, and of people and scenes in India and Turkey. All these are black and white. However, his occasional diversions included color photographs of the Gotō Islands and even of nudes.[16]

Unusually in Japan, where photographers tend to join or form groups, Kikai was never in any group, preferring to work by himself.[17] When not setting out to take photographs, Kikai did not carry a camera with him. He left photographing his own family to his wife Noriko, and it is she who had the camera if they went on a trip together.[18]

In the early part of his career, Kikai often had to earn money in other ways: after three years' work in the darkroom, he returned to manual labor.[19]

Kikai taught for some time at Musashino Art University, but he was disappointed by the students' lack of sustained effort and therefore quit.[20]

Kikai died of lymphoma on 19 October 2020.[21][22][23]

Asakusa portraits edit

Kikai had started his Asakusa series of square, monochrome portraits as early as 1973, but after this there was a hiatus until 1985, when he realized that an ideal backdrop would be the plain red walls of Sensō-ji. At that time, the great majority of his Asakusa portraits adopted further constraints: the single subject stands directly in front of the camera (originally a Minolta Autocord TLR, later the Hasselblad), looking directly at it, and is shown from around the knees upwards.[24] Kikai might wait at the temple for four or five hours, hoping to see somebody he wanted to photograph, and three or four days might pass without a single photograph; but he might photograph three people in a single day, and he photographed over six hundred people in this way.[25] He believed that to have a plain backdrop and a direct confrontation with the subject allows the viewer to see the subject as a whole, and as somebody on whom time is marked, without any distracting or limiting specificity.[26]

Though Kikai started to photograph in Asakusa simply because it was near where he then lived, he continued because of the nature of the place and its visitors. Once a bustling and fashionable area, Asakusa long ago lost this status. If it were as popular and crowded as it was before the war, Kikai said, he would go somewhere else.[27]

Published in 1987, Ōtachi no shōzō / Ecce Homo was the first collection of these portraits. It is a large-format book with portraits made in Asakusa in 1985 to '86. Kikai won the 1988 Newcomer's Award of the Photographic Society of Japan (PSJ) for this book and the third Ina Nobuo Award for the accompanying exhibition.[28]

In 1995, a number of portraits from the series were shown together with the works of eleven other photographers in Tokyo/City of Photos, one of a pair of opening exhibitions for the purpose-made building of the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.[29]

Ya-Chimata, a second collection of the portraits made in Asakusa, was published a year later.[30][31]

Persona (2003) is a further collection. A few are from Kikai's earliest work, but most postdate anything in the earlier books. Several of the subjects appear twice or more often, so the reader sees the effect of time. The book format is unusually large for a photograph collection in Japan, and the plates were printed via quadtone.[32] The book won the 23rd Domon Ken Award and 2004 Annual Award of the PSJ.[2] A smaller-format edition with additional photographs followed two years later.[33]

Asakusa Portraits (2008) is a large collection edited by the International Center of Photography (New York), published in conjunction with the ICP's exhibition of recent Japanese photography and art Heavy Light. Kikai's contribution to this exhibition was well received,[34] and Asakusa Portraits won praise for its photography and also (from Paul Smith) for the vernacular fashion of those photographed.[35]

Portraits of spaces edit

Kikai said that people and scenery are two sides of the same coin.[36] When tired of waiting (or photographing) in Asakusa, he would walk as far as 20 km looking for urban scenes of interest where he could make "portraits of spaces".[37] A day's walk might take two or three hours for less than a single roll of 120 film.[38] He generally photographed between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., and avoided photographing when people were outside as their presence would transform the photographs into mere snapshots, easily understood; even without people, they are the images or reflections of life.[39] Kikai might find a scene that he wanted to photograph and then wait there and only photograph it when something unexpected occurred in the frame. After development, he did not bother with contact prints, instead judging a photograph by the negative alone.[40]

Samples from this series appeared in various magazines from at least as early as 1976.[41] Each photograph is simply captioned with the approximate address (in Japanese script) and year.

Tōkyō meiro / Tokyo Labyrinth (1999) presents portraits of unpeopled spaces in Tokyo (and occasionally the adjacent town of Kawasaki). There are individual shopfronts, rows of shops and residential streets. Most of the buildings are unpretentious. Like the Asakusa series, these portraits are monochrome and square, taken via a standard lens on 120 film.[42]

Tōkyō mutan / Labyrinthos (2007)—based on an essay/photograph series that ran in the monthly Sōshi (草思) from March 2004 to July 2005 and then in the web series "Tokyo Polka"[43]—presents more of the same. Between a single nude in a shopfront display from 1978 and a very young boy photographed in December 2006 (the latter appearing to share the Sensō-ji backdrop of Persona), are square monochrome views of Tokyo and Kawasaki, compositions that seem casual and rather disorderly, mostly of unpeopled scenes showing signs of intensive and recent use. The book also has Kikai's essays from "Tokyo Polka", essays that dwell on the inhabitants of Tokyo as observed during walks or on the train.

Tokyo View (2016) is a large-format collection, mostly of photographs that also appear in one or other of the earlier books (or Tōkyō pōtoreito / Tokyo Portraits).

India edit

Kikai said that going to India felt like a return to the Yamagata of his youth, and a release from life in Tokyo.[44] His photography there was much less planned or formal than his portraits of people or places in Tokyo: after an early start with color 120 film, he used black and white 35 mm film in India—and laughingly said that he would use 35 mm in Tokyo if the city were more interesting and did not make him feel unhappy.[45]

India, a large-format book published in 1992, presents photographs taken in India (and to a much lesser extent Bangladesh) over a period totalling rather more than a year and ranging from 1982 to 1990. It won high praise from the critic Kazuo Nishii, who commented that the India of Kikai's work seems perpetually overcast, and that in their ambiguity his photographs seem to benefit from the work done in the Asakusa portrait series.[46] The book won Kikai the 1993 Society of Photography Award.[47]

Shiawase / Shanti (2001) is a collection of photographs that concentrates on children, most of which were taken in Allahabad, Benares, Calcutta, Puri and Delhi in 2000.[48] It won the Grand Prix of the second Photo City Sagamihara Festival.[49]

Turkey edit

Wanting to explore somewhere that (in contrast to India) was cold, as well as a Muslim land where Asian and European cultures meet, in 1994 Kikai made the first of six visits to Turkey, where he stayed for a total of nine months.[50] His monochrome photographs of Turkey appeared in the magazine Asahi Camera,[51] and his colour photographs on its website,[52] before the publication in January 2011 of his large book Anatolia, a compilation of his monochrome work.

Photography elsewhere edit

Kikai was one of thirteen Japanese photographers invited by EU–Japan Fest to photograph the twenty-six nations of the European Union; he spent twenty-one days in Malta in September 2005 and a short period in Portugal in October 2004, travelling widely in both countries.[53] In color, these photographs are a departure from his earlier work. Most are more or less candid photographs of people. The collection was published in a book titled In-between 8.[54]

Series of color photographs from short visits to Cuba (2007) and Taiwan (2013) have appeared in Asahi Camera.[55]

Writing edit

Kikai's essays have appeared in periodicals and within some of his own photobooks. They have also been collected in four books, in which they are illustrated by reproductions of relevant photographs.[30]

Indo ya Gassan ("India and Gassan", 1999) is a collection of essays about and photographs of India. Gassan is a mountain in central Yamagata close to where Kikai was brought up; Kikai muses on India and compares it with the Yamagata of his youth.[44][30]

Me to kaze no kioku ("Memories of the eye and the wind", 2012) collects essays published in Yamagata Shinbun (山形新聞) since 2006; Dare omo sukoshi suki ni naru hi: Memekuri bōbiroku ("Days when you come to like anyone a little: An image-turning aide-memoire", 2015) collects essays published in Bungakukai (文學界) since 2011; Kutsuzoku no herikata ("Ways to wear down shoe rubber", 2016) is a fourth collection.[30]

Exhibitions edit

Supplementary English titles in parentheses are nonce translations for this article; those outside parentheses and in quotation marks were used at the time.

  • [A]: Asakusa portraits
  • [I]: India
  • [S]: Portraits of spaces
  • [T]: Turkey

Selected solo exhibitions edit

 
Entrance to the exhibition Tokyo Portraits at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 12 August 2011
  • "Nagi: Machinaka no kōkei" (凪:町中の光景, Calm: Town scenes). [S] Konishiroku Photo Gallery (Shinjuku, Tokyo), August–September 1983.[56]
  • "Indo kikō" (インド紀行, India travelogue). [I] Doi Photo Plaza Shibuya (Shibuya, Tokyo), August 1984; Art Plaza (Fukuoka), August 1984; Gallery Antomeru (Sendai), September 1984; Yamagata, 1984.[57] 
  • "Ōtachi no shōzō (Sensōji keidai)" (王たちの肖像(浅草寺境内), Portraits of kings [in the grounds of Sensō-ji]). [A] Ginza Nikon Salon (Ginza, Tokyo), September 1988.[58] 
  • "Dai-13 Ina Nobuo shō jushō sakuhinten: Kikai Hiroo 'Ōtachi no shōzō (Sensōji keidai)' " (第13伊奈信男賞受賞作品展・鬼海弘雄「王たちの肖像(浅草寺境内)」, Exhibition of works winning the 13th Ina Nobuo Award: Hiroh Kikai, Portraits of kings [in the grounds of Sensō-ji]). [A] Ginza Nikon Salon (Ginza, Tokyo); Osaka; Kyoto; etc., 1988–89.[59]
  • The Hitachi Collection of Contemporary Japanese Photography, Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, Arizona. 1989.[60] 
  • "Dai-13-kai Ina Nobuo shō jushō sakuhinten: Kikai Hiroo 'Kanshō: Machi no katachi' " (第13回伊奈信男賞受賞作品展・鬼海弘雄「観照:町のかたち」, Exhibition of works winning the 13th Ina Nobuo Award: Hiroh Kikai, Meditation: Town shapes). [S] Osaka Nikon Salon, February 1990; Ginza Nikon Salon (Ginza, Tokyo), March 1990; Kyoto; etc., 1990.[61] 
  • "Ecce Homo". [A] Robert Koch Gallery (San Francisco), 1993.[62] 
  • "Indo kikō" (インド紀行, India travelogue). [I] Shōmeidō Gallery (Kodaira), 1998.[63]
  • "Persona (1)". [A] Centrum Sztuki i Techniki Japońskiej "Manggha" (Kraków), 1999.[60]
  • "Shashin to insatsu hyōgen" (写真と印刷表現, Photographs and printing expression). [S] Mitsumura Art Plaza (Ōsaki, Tokyo), February–March 2000.[64]
  • "Persona (2)". [A] Centrum Sztuki i Techniki Japońskiej "Manggha" (Kraków), November–December 2002.[65]
  • "Persona". [A] The Third Gallery Aya (Osaka), October 2003.[66]
  • "Persona". [A] Domon Ken Photography Museum (Sakata), September–November 2004.[67] 
  • "Persona". [A] Ginza Nikon Salon (Tokyo); Osaka, 2004.[68] 
  • "Persona". [A] Galeria Fotografii PF, Centrum Kultury "Zamek" (Poznań), February–March 2005.[69]
  • "Persona". [A] Shōmeidō Gallery (Kodaira) January 2005.[49]
  • "Perusona" (ぺるそな). [A] Ginza Nikon Salon (Ginza, Tokyo), February–March 2006; Osaka Nikon Salon (Osaka), April 2006.[70]
  • "Tōkyō mutan" (東京夢譚, Tokyo dreams). [S] Ginza Nikon Salon (Ginza, Tokyo), September 2007; Osaka Nikon Salon (Osaka), October 2007.[71]
  • "Tokyo Labyrinth". [S] Yancey Richardson Gallery (New York City), September–October 2008.[72]
  • "Jinsei gekijō" (人生劇場, Human theatre). [A] Gallery Raku, Kyoto University of Art and Design, Kyoto, March 2009.[60]
  • "Persona". [A] Yancey Richardson Gallery (New York City), May–July 2009.[73]
  • "Asakusai portrék". [A] Liget Gallery (Budapest), November–December 2010.[74][75]
  • "Anatoria e no purosesu" (アナトリアへのプロセス). [T] Aoyama Book Center (Omotesandō, Tokyo), January 2011.[76]
  • "Tōkyō pōtoreito" (東京ポートレイト) / "Tokyo portraits". [A, S] Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography (Ebisu, Tokyo), August–October 2011.[77]
  • "Anatoria" (アナトリア). [T] M2 (Shinjuku, Tokyo), August 2011.[78]
  • "Persona". [A, S, I, T] Yamagata Museum of Art (Yamagata), December 2011 – January 2012.[79]
  • "Tokyo Labyrinth". [S] Zen Foto Gallery (Roppongi, Tokyo), May 2013.[80]
  • "Persona" / "Perusona" (ペルソナ). [A] 14th Documentary Photo Festival Miyazaki, Miyazaki Prefectural Art Museum, August–September 2013.[81][82]
  • "Asakusa Portraits (1973–2008) et India (1982–2008)". [A, I] In between Gallery (Paris), November 2013.[83][84][85]
  • "India 1982–2011". [I] Canon Gallery S (Shinagawa, Tokyo), May–June 2014.[86][87]
  • "Retratos de Asakusa". [A] Tabacalera [Wikidata], Promoción del Arte (Madrid), September–November 2014.[88][89][90][91][92][93]
  • "India 1982–2011". [I] The Museum of Art, Ehime (Matsuyama, Ehime), September–October 2014.[94]
  • "Tôkyô: voyage à Asakusa". [A, S] Société d'encouragement pour l'industrie nationale, Paris 6. October 2015.[95]
  • "India 1979–2016" [I] Fujifilm Photo Salon (Tokyo), May–June 2017.[96]
  • 《人物》鬼海弘雄的肖像摄影. [A] See+ Art Space / Gallery (Beijing), December 2017 – February 2018.[97][98][99]
  • "Persona". [A] Photo Gallery Blue Hole (Katagami, Akita), August 2018 – January 2019.[100]
  • "Persona". [A] Kihoku town office (鬼北町役場庁舎), Kihoku, Ehime, February 2019.[101][102]
  • "Persona". [A] Sagae City Museum of Art, Sagae, Yamagata, April–June 2019.[103][104]
  • "Persona: The Final Chapter" / "Persona saishūshō" (Persona 最終章). [A] Irie Taikichi Memorial Museum of Photography Nara City, September–October 2019.[105][106]
  • "Persona: The Final Chapter 最終章". [A] In between Gallery (Paris), November–December 2019.[107][108][109]
  • "Ōtachi no shōzō" (王たちの肖像, Portraits of kings). [A] JCII Photo Salon [Wikidata] (Tokyo), June–August 2020.[110]

Selected group exhibitions edit

Permanent collections edit

Publications edit

Books by Kikai edit

  • Ōtachi no shōzō: Sensō-ji keidai (王たちの肖像:浅草寺境内) / Ecce homo: Portraits of kings. Yokohama: Yatate, 1987. NCID BN02320562. Photograph collection, with captions in Japanese and English, and an essay by Sadayoshi Fukuda. There are forty-one monochrome plates.
  • India. Tokyo: Misuzu Shobō, 1992. ISBN 4-622-04385-8. Photograph collection, with text (by Kikai and Munesuke Mita) in Japanese and English, and captions in English. There are 106 monochrome plates (all "landscape" format).
  • Ya-Chimata: Ōtachi no kairō (や・ちまた:王たちの回廊, Ya-Chimata: A gallery of kings).[n 2] Tokyo: Misuzu Shobō, 1996. ISBN 4-622-04409-9. Photograph collection, with text (by Kikai and ten other writers) in Japanese only. There are 183 monochrome plates.
  • Tōkyō meiro (東京迷路) / Tokyo Labyrinth. Tokyo: Shōgakukan, 1999. ISBN 4-09-681241-2. Photograph collection, with text (by Andrzej Wajda, Genpei Akasegawa, and Suehiro Tanemura) in Japanese only. There are 108 monochrome plates.
  • Indo ya Gassan (印度や月山, India and Gassan). Tokyo: Hakusuisha, 1999. ISBN 4-560-04928-9. Thirty essays and forty-one photographs; text in Japanese only. The monochrome photographs are a mixture of "landscape" (across two pages) and "portrait" (on single pages).
  • Shiawase: Indo daichi no kodomo-tachi (しあわせ:インド大地の子どもたち) / Shanti: Children of India. Tokyo: Fukuinkan, 2001. ISBN 4-8340-1779-6. Photograph collection (all monochrome): thirteen "landscape" photographs across both pages; and ninety-four "portrait". There are no captions, and the text is in Japanese only.[n 3]
  • Persona. Tokyo: Sōshisha, 2003. ISBN 4-7942-1240-2. Photograph collection, with captions and text (by Andrzej Wajda, Suehiro Tanemura, and Kikai) in both Japanese and English. Between an additional plate at the front and back, there are twelve plates in a prefatory section (photographs taken well before the others), and in the body of the book twenty-eight plates four to a page and 138 plates on their own pages.
  • Perusona (ぺるそな) / Persona. Tokyo: Sōshisha, 2005. ISBN 4-7942-1450-2. Second, popular edition of the 2003 Persona in a smaller format. There are additional essays and photographs by Kikai; captions in both Japanese and English, other text in Japanese only. The twelve prefatory plates of the first edition and 191 plates of the main series are each presented on a separate page; there are also three more plates of photographs outside the series.[n 4]
  • In-between 8: Kikai Hiroo Porutogaru, Maruta (In-between 8 鬼海弘雄 ポルトガル、マルタ) / In-between, 8: Hiroh Kikai, Portugal, Malta. Tokyo: EU–Japan Fest Japan Committee, 2005. ISBN 4-903152-07-3. One of a series of 14 books (NCID BA72485871). Photograph collection; captions and text in both Japanese and English. There are twenty-eight colour photographs of Portugal and twenty-seven of Malta.[n 5]
  • Tōkyō mutan (東京夢譚) / Labyrinthos. Tokyo: Sōshisha, 2007. ISBN 4-7942-1572-X. Collection of 118 monochrome photographs and essays; captions (for each, the approximate address and the year) and essays are in Japanese only.
  • Asakusa Portraits. New York: International Center of Photography; Göttingen: Steidl, 2008. ISBN 978-3-86521-601-4. Collection of monochrome photographs; captions and texts in English only. With an interview of Kikai by Noriko Fuku, essays by Kikai (translated from Perusona) and an essay on Asakusa by Hiromichi Hosoma [Wikidata].[n 6]
  • Anatoria (アナトリア) / Anatolia. Tokyo: Crevis, 2011. ISBN 978-4-904845-10-3. Collection of 140 monochrome photographs (all "landscape" format) of Turkey (not only Anatolia). With afterwords by Toshiyuki Horie and Kikai.[n 7]
  • Tōkyō pōtoreito (東京ポートレイト) / Tokyo Portraits. Tokyo: Crevis, 2011. ISBN 978-4-904845-14-1. Exhibition catalogue of over 150 monochrome photographs of the "Asakusa portraits" and "portraits of spaces" series. Afterwords (by Shinji Ishii [Wikidata], Iwao Matsuyama [Wikidata], and Nobuyuki Okabe [岡部信幸]) in Japanese only; captions in Japanese and English.[n 8]
  • Me to kaze no kioku: Shashin o meguru esē (眼と風の記憶 写真をめぐるエセー). Tokyo: Iwanami, 2012. ISBN 978-4-00-024952-2. Essay collection.
  • Seken no hito (世間のひと). Chikuma Bunko. Tokyo: Chikuma Shobō, 2014. ISBN 978-4-480-43156-1. A bunkobon anthology of the Asakusa portrait series.
  • Dare o mo sukoshi suki ni naru hi: Memekuri bōbiroku (誰をも少し好きになる日 眼めくり忘備録). Tokyo: Bungei shunjū, 2015. ISBN 978-4-16-390215-9. Essay collection.
    • Naxie jianjian xihuan shang ren de rizi (那些渐渐喜欢上人的日子 视线所至备忘录). Hunan: 浦睿文化·湖南文艺出版社, 2019. ISBN 978-7-5404-9074-4. Translation into Chinese by 连子心.
  • Tokyo View. Kyoto: Kazetabi-sha, 2016. A large-format collection of 117 monochrome photographs of the "portraits of spaces" series. Captions in Japanese and English; afterword by Hideki Maeda [Wikidata] in Japanese only.[n 9]
  • Kutsuzoku no herikata (靴族の減り方). Tokyo: Chikumashobo, 2016. ISBN 978-4-480-87621-8. Essay collection, contains 32 full-page plates from the "portraits of spaces" series.[n 10]
  • India 1979–2016. Tokyo: Crevis, 2017. ISBN 978-4-904845-83-7. Black and white plates, mostly one to a page, with captions in Japanese. With a preface by Kikai and an essay by Randy Taguchi [Wikidata]; all in Japanese only.[n 11]
  • Persona saishūshō 2005–2018 (Persona 最終章 2005–2018) / Persona: The Final Chapter, 2005–2018. Tokyo: Chikumashobo, 2019. ISBN 978-4-480-87399-6. 205 captioned black and white plates, one to a page; with essays by Kikai and Toshiyuki Horie; all both in Japanese and in English translation.[n 12]
  • Kotoba wo utsusu: Kikai Hiroo taidanshū (ことばを写す 鬼海弘雄対談集, Portraying words: Hiroh Kikai interview collection). Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2019. ISBN 978-4-582-23130-4. Interviews by Kikai of Taichi Yamada, Nobuyoshi Araki, Toshiko Hirata [Wikidata], Shūsuke Michio [Wikidata], Randy Taguchi, Shigeru Aoki [Wikidata], Toshiyuki Horie and Natsuki Ikezawa; edited by Jun'ichirō Yamaoka [Wikidata].[n 13]
  • Shanti: Persona in India. Tokyo: Chikumashobo, 2019. ISBN 978-4-480-87401-6. 168 captioned black and white plates, one to a page; with essays by Kikai and Shinji Ishii; all both in Japanese and in English translation.[n 14]
  • Ōtachi no shōzō (王たちの肖像, "Portraits of kings"). JCII Photo Salon Library 346. Tokyo: JCII Photo Salon, 2020. NCID BB31276856.[n 15] Photographs from the series later known as "Asakusa portraits", from 1973 to 1986; 22 photographs, one per page; plus four photographs on each of four pages.

Other books with contributions by Kikai edit

  • Shashin toshi Tōkyō (写真都市Tokyo) / Tokyo/City of Photos. Tokyo: Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 1995. Catalogue of an exhibition held in 1995. Plates 113–29, admirably printed, are from Kikai's series of Asakusa portraits. Captions and texts in both Japanese and English.
  • Literatura na świecie (Warsaw, ISSN 0324-8305) number 1–3, 2002. This special issue on Japanese literature, Japonia, is illustrated with photographs by Kikai, taken from Ya-Chimata and Tōkyō meiro / Tokyo Labyrinth. Text in Polish.
  • Ueda Makoto. Shūgō jūtaku monogatari (集合住宅物語, The story of collective housing). Tokyo: Misuzu, 2004. ISBN 4-622-07086-3. A book about collective housing in Japan from the Dōjunkai buildings onward, with 165 illustrative color photographs, all by Kikai. (Some monochrome photographs are older and are by other photographers.) The text, by Ueda, is in Japanese only. Content previously (1997–2001) published in Tokyojin.[n 16]
  • In-between: 13-nin no shashinka 25-kakoku (In-between 13人の写真家 25ヶ国) / In-between: 13 photographers, 25 nations. Tokyo: EU–Japan Fest Japan Committee, 2005. ISBN 4-903152-13-8. Kikai is one of the thirteen in this supplementary collection of photographs in six themes ("Stones and walls", "Words", etc.); captions and text in both Japanese and English.
  • Miyako Harumi. Messēji (メッセージ) / The Message. Tokyo: Juritsusha, 2006. ISBN 4-901769-41-3. A book of which about half consists of quotations from interviews with the enka singer Harumi Miyako, and the other half of color photographs by Kikai. The photographs are not described or identified; a handful are of Miyako but most are of sea and provincial views. (In many, the scenes are recognizably of the Kumano area just west of Kumanogawa, Wakayama.) The text is all in Japanese.[n 17]
  • Heavy Light: Recent Photography and Video from Japan. New York: International Center of Photography; Göttingen: Steidl, 2008. ISBN 978-3-86521-623-6. Captions and texts in English only.
  • Higashi-Nihon dai-jishin: Shashinka 17-nin no shiten (東日本大地震 写真家17人の視点, The great east Japan earthquake: The perspectives of 17 photographers). Special compilation by Asahi Camera. Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 2011. ISBN 978-4-02-330996-8. A collection of photographs of the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. Text in Japanese only. Kikai contributes six pages: Sōma in early June, and three towns in Miyagi in late August.
  • Kikai Hirô and Jean-François Sabouret [Wikidata]. Tôkyô: voyage à Asakusa. Atlantique, Éditions de l'Actualité Scientifique Poitou-Charentes, 2015. ISBN 978-2-911320-55-2. An introduction to the work of Kikai, in French and Japanese.
  • Gabriele Conrath-Scholl and Stephan Berg, eds. Mit anderen Augen. Das Porträt in der zeitgenössischen Fotografie = With Different Eyes: The Portrait in Contemporary Photography. Cologne: Snoeck, 2016. ISBN 978-3-86442-158-7. Catalogue of the exhibition.

Notes edit

  1. ^ When romanized, the name is usually spelled "Hiroh" but sometimes "Hiroo"; in French contexts, sometimes "Hirô".
  2. ^ Ya-Chimata (in other contexts written in the kanji 八衢 rather than in hiragana) means a place where a road divides into eight (or some comparable number), or a place where the paths are confusingly numerous. For a dictionary definition (in Japanese), see 八衢(やちまた) の意味 (goo辞書).
  3. ^ Fukuinkan's description (in Japanese) of Shanti is .
  4. ^ Sōshisha's description (in Japanese) of the second edition of Persona (with 24 sample photographs) is here.
  5. ^ The EU–Japan Fest Japan Committee's description of In-between 8 is .
  6. ^ Steidl's description of Asakusa Portraits is .
  7. ^ Crevis's description (in Japanese) of Anatolia is here.
  8. ^ Crevis's description (in Japanese) of Tokyo Portraits is here.
  9. ^ Kazetabi's description (in Japanese) of Tokyo View is here.
  10. ^ Chikumashobo's description (in Japanese) of Kutsuzoku no herikata is here.
  11. ^ Crevis's description (in Japanese) of India 1979–2016 is here.
  12. ^ Chikumashobo's description (in Japanese) of Persona: The Final Chapter is here.
  13. ^ Heibonsha's description (in Japanese) of Kotoba wo utsusu is here.
  14. ^ Chikumashobo's description (in Japanese) of Shanti is here.
  15. ^ 鬼海弘雄作品展 「王たちの肖像」 (catalogue sales page), JCII Camera Museum, [2020]. Accessed 27 August 2020.
  16. ^ Misuzu's description (in Japanese) of Shūgō jūtaku monogatari is here.
  17. ^ Juritsusha's description (in Japanese) of The message is here 21 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine.

References edit

  1. ^ Note Kikai's winning of the Ina Nobuo Award in 1988 (for details, see below); and the inclusion by 2000 of his works in the permanent collection of the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography as implied by Sumiyo Mitsuhashi (三橋純予, Mitsuhashi Sumiyo), "Kikai Hiroo" (鬼海弘雄), Nihon shashinka jiten (日本写真家事典) / 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers (Kyoto: Tankōsha, 2000; ISBN 4-473-01750-8), p. 98 (despite its alternative title in English, the book is in Japanese only).
  2. ^ a b Domon Ken Award: "Domon Ken–shō no rekishi to zen-jushō-shashinka" (土門拳賞の歴史と全受賞写真家, list of award-winners since 1982) (accessed 6 March 2006). PSJ award: "2004-nen Nihon Shashin Kyōkai-shō jushōsha".
  3. ^ Place of birth, siblings: Kōtarō Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo" (鬼海弘雄), in Japanīzu fotogurafāzu: 14nin no shashinka-tachi no "ima" (ジャパニーズ・フォトグラファーズ:14人の写真家たちの「いま」) / Japanese photographers (Tokyo: Hakusuisha, 2005; ISBN 4-560-02705-6), p. 131. (Despite the book's alternative English title, the text is all in Japanese. This article, which runs pp. 129–43, previously appeared in Asahi Camera, November 2004, pp. 248–52.) Date of birth: "Domon-Ken-shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten 'Persona' 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine" (土門拳賞受賞記念 鬼海弘雄写真展『Persona』, Hiroh Kikai photograph exhibition "Persona", in celebration of the Domon Ken Award), Shōmeidō Gallery (松明堂ギャラリー), 2005 (accessed 5 March 2006).
  4. ^ Noriyuki Kanda (神田憲行, Kanda Noriyuki), "Gendai no shōzō: Shashinka Kikai Hiroo: Jinsei no fuhen o toru to iu otoko" (現代の肖像:写真家鬼海弘雄:人生の普遍を撮るという男, A portrait of today: The photographer Hiroh Kikai: The man who photographs the universality of life), Aera, 25 April 2005. p. 61 (the article runs pp. 59–63).
  5. ^ Film tastes: Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", p. 132. Film as a career: Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 63.
  6. ^ Both Kikai's book Perusona / Persona (first impression, 2005, n.p.) and his Tōkyō Mutan / Labyrinthos (first impression, 2007, n.p.) say 1978, presumably first a typo or mistake and then inherited misinformation. His other books India (n.p.) and Ya-Chimata (n.p.) have him graduating in 1969. His book In-between 8 says 1968. (For details see "Books by Kikai".) Kikai said that 1968 is correct (conversation, 3 March 2006).
  7. ^ Hideko Oiwake (追分日出子, Oiwake Hideko), "Kindaika ni norenakatta otoko: Kikai Hiroo" (近代化にのれなかった男 鬼海弘雄, A man who couldn't get on board modernization: Hiroh Kikai), Shashin Jidai, November 1984, p. 141.
  8. ^ Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", pp. 132–33; Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 62.
  9. ^ Purchase and use of the Hasselblad: "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24: Kikai Hiroo san" (わたし きょう きのう あした 24 鬼海弘雄さん, Me today yesterday tomorrow 24: Hiroh Kikai), Croissant no. 640, 10 July 2004, p. 98 (the article runs pp. 98–101).
  10. ^ Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 62.
  11. ^ Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", p. 133; Kikai, "Sen'in techō bangō: Misaki 16000" (船員手帳番号:三崎16000) / "Seamen's Registered Number: Misaki 16000", Camera Mainichi, May 1973, pp. 95–101 (the minimal text within the latter is in Japanese only, despite its secondary title in English).
  12. ^ Mitsuhashi, "Kikai Hiroo", p. 98.
  13. ^ Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", p. 134.
  14. ^ LensCulture, Hiroh Kikai |. "Hiroh Kikai". LensCulture. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  15. ^ "artscape International". www.dnp.co.jp. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  16. ^ Gotō islands: "Nihon o arukō (19): Kikai Hiroo to aruku (Nagasaki): Gotō rettō" (日本を歩こう[19];鬼海弘雄と歩く【長崎】:五島列島, Walking around Japan [19]: Walking with Hiroh Kikai [Nagasaki]: The Gotō islands), Photo Contest, July 2006, pp. 4, 6, 8–16. Nudes: "Hareta hi ni" (晴れた日に) / "On clear day", Asahi Camera, July 2005, pp. 47–52.
  17. ^ Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 61.
  18. ^ Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 63.
  19. ^ Oiwake, "Kindaika ni norenakatta otoko", p. 141. By his own account in 1980 he briefly worked at an Isuzu plant, in 1982 in a Subaru plant.Kikai, Ōtachi no shōzō / Ecce homo, n.p. (for details see "Books by Kikai").
  20. ^ Name of the university: "Domon-Ken-shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten 'Persona' 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine"; this says that he started there in 1994. Dissatisfaction: "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24", p. 101.
  21. ^ 鬼海弘雄氏が死去 写真家, Nihon Keizai Shinbun, 19 October 2020 (accessed 19 October 2020).
  22. ^ 鬼海弘雄さん死去 写真家「Persona」, Tokyo Shinbun, 20 October 2020 (accessed 20 October 2020).
  23. ^ 摄影师|鬼海弘雄:将人类永恒不变的东西,以肖像记录下来, The Paper (Shanghai), 20 October 2020 (accessed 20 October 2020).
  24. ^ Backdrop and constraints: Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", pp. 134–35. Autocord and Hasselblad: Iizawa, "Kikai Hiroo", p. 134.
  25. ^ Time spent waiting, number photographed: "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24", p. 98. Days with no photos, three people in a day: "Watakushi no naka no 'Persona' " (私の中の『ペルソナ』, My Persona), Tokyojin, November 2003, pp. 152–53 (Kikai in conversation with Midori Nakano and Taichi Yamada; article runs p. 148–54).
  26. ^ "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24", p. 99; "Watakushi no naka no 'Persona' ", p. 149.
  27. ^ "Watakushi no naka no 'Persona' ", p. 150.
  28. ^ PSJ award: PSJ, "Kako no jushōsha ichiran" (過去の受賞者一覧, List of past PSJ award-winners) (accessed 6 March 2006); PSJ, "2004-nen Nihon Shashin Kyōkai-shō jushōsha" (2004年日本写真協会賞受賞者, PSJ prize-winners for 2004) (accessed 6 March 2006). Ina Nobuo Award: announcement of 13th Ina Nobuo award, 1988 (第13回(1988年)伊奈信男賞 鬼海弘雄写真展『王たちの肖像(浅草寺境内)』, 13th Ina Nobuo Award [1988], Hiroh Kikai, Ecce Homo), Nikon (accessed 5 March 2006.) Also see Ina Nobuo shō 20-nen: Nikon Saron ni miru gendai shashin no nenpu (伊奈信男賞20年:ニコンサロンにみる現代写真の年譜) / Ina Nobuo Award '76–'95, Nikon Salon Books 23 (Tokyo: Nikon, 1996), with a few pages devoted to the works of each of the winners of the Ina Nobuo Award to date (Kikai is on pp. 96–101), and also lists of the exhibitions at the Ginza and Shinjuku Nikon Salons.
  29. ^ a b Tokyo/City of Photos, the published catalogue of the exhibition (for details see "Other works with contributions by Kikai").
  30. ^ a b c d "Hiroh Kikai". inbetween art gallery (in French). 22 March 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  31. ^ "Hiroh Kikai Captures Raw Essence of Existence in 'Ya-Chimata'". Cartellino. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  32. ^ Kanda, "Gendai no shōzō", p. 60.
  33. ^ "Hiroh Kikai "Persona"". Japan-Photo.info. 25 June 2006. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  34. ^ a b Favorable reviews of Kikai's photographs in "Heavy Light": Roberta Smith, "Japanese Culture, in Vivid Color", New York Times, 13 June 2008 (accessed 17 September 2008, requires registration but no payment); Heesun Wee, "Summer's photo finish with Atget, Evans, Kikai, Fusco 4 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine", Newyorkology, 22 August 2008 (accessed 17 September 2008); "Goings On About Town", New Yorker, 30 June 2008 (accessed 17 September 2008).
  35. ^ Photography: Jörg M. Colberg, "Review: Asakusa Portraits by Hiroh Kikai 14 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine", Conscientious, 10 September 2008; Jörg M. Colberg, "Best Photo Books 2008 ", Conscientious, 16 December 2008 (both accessed 1 January 2011). Fashion: Paul Smith, "Kikai Style 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine", vogue.co.uk, 10 September 2008 (accessed 17 July 2009).
  36. ^ "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24", p. 99.
  37. ^ "Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24", p. 98. "Portraits of spaces" (空間のポートレイト, Kūkan no pōtoreito): afterword to Tōkyō meiro / Tokyo Labyrinth (for details see "Books by Kikai").
  38. ^ Time, quantity: Noriyuki Kanda, "Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō: Miru me, erabu me" (鬼海弘雄の東京:見る目、選ぶ目), The Tokyo of Hiroh Kikai: The seeing eye, the selecting eye), Asahi Camera, November 2006, pp. 232–33.
  39. ^ Time: "Tōkyō meiro o megutte" (『東京迷路』をめぐって, About Tokyo Labyrinth), Tokyojin, February 2000, p. 110 (Kikai in conversation with Suehiro Tanemura and Iwao Matsuyama [松山巖]). Peopling, snapshots, image/reflection of life (seikatsu no kage, 生活の影): "Tōkyō meiro o megutte", p. 109; Kanda, "Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō".
  40. ^ Waiting for the unexpected, avoidance of contact prints: Kanda, "Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō".
  41. ^ See for example "Nagi" (凪, Calm), Camera Mainichi, June 1976, pp. 119–25.
  42. ^ Standard lens: afterword to Tōkyō meiro / Tokyo Labyrinth.
  43. ^ Sōshi is produced by Sōshisha, the publisher of Labyrinthos. Some photographs within the book had also appeared elsewhere, e.g. issue 2 (October 2004) of Tamaya (たまや). "Tokyo Polka 5 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine" was a series of essays, each illustrated with photographs (accessed 24 February 2006; as of 28 May 2007, the essays and photographs had been removed, leaving only a short description; earlier versions do not seem to be available via the Wayback Machine.) Continues in "Yurari-yurayura-ki 3 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine".
  44. ^ a b "Tōkyō Meiro o megutte", pp. 114, 115.
  45. ^ Color photographs of India: Kikai, "Indo: Higan to shigan" (インド 彼岸と此岸, India: The world of the Buddha and our world), Camera Mainichi, November 1981, pp. 24–29. (Kikai mentions use of a Minolta Autocord and a Rolleiflex.) On Tokyo: "Tōkyō Meiro o megutte", p. 115.
  46. ^ Kazuo Nishii, "Kikai Hiroo (India)" (鬼海弘雄 『India』), in Shashinteki kioku (写真的記憶, Photographic memories) (Tokyo: Seikyūsha, 1997; ISBN 4-7872-7072-9), 173–77 (first appeared in an unspecified publication of Misuzu Shobō, November 1992).
  47. ^ Society of Photography, Awards, 1 (1989) – 10 (1998) 26 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 4 April 2007).
  48. ^ Afterword, Shiawase / Shanti (for details see "Books by Kikai").
  49. ^ a b "Domon-Ken-shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten 'Persona' 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine".
  50. ^ "Hyakunengo nimo hibiku koe o totta tabi" (百年後にも響く声を撮った旅), Asahi Camera, November 2010, p.225.
  51. ^ As installments of "Anatoria kikō" (アナトリア紀行) / "A Journey to Anatolia", Asahi Camera, June 2001, pp. 55–61; January 2003, pp. 72–79; March 2006, pp. 68–75. Also, "Anatoria" (アナトリア) / "Anatolia, Turkey", Asahi Camera, November 2010, pp. 37–46.
  52. ^ "Anatoria kikō" (アナトリア紀行) / "Backroad to Anatolia" Part 1 2 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Part 2 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, asahicamera.net (both accessed 26 March 2010). Requires Flash.
  53. ^ Length of stay in Malta: Hiroh Kikai, In-between 8, n.p. (for details see "Books by Kikai"). Month and year: Kikai, "Porutogaru kikō" (ポルトガル紀行) / "My Portugal", Nippon Camera, December 2005, p. 16.
  54. ^ Archive, Asia Art. "In-between 8 — Hiroh Kikai: Portugal, Malta". Asia Art Archive. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  55. ^ Kikai, "Habana no heijitsu" (ハバナの平日) / "Ordinary Days in Havana, Cuba, 2007", Asahi Camera, October 2007, pp. 47–56. Kikai, "Taiwan e" (台湾へ), Asahi Camera, November 2013, pp. 29–36.
  56. ^ "Shashinten purebyū" (写真展プレビュー) / "Photo Exhibition Guide", Nippon Camera, September 1983, p.130. (Other lists of Kikai's past exhibitions give the place as "Konica Photo Gallery" or "Konica Photo Plaza"; these are anachronistic.)
  57. ^ Shibuya: "Shashinten gaido" (写真展ガイド, Photo exhibition guide), Asahi Camera, August 1984, p. 13. Fukuoka, Sendai: "Shashinten gaido", Asahi Camera, September 1984, pp. 14, 16. In Ōtachi no shōzō / Ecce homo (n.p.), Kikai lists the Fukuoka exhibition as more specifically in Hakata. "Antomeru" is a transliteration of アントメル. Yamagata: "Kikai Hiroo, Indo ya gassan shashinka" (鬼海弘雄 《印度や月山》写真家), Yamagata no yūmeijin (山形の有名人) 2005 (accessed 25 May 2008), not specifying the gallery.
  58. ^ Ginza Nikon Salon: Ina Nobuo shō 20-nen, p.154; Kōtarō Iizawa, "Shashin no seitōteki na hyōgen ni deau" (写真の正統的な表現に出会う), Shashin no genzai: Kuronikuru 1983–1992 (写真の現在:クロニクル1983~1992) (Tokyo: Miraisha, 1993; ISBN 4-624-71061-4), pp.208–209 (essay first appeared in Photo Contest, November 1988).
  59. ^ Ginza Nikon Salon: Ina Nobuo shō 20-nen, p.154. Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, etc.: "Kikai Hiroo, Indo ya gassan shashinka" (specifying the cities but not the galleries).
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  61. ^ Ginza: Ina Nobuo shō 20-nen, p.154. Osaka and Ginza: "Shashinten gaido" (写真展ガイド), / "Gallery Guide", Asahi Camera, March 1990, pp. 135, 132. Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, etc.: "Kikai Hiroo, Indo ya gassan shashinka" (specifying the cities but not the galleries).
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  117. ^ Meyers, William (10 June 2016). "Portraits, Painterly Photographs and the Pacific". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
  118. ^ Search results 29 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography. Accessed 11 March 2013.
  119. ^ "Kikai, Hiroh", Walther Collection. Accessed 28 October 2020.
  120. ^ Emily S. Burke, "Photography", Modern and Contemporary Art at Dartmouth: Highlights from the Hood Museum of Art (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England, 2009; ISBN 1-58465-786-3), p. 195.
  121. ^ Annual report for the year 2010–2011 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), Amherst College, 2011, p. 9. Accessed 16 September 2014.
  122. ^ Catalogue entry, Philadelphia Museum of Art. Accessed 16 September 2014.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • accompanying the 2015 Paris exhibition "Tôkyô: voyage à Asakusa" (in French and Japanese)
  • "Hiroh Kikai". Crevis (クレヴィス).
  • Fallis, Greg. "". Sunday Salon. Utata Tribal Photography. (in English)
  • Feustel, Marc. "". LensCulture. 2008. Interview, with 10 sample photographs. (in English)
  • Feustel, Marc. "Hiroh Kikai: A man in the cosmos". Eyecurious. 10 February 2010. Interview, with sample photographs. (in English)
  • "". Studio Equis. Short biography with a set of images whose display requires Flash Player 8. (in English)
  • "Hiroh Kikai". Yancey Richardson Gallery (New York). Photographs from the "Persona" ("Asakusa Portraits") series.
  • "Hiroh Kikai 'Asakusai portréi' " = "Interview with Hiroh Kikai". Liget Gallery. Translations of a long interview of Kikai by Noriko Fuku. (in Hungarian and English)
  • Kikai Hiroh. "" (ゆらりゆらゆら記). A series of essays, each illustrated with photographs. (in Japanese)
  • "Kikai Hiroo", Shashin shika dekinai koto (写真しかできないこと), The Photographer 2007. Fujifilm. Samples of Kikai's work. (in Japanese)
  • Mirapaul, Evan. "Musings from a Trip to Japan (III) Kikai." Fugitive Vision, 13 November 2007. Mirapaul comments on the Asakusa portrait series. (in English)
  • Asakusa Portraits by Hiroh Kikai (PDF), Liget Galéria, Budapest. Lavishly illustrated proposal for an exhibition.

hiroh, kikai, 鬼海, 弘雄, kikai, hiroo, march, 1945, october, 2020, japanese, photographer, best, known, within, japan, four, series, monochrome, photographs, scenes, buildings, close, tokyo, portraits, people, asakusa, area, tokyo, rural, town, life, india, turke. Hiroh Kikai 鬼海 弘雄 Kikai Hiroo n 1 18 March 1945 19 October 2020 was a Japanese photographer best known within Japan for four series of monochrome photographs scenes of buildings in and close to Tokyo portraits of people in the Asakusa area of Tokyo and rural and town life in India and Turkey He pursued each of these for over two decades and each led to one or more book length collections Hiroh Kikai in 2011Kikai interviewed during the press preview of his exhibition Tokyo Portraits at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 12 August 2011Although previously a respected name in Japanese photography 1 Kikai was not widely known until 2004 when the first edition of his book Persona a collection of Asakusa portraits won both the Domon Ken Award and Annual Award of the PSJ 2 In 2009 the ICP and Steidl copublished Asakusa Portraits for an international market Contents 1 Early years 2 Career 2 1 Asakusa portraits 2 2 Portraits of spaces 2 3 India 2 4 Turkey 2 5 Photography elsewhere 2 6 Writing 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Selected solo exhibitions 3 2 Selected group exhibitions 4 Permanent collections 5 Publications 5 1 Books by Kikai 5 2 Other books with contributions by Kikai 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly years editKikai was born in the village of Daigo now part of Sagae Yamagata Prefecture on 18 March 1945 as the seventh and last child and fifth son of the family 3 He had a happy childhood from the age of 11 or so preferring to play by himself in the nature that surrounded the village 4 He graduated from high school in 1963 and worked in Yamagata for a year and then went to Hosei University in Tokyo to study philosophy As a student he was keen on the cinema he particularly enjoyed the films of Andrzej Wajda who would later contribute essays to some of his books and Satyajit Ray and said that he would have worked in film production if it did not require writing a task he never enjoyed and money which he lacked 5 Immediately after his graduation in 1968 6 Kikai worked for two years as a truck driver and for two in a shipyard 7 Meanwhile he stayed in touch with his philosophy professor from his university days Sadayoshi Fukuda whose interests extended to writing a regular column for the magazine Camera Mainichi he introduced Kikai to its editor Shōji Yamagishi who showed him photographs by Diane Arbus that made a great impact on Kikai 8 Kikai started to take photographs in 1969 At that time when somebody fresh out of university could expect to earn 40 000 per month a Hasselblad SLR camera normally cost 600 000 Kikai heard of an opportunity to buy one for 320 000 and mentioned this to Fukuda who immediately lent him the money with no interest and no date or pressure for repayment The loan was eventually repaid This Hasselblad 500CM with its 80 mm lens was what Kikai used for his portraits thereafter 9 Career editKikai thought that work on a boat might be photogenic but having no experience could not get a job on one He was eventually accepted on a boat fishing for tuna when he displayed the scar from an unneeded appendectomy as evidence of one risk fewer that his presence might force the boat into port 10 He worked on the boat in the Pacific from 6 April until 9 November 1972 with a stop in Manzanillo Mexico for provisions It was during this time that he took his first photographs to be published in the May 1973 issue of Camera Mainichi 11 In 1973 he won a prize for his submission to the 14th exhibition of the Japan Advertising Photographers Association 12 But Kikai decided that in order to be a photographer he needed darkroom skills and he returned to Tokyo to work at Doi Technical Photo 1973 76 13 He became a freelance photographer in 1984 a year after his first solo exhibition and the same year as his second 14 Living close to Asakusa Tokyo Kikai often went there on his days off taking photographs of visitors He stepped up his visits in 1985 a number of collections of his portraits taken there have been published 15 Kikai s other long term photographic projects are of working and residential neighborhoods in and near Tokyo and of people and scenes in India and Turkey All these are black and white However his occasional diversions included color photographs of the Gotō Islands and even of nudes 16 Unusually in Japan where photographers tend to join or form groups Kikai was never in any group preferring to work by himself 17 When not setting out to take photographs Kikai did not carry a camera with him He left photographing his own family to his wife Noriko and it is she who had the camera if they went on a trip together 18 In the early part of his career Kikai often had to earn money in other ways after three years work in the darkroom he returned to manual labor 19 Kikai taught for some time at Musashino Art University but he was disappointed by the students lack of sustained effort and therefore quit 20 Kikai died of lymphoma on 19 October 2020 21 22 23 Asakusa portraits edit Kikai had started his Asakusa series of square monochrome portraits as early as 1973 but after this there was a hiatus until 1985 when he realized that an ideal backdrop would be the plain red walls of Sensō ji At that time the great majority of his Asakusa portraits adopted further constraints the single subject stands directly in front of the camera originally a Minolta Autocord TLR later the Hasselblad looking directly at it and is shown from around the knees upwards 24 Kikai might wait at the temple for four or five hours hoping to see somebody he wanted to photograph and three or four days might pass without a single photograph but he might photograph three people in a single day and he photographed over six hundred people in this way 25 He believed that to have a plain backdrop and a direct confrontation with the subject allows the viewer to see the subject as a whole and as somebody on whom time is marked without any distracting or limiting specificity 26 Though Kikai started to photograph in Asakusa simply because it was near where he then lived he continued because of the nature of the place and its visitors Once a bustling and fashionable area Asakusa long ago lost this status If it were as popular and crowded as it was before the war Kikai said he would go somewhere else 27 Published in 1987 Ōtachi no shōzō Ecce Homo was the first collection of these portraits It is a large format book with portraits made in Asakusa in 1985 to 86 Kikai won the 1988 Newcomer s Award of the Photographic Society of Japan PSJ for this book and the third Ina Nobuo Award for the accompanying exhibition 28 In 1995 a number of portraits from the series were shown together with the works of eleven other photographers in Tokyo City of Photos one of a pair of opening exhibitions for the purpose made building of the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 29 Ya Chimata a second collection of the portraits made in Asakusa was published a year later 30 31 Persona 2003 is a further collection A few are from Kikai s earliest work but most postdate anything in the earlier books Several of the subjects appear twice or more often so the reader sees the effect of time The book format is unusually large for a photograph collection in Japan and the plates were printed via quadtone 32 The book won the 23rd Domon Ken Award and 2004 Annual Award of the PSJ 2 A smaller format edition with additional photographs followed two years later 33 Asakusa Portraits 2008 is a large collection edited by the International Center of Photography New York published in conjunction with the ICP s exhibition of recent Japanese photography and art Heavy Light Kikai s contribution to this exhibition was well received 34 and Asakusa Portraits won praise for its photography and also from Paul Smith for the vernacular fashion of those photographed 35 Portraits of spaces edit Kikai said that people and scenery are two sides of the same coin 36 When tired of waiting or photographing in Asakusa he would walk as far as 20 km looking for urban scenes of interest where he could make portraits of spaces 37 A day s walk might take two or three hours for less than a single roll of 120 film 38 He generally photographed between 10 a m and 3 p m and avoided photographing when people were outside as their presence would transform the photographs into mere snapshots easily understood even without people they are the images or reflections of life 39 Kikai might find a scene that he wanted to photograph and then wait there and only photograph it when something unexpected occurred in the frame After development he did not bother with contact prints instead judging a photograph by the negative alone 40 Samples from this series appeared in various magazines from at least as early as 1976 41 Each photograph is simply captioned with the approximate address in Japanese script and year Tōkyō meiro Tokyo Labyrinth 1999 presents portraits of unpeopled spaces in Tokyo and occasionally the adjacent town of Kawasaki There are individual shopfronts rows of shops and residential streets Most of the buildings are unpretentious Like the Asakusa series these portraits are monochrome and square taken via a standard lens on 120 film 42 Tōkyō mutan Labyrinthos 2007 based on an essay photograph series that ran in the monthly Sōshi 草思 from March 2004 to July 2005 and then in the web series Tokyo Polka 43 presents more of the same Between a single nude in a shopfront display from 1978 and a very young boy photographed in December 2006 the latter appearing to share the Sensō ji backdrop of Persona are square monochrome views of Tokyo and Kawasaki compositions that seem casual and rather disorderly mostly of unpeopled scenes showing signs of intensive and recent use The book also has Kikai s essays from Tokyo Polka essays that dwell on the inhabitants of Tokyo as observed during walks or on the train Tokyo View 2016 is a large format collection mostly of photographs that also appear in one or other of the earlier books or Tōkyō pōtoreito Tokyo Portraits India edit Kikai said that going to India felt like a return to the Yamagata of his youth and a release from life in Tokyo 44 His photography there was much less planned or formal than his portraits of people or places in Tokyo after an early start with color 120 film he used black and white 35 mm film in India and laughingly said that he would use 35 mm in Tokyo if the city were more interesting and did not make him feel unhappy 45 India a large format book published in 1992 presents photographs taken in India and to a much lesser extent Bangladesh over a period totalling rather more than a year and ranging from 1982 to 1990 It won high praise from the critic Kazuo Nishii who commented that the India of Kikai s work seems perpetually overcast and that in their ambiguity his photographs seem to benefit from the work done in the Asakusa portrait series 46 The book won Kikai the 1993 Society of Photography Award 47 Shiawase Shanti 2001 is a collection of photographs that concentrates on children most of which were taken in Allahabad Benares Calcutta Puri and Delhi in 2000 48 It won the Grand Prix of the second Photo City Sagamihara Festival 49 Turkey edit Wanting to explore somewhere that in contrast to India was cold as well as a Muslim land where Asian and European cultures meet in 1994 Kikai made the first of six visits to Turkey where he stayed for a total of nine months 50 His monochrome photographs of Turkey appeared in the magazine Asahi Camera 51 and his colour photographs on its website 52 before the publication in January 2011 of his large book Anatolia a compilation of his monochrome work Photography elsewhere edit Kikai was one of thirteen Japanese photographers invited by EU Japan Fest to photograph the twenty six nations of the European Union he spent twenty one days in Malta in September 2005 and a short period in Portugal in October 2004 travelling widely in both countries 53 In color these photographs are a departure from his earlier work Most are more or less candid photographs of people The collection was published in a book titled In between 8 54 Series of color photographs from short visits to Cuba 2007 and Taiwan 2013 have appeared in Asahi Camera 55 Writing edit Kikai s essays have appeared in periodicals and within some of his own photobooks They have also been collected in four books in which they are illustrated by reproductions of relevant photographs 30 Indo ya Gassan India and Gassan 1999 is a collection of essays about and photographs of India Gassan is a mountain in central Yamagata close to where Kikai was brought up Kikai muses on India and compares it with the Yamagata of his youth 44 30 Me to kaze no kioku Memories of the eye and the wind 2012 collects essays published in Yamagata Shinbun 山形新聞 since 2006 Dare omo sukoshi suki ni naru hi Memekuri bōbiroku Days when you come to like anyone a little An image turning aide memoire 2015 collects essays published in Bungakukai 文學界 since 2011 Kutsuzoku no herikata Ways to wear down shoe rubber 2016 is a fourth collection 30 Exhibitions editSupplementary English titles in parentheses are nonce translations for this article those outside parentheses and in quotation marks were used at the time A Asakusa portraits I India S Portraits of spaces T TurkeySelected solo exhibitions edit nbsp Entrance to the exhibition Tokyo Portraits at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 12 August 2011 Nagi Machinaka no kōkei 凪 町中の光景 Calm Town scenes S Konishiroku Photo Gallery Shinjuku Tokyo August September 1983 56 Indo kikō インド紀行 India travelogue I Doi Photo Plaza Shibuya Shibuya Tokyo August 1984 Art Plaza Fukuoka August 1984 Gallery Antomeru Sendai September 1984 Yamagata 1984 57 Ōtachi no shōzō Sensōji keidai 王たちの肖像 浅草寺境内 Portraits of kings in the grounds of Sensō ji A Ginza Nikon Salon Ginza Tokyo September 1988 58 Dai 13 Ina Nobuo shō jushō sakuhinten Kikai Hiroo Ōtachi no shōzō Sensōji keidai 第13伊奈信男賞受賞作品展 鬼海弘雄 王たちの肖像 浅草寺境内 Exhibition of works winning the 13th Ina Nobuo Award Hiroh Kikai Portraits of kings in the grounds of Sensō ji A Ginza Nikon Salon Ginza Tokyo Osaka Kyoto etc 1988 89 59 The Hitachi Collection of Contemporary Japanese Photography Center for Creative Photography Tucson Arizona 1989 60 Dai 13 kai Ina Nobuo shō jushō sakuhinten Kikai Hiroo Kanshō Machi no katachi 第13回伊奈信男賞受賞作品展 鬼海弘雄 観照 町のかたち Exhibition of works winning the 13th Ina Nobuo Award Hiroh Kikai Meditation Town shapes S Osaka Nikon Salon February 1990 Ginza Nikon Salon Ginza Tokyo March 1990 Kyoto etc 1990 61 Ecce Homo A Robert Koch Gallery San Francisco 1993 62 Indo kikō インド紀行 India travelogue I Shōmeidō Gallery Kodaira 1998 63 Persona 1 A Centrum Sztuki i Techniki Japonskiej Manggha Krakow 1999 60 Shashin to insatsu hyōgen 写真と印刷表現 Photographs and printing expression S Mitsumura Art Plaza Ōsaki Tokyo February March 2000 64 Persona 2 A Centrum Sztuki i Techniki Japonskiej Manggha Krakow November December 2002 65 Persona A The Third Gallery Aya Osaka October 2003 66 Persona A Domon Ken Photography Museum Sakata September November 2004 67 Persona A Ginza Nikon Salon Tokyo Osaka 2004 68 Persona A Galeria Fotografii PF Centrum Kultury Zamek Poznan February March 2005 69 Persona A Shōmeidō Gallery Kodaira January 2005 49 Perusona ぺるそな A Ginza Nikon Salon Ginza Tokyo February March 2006 Osaka Nikon Salon Osaka April 2006 70 Tōkyō mutan 東京夢譚 Tokyo dreams S Ginza Nikon Salon Ginza Tokyo September 2007 Osaka Nikon Salon Osaka October 2007 71 Tokyo Labyrinth S Yancey Richardson Gallery New York City September October 2008 72 Jinsei gekijō 人生劇場 Human theatre A Gallery Raku Kyoto University of Art and Design Kyoto March 2009 60 Persona A Yancey Richardson Gallery New York City May July 2009 73 Asakusai portrek A Liget Gallery Budapest November December 2010 74 75 Anatoria e no purosesu アナトリアへのプロセス T Aoyama Book Center Omotesandō Tokyo January 2011 76 Tōkyō pōtoreito 東京ポートレイト Tokyo portraits A S Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography Ebisu Tokyo August October 2011 77 Anatoria アナトリア T M2 Shinjuku Tokyo August 2011 78 Persona A S I T Yamagata Museum of Art Yamagata December 2011 January 2012 79 Tokyo Labyrinth S Zen Foto Gallery Roppongi Tokyo May 2013 80 Persona Perusona ペルソナ A 14th Documentary Photo Festival Miyazaki Miyazaki Prefectural Art Museum August September 2013 81 82 Asakusa Portraits 1973 2008 et India 1982 2008 A I In between Gallery Paris November 2013 83 84 85 India 1982 2011 I Canon Gallery S Shinagawa Tokyo May June 2014 86 87 Retratos de Asakusa A Tabacalera Wikidata Promocion del Arte Madrid September November 2014 88 89 90 91 92 93 India 1982 2011 I The Museum of Art Ehime Matsuyama Ehime September October 2014 94 Tokyo voyage a Asakusa A S Societe d encouragement pour l industrie nationale Paris 6 October 2015 95 India 1979 2016 I Fujifilm Photo Salon Tokyo May June 2017 96 人物 鬼海弘雄的肖像摄影 A See Art Space Gallery Beijing December 2017 February 2018 97 98 99 Persona A Photo Gallery Blue Hole Katagami Akita August 2018 January 2019 100 Persona A Kihoku town office 鬼北町役場庁舎 Kihoku Ehime February 2019 101 102 Persona A Sagae City Museum of Art Sagae Yamagata April June 2019 103 104 Persona The Final Chapter Persona saishushō Persona 最終章 A Irie Taikichi Memorial Museum of Photography Nara City September October 2019 105 106 Persona The Final Chapter 最終章 A In between Gallery Paris November December 2019 107 108 109 Ōtachi no shōzō 王たちの肖像 Portraits of kings A JCII Photo Salon Wikidata Tokyo June August 2020 110 Selected group exhibitions edit The Hitachi Collection of Contemporary Japanese Photography Center for Creative Photography University of Arizona 1988 111 Nyu dokyumentsu 1990 ニュー ドキュメンツ 1990 New Documents 1990 Museum of Modern Art Toyama Toyama 1990 62 Shashin toshi Tōkyō 写真都市Tokyo Tokyo City of Photos A Other photographers exhibited were Takanobu Hayashi Ryuji Miyamoto Daidō Moriyama Shigeichi Nagano Ikkō Narahara Mitsugu Ōnishi Masato Seto Issei Suda Akihide Tamura Tokuko Ushioda and Hiroshi Yamazaki Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 1995 29 Shashin wa nani o katareru ka 写真は何を語れるか What can photographs say I Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography June Osaka Umeda Canon Salon July Fukuoka Canon Salon August Nagoya Canon Salon September Sapporo Canon Salon October Sendai Canon Salon November 1997 112 Berlin Tokyo Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin 2006 60 Tōkyō meiro Andesu Kuero 東京迷路 アンデスケロ村 Tokyo Labyrinth Andes Qero S With Yoshiharu Sekino who exhibited photographs taken of the Q ero Shōmeidō Gallery Kodaira July 2007 113 Heavy Light Recent Photography and Video from Japan A International Center of Photography New York May September 2008 34 114 Sander s Children A Danziger Projects New York 2008 60 Mit anderen Augen Das Portrat in der zeitgenossischen Fotografie With Different Eyes The Portrait in Contemporary Photography A Die Photografische Sammlung SK Stiftung Kultur Wikidata Cologne 26 February 29 May 2016 Kunstmuseum Bonn 25 February 8 May 2016 115 Faces from Places A L Parker Stephenson Photographs Manhattan 6 May 16 July 2016 With Mike Disfarmer Sirkka Liisa Konttinen J D Okhai Ojeikere Malick Sidibe and Jacques Sonck 116 117 Permanent collections editTokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 17 photographs from the series Ōtachi no shōzō later known as Persona or Asakusa Portraits 1985 86 118 Museum of Modern Art Toyama Japan 60 Domon Ken Photography Museum Sakata Yamagata Japan 60 Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin 60 Walther Collection Neu Ulm Germany New York 16 photographs from the series Asakusa Portraits 119 Center for Creative Photography University of Arizona Tucson 60 Hood Museum of Art Dartmouth College Hanover New Hampshire 120 Museum of Fine Arts Houston Texas 60 Museum of the International Center of Photography New York 60 Mead Art Museum Amherst College Amherst Massachusetts 121 Philadelphia Museum of Art Pennsylvania 122 Publications editBooks by Kikai edit Ōtachi no shōzō Sensō ji keidai 王たちの肖像 浅草寺境内 Ecce homo Portraits of kings Yokohama Yatate 1987 NCID BN02320562 Photograph collection with captions in Japanese and English and an essay by Sadayoshi Fukuda There are forty one monochrome plates India Tokyo Misuzu Shobō 1992 ISBN 4 622 04385 8 Photograph collection with text by Kikai and Munesuke Mita in Japanese and English and captions in English There are 106 monochrome plates all landscape format Ya Chimata Ōtachi no kairō や ちまた 王たちの回廊 Ya Chimata A gallery of kings n 2 Tokyo Misuzu Shobō 1996 ISBN 4 622 04409 9 Photograph collection with text by Kikai and ten other writers in Japanese only There are 183 monochrome plates Tōkyō meiro 東京迷路 Tokyo Labyrinth Tokyo Shōgakukan 1999 ISBN 4 09 681241 2 Photograph collection with text by Andrzej Wajda Genpei Akasegawa and Suehiro Tanemura in Japanese only There are 108 monochrome plates Indo ya Gassan 印度や月山 India and Gassan Tokyo Hakusuisha 1999 ISBN 4 560 04928 9 Thirty essays and forty one photographs text in Japanese only The monochrome photographs are a mixture of landscape across two pages and portrait on single pages Shiawase Indo daichi no kodomo tachi しあわせ インド大地の子どもたち Shanti Children of India Tokyo Fukuinkan 2001 ISBN 4 8340 1779 6 Photograph collection all monochrome thirteen landscape photographs across both pages and ninety four portrait There are no captions and the text is in Japanese only n 3 Persona Tokyo Sōshisha 2003 ISBN 4 7942 1240 2 Photograph collection with captions and text by Andrzej Wajda Suehiro Tanemura and Kikai in both Japanese and English Between an additional plate at the front and back there are twelve plates in a prefatory section photographs taken well before the others and in the body of the book twenty eight plates four to a page and 138 plates on their own pages Perusona ぺるそな Persona Tokyo Sōshisha 2005 ISBN 4 7942 1450 2 Second popular edition of the 2003 Persona in a smaller format There are additional essays and photographs by Kikai captions in both Japanese and English other text in Japanese only The twelve prefatory plates of the first edition and 191 plates of the main series are each presented on a separate page there are also three more plates of photographs outside the series n 4 In between 8 Kikai Hiroo Porutogaru Maruta In between 8 鬼海弘雄 ポルトガル マルタ In between 8 Hiroh Kikai Portugal Malta Tokyo EU Japan Fest Japan Committee 2005 ISBN 4 903152 07 3 One of a series of 14 books NCID BA72485871 Photograph collection captions and text in both Japanese and English There are twenty eight colour photographs of Portugal and twenty seven of Malta n 5 Tōkyō mutan 東京夢譚 Labyrinthos Tokyo Sōshisha 2007 ISBN 4 7942 1572 X Collection of 118 monochrome photographs and essays captions for each the approximate address and the year and essays are in Japanese only Asakusa Portraits New York International Center of Photography Gottingen Steidl 2008 ISBN 978 3 86521 601 4 Collection of monochrome photographs captions and texts in English only With an interview of Kikai by Noriko Fuku essays by Kikai translated from Perusona and an essay on Asakusa by Hiromichi Hosoma Wikidata n 6 Anatoria アナトリア Anatolia Tokyo Crevis 2011 ISBN 978 4 904845 10 3 Collection of 140 monochrome photographs all landscape format of Turkey not only Anatolia With afterwords by Toshiyuki Horie and Kikai n 7 Tōkyō pōtoreito 東京ポートレイト Tokyo Portraits Tokyo Crevis 2011 ISBN 978 4 904845 14 1 Exhibition catalogue of over 150 monochrome photographs of the Asakusa portraits and portraits of spaces series Afterwords by Shinji Ishii Wikidata Iwao Matsuyama Wikidata and Nobuyuki Okabe 岡部信幸 in Japanese only captions in Japanese and English n 8 Me to kaze no kioku Shashin o meguru ese 眼と風の記憶 写真をめぐるエセー Tokyo Iwanami 2012 ISBN 978 4 00 024952 2 Essay collection Seken no hito 世間のひと Chikuma Bunko Tokyo Chikuma Shobō 2014 ISBN 978 4 480 43156 1 A bunkobon anthology of the Asakusa portrait series Dare o mo sukoshi suki ni naru hi Memekuri bōbiroku 誰をも少し好きになる日 眼めくり忘備録 Tokyo Bungei shunju 2015 ISBN 978 4 16 390215 9 Essay collection Naxie jianjian xihuan shang ren de rizi 那些渐渐喜欢上人的日子 视线所至备忘录 Hunan 浦睿文化 湖南文艺出版社 2019 ISBN 978 7 5404 9074 4 Translation into Chinese by 连子心 Tokyo View Kyoto Kazetabi sha 2016 A large format collection of 117 monochrome photographs of the portraits of spaces series Captions in Japanese and English afterword by Hideki Maeda Wikidata in Japanese only n 9 Kutsuzoku no herikata 靴族の減り方 Tokyo Chikumashobo 2016 ISBN 978 4 480 87621 8 Essay collection contains 32 full page plates from the portraits of spaces series n 10 India 1979 2016 Tokyo Crevis 2017 ISBN 978 4 904845 83 7 Black and white plates mostly one to a page with captions in Japanese With a preface by Kikai and an essay by Randy Taguchi Wikidata all in Japanese only n 11 Persona saishushō 2005 2018 Persona 最終章 2005 2018 Persona The Final Chapter 2005 2018 Tokyo Chikumashobo 2019 ISBN 978 4 480 87399 6 205 captioned black and white plates one to a page with essays by Kikai and Toshiyuki Horie all both in Japanese and in English translation n 12 Kotoba wo utsusu Kikai Hiroo taidanshu ことばを写す 鬼海弘雄対談集 Portraying words Hiroh Kikai interview collection Tokyo Heibonsha 2019 ISBN 978 4 582 23130 4 Interviews by Kikai of Taichi Yamada Nobuyoshi Araki Toshiko Hirata Wikidata Shusuke Michio Wikidata Randy Taguchi Shigeru Aoki Wikidata Toshiyuki Horie and Natsuki Ikezawa edited by Jun ichirō Yamaoka Wikidata n 13 Shanti Persona in India Tokyo Chikumashobo 2019 ISBN 978 4 480 87401 6 168 captioned black and white plates one to a page with essays by Kikai and Shinji Ishii all both in Japanese and in English translation n 14 Ōtachi no shōzō 王たちの肖像 Portraits of kings JCII Photo Salon Library 346 Tokyo JCII Photo Salon 2020 NCID BB31276856 n 15 Photographs from the series later known as Asakusa portraits from 1973 to 1986 22 photographs one per page plus four photographs on each of four pages Other books with contributions by Kikai edit Shashin toshi Tōkyō 写真都市Tokyo Tokyo City of Photos Tokyo Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 1995 Catalogue of an exhibition held in 1995 Plates 113 29 admirably printed are from Kikai s series of Asakusa portraits Captions and texts in both Japanese and English Literatura na swiecie Warsaw ISSN 0324 8305 number 1 3 2002 This special issue on Japanese literature Japonia is illustrated with photographs by Kikai taken from Ya Chimata and Tōkyō meiro Tokyo Labyrinth Text in Polish Ueda Makoto Shugō jutaku monogatari 集合住宅物語 The story of collective housing Tokyo Misuzu 2004 ISBN 4 622 07086 3 A book about collective housing in Japan from the Dōjunkai buildings onward with 165 illustrative color photographs all by Kikai Some monochrome photographs are older and are by other photographers The text by Ueda is in Japanese only Content previously 1997 2001 published in Tokyojin n 16 In between 13 nin no shashinka 25 kakoku In between 13人の写真家 25ヶ国 In between 13 photographers 25 nations Tokyo EU Japan Fest Japan Committee 2005 ISBN 4 903152 13 8 Kikai is one of the thirteen in this supplementary collection of photographs in six themes Stones and walls Words etc captions and text in both Japanese and English Miyako Harumi Messeji メッセージ The Message Tokyo Juritsusha 2006 ISBN 4 901769 41 3 A book of which about half consists of quotations from interviews with the enka singer Harumi Miyako and the other half of color photographs by Kikai The photographs are not described or identified a handful are of Miyako but most are of sea and provincial views In many the scenes are recognizably of the Kumano area just west of Kumanogawa Wakayama The text is all in Japanese n 17 Heavy Light Recent Photography and Video from Japan New York International Center of Photography Gottingen Steidl 2008 ISBN 978 3 86521 623 6 Captions and texts in English only Higashi Nihon dai jishin Shashinka 17 nin no shiten 東日本大地震 写真家17人の視点 The great east Japan earthquake The perspectives of 17 photographers Special compilation by Asahi Camera Tokyo Asahi Shinbunsha 2011 ISBN 978 4 02 330996 8 A collection of photographs of the aftermath of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami Text in Japanese only Kikai contributes six pages Sōma in early June and three towns in Miyagi in late August Kikai Hiro and Jean Francois Sabouret Wikidata Tokyo voyage a Asakusa Atlantique Editions de l Actualite Scientifique Poitou Charentes 2015 ISBN 978 2 911320 55 2 An introduction to the work of Kikai in French and Japanese Gabriele Conrath Scholl and Stephan Berg eds Mit anderen Augen Das Portrat in der zeitgenossischen Fotografie With Different Eyes The Portrait in Contemporary Photography Cologne Snoeck 2016 ISBN 978 3 86442 158 7 Catalogue of the exhibition Notes edit When romanized the name is usually spelled Hiroh but sometimes Hiroo in French contexts sometimes Hiro Ya Chimata in other contexts written in the kanji 八衢 rather than in hiragana means a place where a road divides into eight or some comparable number or a place where the paths are confusingly numerous For a dictionary definition in Japanese see 八衢 やちまた の意味 goo辞書 Fukuinkan s description in Japanese of Shanti is here Sōshisha s description in Japanese of the second edition of Persona with 24 sample photographs is here The EU Japan Fest Japan Committee s description of In between 8 is here Steidl s description of Asakusa Portraits is here Crevis s description in Japanese of Anatolia is here Crevis s description in Japanese of Tokyo Portraits is here Kazetabi s description in Japanese of Tokyo View is here Chikumashobo s description in Japanese of Kutsuzoku no herikata is here Crevis s description in Japanese of India 1979 2016 is here Chikumashobo s description in Japanese of Persona The Final Chapter is here Heibonsha s description in Japanese of Kotoba wo utsusu is here Chikumashobo s description in Japanese of Shanti is here 鬼海弘雄作品展 王たちの肖像 catalogue sales page JCII Camera Museum 2020 Accessed 27 August 2020 Misuzu s description in Japanese of Shugō jutaku monogatari is here Juritsusha s description in Japanese of The message is here Archived 21 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine References edit Note Kikai s winning of the Ina Nobuo Award in 1988 for details see below and the inclusion by 2000 of his works in the permanent collection of the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography as implied by Sumiyo Mitsuhashi 三橋純予 Mitsuhashi Sumiyo Kikai Hiroo 鬼海弘雄 Nihon shashinka jiten 日本写真家事典 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers Kyoto Tankōsha 2000 ISBN 4 473 01750 8 p 98 despite its alternative title in English the book is in Japanese only a b Domon Ken Award Domon Ken shō no rekishi to zen jushō shashinka 土門拳賞の歴史と全受賞写真家 list of award winners since 1982 accessed 6 March 2006 PSJ award 2004 nen Nihon Shashin Kyōkai shō jushōsha Place of birth siblings Kōtarō Iizawa Kikai Hiroo 鬼海弘雄 in Japanizu fotogurafazu 14nin no shashinka tachi no ima ジャパニーズ フォトグラファーズ 14人の写真家たちの いま Japanese photographers Tokyo Hakusuisha 2005 ISBN 4 560 02705 6 p 131 Despite the book s alternative English title the text is all in Japanese This article which runs pp 129 43 previously appeared in Asahi Camera November 2004 pp 248 52 Date of birth Domon Ken shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten Persona Archived 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine 土門拳賞受賞記念 鬼海弘雄写真展 Persona Hiroh Kikai photograph exhibition Persona in celebration of the Domon Ken Award Shōmeidō Gallery 松明堂ギャラリー 2005 accessed 5 March 2006 Noriyuki Kanda 神田憲行 Kanda Noriyuki Gendai no shōzō Shashinka Kikai Hiroo Jinsei no fuhen o toru to iu otoko 現代の肖像 写真家鬼海弘雄 人生の普遍を撮るという男 A portrait of today The photographer Hiroh Kikai The man who photographs the universality of life Aera 25 April 2005 p 61 the article runs pp 59 63 Film tastes Iizawa Kikai Hiroo p 132 Film as a career Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 63 Both Kikai s book Perusona Persona first impression 2005 n p and his Tōkyō Mutan Labyrinthos first impression 2007 n p say 1978 presumably first a typo or mistake and then inherited misinformation His other books India n p and Ya Chimata n p have him graduating in 1969 His book In between 8 says 1968 For details see Books by Kikai Kikai said that 1968 is correct conversation 3 March 2006 Hideko Oiwake 追分日出子 Oiwake Hideko Kindaika ni norenakatta otoko Kikai Hiroo 近代化にのれなかった男 鬼海弘雄 A man who couldn t get on board modernization Hiroh Kikai Shashin Jidai November 1984 p 141 Iizawa Kikai Hiroo pp 132 33 Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 62 Purchase and use of the Hasselblad Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 Kikai Hiroo san わたし きょう きのう あした 24 鬼海弘雄さん Me today yesterday tomorrow 24 Hiroh Kikai Croissant no 640 10 July 2004 p 98 the article runs pp 98 101 Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 62 Iizawa Kikai Hiroo p 133 Kikai Sen in techō bangō Misaki 16000 船員手帳番号 三崎16000 Seamen s Registered Number Misaki 16000 Camera Mainichi May 1973 pp 95 101 the minimal text within the latter is in Japanese only despite its secondary title in English Mitsuhashi Kikai Hiroo p 98 Iizawa Kikai Hiroo p 134 LensCulture Hiroh Kikai Hiroh Kikai LensCulture Retrieved 21 October 2020 artscape International www dnp co jp Retrieved 21 October 2020 Gotō islands Nihon o arukō 19 Kikai Hiroo to aruku Nagasaki Gotō rettō 日本を歩こう 19 鬼海弘雄と歩く 長崎 五島列島 Walking around Japan 19 Walking with Hiroh Kikai Nagasaki The Gotō islands Photo Contest July 2006 pp 4 6 8 16 Nudes Hareta hi ni 晴れた日に On clear day Asahi Camera July 2005 pp 47 52 Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 61 Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 63 Oiwake Kindaika ni norenakatta otoko p 141 By his own account in 1980 he briefly worked at an Isuzu plant in 1982 in a Subaru plant Kikai Ōtachi no shōzō Ecce homo n p for details see Books by Kikai Name of the university Domon Ken shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten Persona Archived 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine this says that he started there in 1994 Dissatisfaction Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 p 101 鬼海弘雄氏が死去 写真家 Nihon Keizai Shinbun 19 October 2020 accessed 19 October 2020 鬼海弘雄さん死去 写真家 Persona Tokyo Shinbun 20 October 2020 accessed 20 October 2020 摄影师 鬼海弘雄 将人类永恒不变的东西 以肖像记录下来 The Paper Shanghai 20 October 2020 accessed 20 October 2020 Backdrop and constraints Iizawa Kikai Hiroo pp 134 35 Autocord and Hasselblad Iizawa Kikai Hiroo p 134 Time spent waiting number photographed Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 p 98 Days with no photos three people in a day Watakushi no naka no Persona 私の中の ペルソナ My Persona Tokyojin November 2003 pp 152 53 Kikai in conversation with Midori Nakano and Taichi Yamada article runs p 148 54 Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 p 99 Watakushi no naka no Persona p 149 Watakushi no naka no Persona p 150 PSJ award PSJ Kako no jushōsha ichiran 過去の受賞者一覧 List of past PSJ award winners accessed 6 March 2006 PSJ 2004 nen Nihon Shashin Kyōkai shō jushōsha 2004年日本写真協会賞受賞者 PSJ prize winners for 2004 accessed 6 March 2006 Ina Nobuo Award announcement of 13th Ina Nobuo award 1988 第13回 1988年 伊奈信男賞 鬼海弘雄写真展 王たちの肖像 浅草寺境内 13th Ina Nobuo Award 1988 Hiroh Kikai Ecce Homo Nikon accessed 5 March 2006 Also see Ina Nobuo shō 20 nen Nikon Saron ni miru gendai shashin no nenpu 伊奈信男賞20年 ニコンサロンにみる現代写真の年譜 Ina Nobuo Award 76 95 Nikon Salon Books 23 Tokyo Nikon 1996 with a few pages devoted to the works of each of the winners of the Ina Nobuo Award to date Kikai is on pp 96 101 and also lists of the exhibitions at the Ginza and Shinjuku Nikon Salons a b Tokyo City of Photos the published catalogue of the exhibition for details see Other works with contributions by Kikai a b c d Hiroh Kikai inbetween art gallery in French 22 March 2014 Retrieved 21 October 2020 Hiroh Kikai Captures Raw Essence of Existence in Ya Chimata Cartellino Retrieved 21 October 2020 Kanda Gendai no shōzō p 60 Hiroh Kikai Persona Japan Photo info 25 June 2006 Retrieved 21 October 2020 a b Favorable reviews of Kikai s photographs in Heavy Light Roberta Smith Japanese Culture in Vivid Color New York Times 13 June 2008 accessed 17 September 2008 requires registration but no payment Heesun Wee Summer s photo finish with Atget Evans Kikai Fusco Archived 4 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Newyorkology 22 August 2008 accessed 17 September 2008 Goings On About Town New Yorker 30 June 2008 accessed 17 September 2008 Photography Jorg M Colberg Review Asakusa Portraits by Hiroh Kikai Archived 14 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine Conscientious 10 September 2008 Jorg M Colberg Best Photo Books 2008 Conscientious 16 December 2008 both accessed 1 January 2011 Fashion Paul Smith Kikai Style Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine vogue co uk 10 September 2008 accessed 17 July 2009 Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 p 99 Watashi kyō kinō ashita 24 p 98 Portraits of spaces 空間のポートレイト Kukan no pōtoreito afterword to Tōkyō meiro Tokyo Labyrinth for details see Books by Kikai Time quantity Noriyuki Kanda Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō Miru me erabu me 鬼海弘雄の東京 見る目 選ぶ目 The Tokyo of Hiroh Kikai The seeing eye the selecting eye Asahi Camera November 2006 pp 232 33 Time Tōkyō meiro o megutte 東京迷路 をめぐって About Tokyo Labyrinth Tokyojin February 2000 p 110 Kikai in conversation with Suehiro Tanemura and Iwao Matsuyama 松山巖 Peopling snapshots image reflection of life seikatsu no kage 生活の影 Tōkyō meiro o megutte p 109 Kanda Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō Waiting for the unexpected avoidance of contact prints Kanda Kikai Hiroo no Tōkyō See for example Nagi 凪 Calm Camera Mainichi June 1976 pp 119 25 Standard lens afterword to Tōkyō meiro Tokyo Labyrinth Sōshi is produced by Sōshisha the publisher of Labyrinthos Some photographs within the book had also appeared elsewhere e g issue 2 October 2004 of Tamaya たまや Tokyo Polka Archived 5 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine was a series of essays each illustrated with photographs accessed 24 February 2006 as of 28 May 2007 the essays and photographs had been removed leaving only a short description earlier versions do not seem to be available via the Wayback Machine Continues in Yurari yurayura ki Archived 3 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Tōkyō Meiro o megutte pp 114 115 Color photographs of India Kikai Indo Higan to shigan インド 彼岸と此岸 India The world of the Buddha and our world Camera Mainichi November 1981 pp 24 29 Kikai mentions use of a Minolta Autocord and a Rolleiflex On Tokyo Tōkyō Meiro o megutte p 115 Kazuo Nishii Kikai Hiroo India 鬼海弘雄 India in Shashinteki kioku 写真的記憶 Photographic memories Tokyo Seikyusha 1997 ISBN 4 7872 7072 9 173 77 first appeared in an unspecified publication of Misuzu Shobō November 1992 Society of Photography Awards 1 1989 10 1998 Archived 26 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine accessed 4 April 2007 Afterword Shiawase Shanti for details see Books by Kikai a b Domon Ken shō jushō kinen Kikai Hiroo shashinten Persona Archived 10 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Hyakunengo nimo hibiku koe o totta tabi 百年後にも響く声を撮った旅 Asahi Camera November 2010 p 225 As installments of Anatoria kikō アナトリア紀行 A Journey to Anatolia Asahi Camera June 2001 pp 55 61 January 2003 pp 72 79 March 2006 pp 68 75 Also Anatoria アナトリア Anatolia Turkey Asahi Camera November 2010 pp 37 46 Anatoria kikō アナトリア紀行 Backroad to Anatolia Part 1 Archived 2 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Part 2 Archived 23 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine asahicamera net both accessed 26 March 2010 Requires Flash Length of stay in Malta Hiroh Kikai In between 8 n p for details see Books by Kikai Month and year Kikai Porutogaru kikō ポルトガル紀行 My Portugal Nippon Camera December 2005 p 16 Archive Asia Art In between 8 Hiroh Kikai Portugal Malta Asia Art Archive Retrieved 21 October 2020 Kikai Habana no heijitsu ハバナの平日 Ordinary Days in Havana Cuba 2007 Asahi Camera October 2007 pp 47 56 Kikai Taiwan e 台湾へ Asahi Camera November 2013 pp 29 36 Shashinten purebyu 写真展プレビュー Photo Exhibition Guide Nippon Camera September 1983 p 130 Other lists of Kikai s past exhibitions give the place as Konica Photo Gallery or Konica Photo Plaza these are anachronistic Shibuya Shashinten gaido 写真展ガイド Photo exhibition guide Asahi Camera August 1984 p 13 Fukuoka Sendai Shashinten gaido Asahi Camera September 1984 pp 14 16 In Ōtachi no shōzō Ecce homo n p Kikai lists the Fukuoka exhibition as more specifically in Hakata Antomeru is a transliteration of アントメル Yamagata Kikai Hiroo Indo ya gassan shashinka 鬼海弘雄 印度や月山 写真家 Yamagata no yumeijin 山形の有名人 2005 accessed 25 May 2008 not specifying the gallery Ginza Nikon Salon Ina Nobuo shō 20 nen p 154 Kōtarō Iizawa Shashin no seitōteki na hyōgen ni deau 写真の正統的な表現に出会う Shashin no genzai Kuronikuru 1983 1992 写真の現在 クロニクル1983 1992 Tokyo Miraisha 1993 ISBN 4 624 71061 4 pp 208 209 essay first appeared in Photo Contest November 1988 Ginza Nikon Salon Ina Nobuo shō 20 nen p 154 Tokyo Osaka Kyoto etc Kikai Hiroo Indo ya gassan shashinka specifying the cities but not the galleries a b c d e f g h i j k Jinsei gekijō Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kyoto University of Art and Design accessed 20 January 2009 Ginza Ina Nobuo shō 20 nen p 154 Osaka and Ginza Shashinten gaido 写真展ガイド Gallery Guide Asahi Camera March 1990 pp 135 132 Tokyo Osaka Kyoto etc Kikai Hiroo Indo ya gassan shashinka specifying the cities but not the galleries a b Tokyo City of Photos n p Kikai Hiroo Indo ya gassan shashinka Exhibition history Archived 22 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine Mitsumura Printing Company accessed 25 May 2008 Miesiac Fotografii w Krakowie Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine fotopolis pl accessed 25 May 2008 Wojciech Wilczyk Miesiac Fotografii w Krakowie Spozniona relacja Fototapeta 2002 accessed 17 July 2009 Persona Archived 27 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Third Gallery Aya accessed 16 March 2009 Shashinten gaido 写真展ガイド Gallery Guide Asahi Camera October 2004 p 309 Kikai In between 8 n p Tokyo City of Photos n p Hiro Kikai w Galerii PF Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine fotopolis pl accessed 9 March 2006 Marta Newelska Marta O ludzie Archived 20 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Japonica Creativa accessed 9 March 2006 Perusona Tokyo Perusona Osaka Nikon accessed 25 May 2008 Tōkyō mutan Tokyo Tōkyō mutan Osaka Nikon accessed 25 May 2008 Yancey Richardson exhibition notice Archived 22 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine re title com accessed 2 December 2009 Hiroh Kikai Persona permanent dead link PDF file yanceyrichardson com accessed 15 May 2009 Kurti Emese Kiallitas Arcokbol a vilagot Hiroh Kikai Asakusai portrek Magyar Narancs accessed 30 November 2014 A Liget Galeria kiallitasai 2002 tol Exhibitions at the Liget Gallery till 2012 Liget Gallery accessed 30 November 2014 Anatoria e no purosesu Archived 20 July 2012 at archive today Aoyama Book Center accessed 14 January 2011 Hiroh Kikai Tokyo Portraits Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography accessed 6 August 2011 Anatoria M2 accessed 22 August 2011 Kikai Hiroo shashinten Persona Archived 26 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 鬼海弘雄写真展 Persona Yamagata Museum of Art accessed 10 December 2011 Exhibition notice Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine JPEG Zen Foto Gallery accessed 6 November 2013 Exhibition notice Archived 3 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine Documentary Photo Festival Miyazaki 27 August 2013 accessed 15 September 2014 Exhibition notice Archived 15 September 2014 at archive today Mainichi Shinbun 29 August 2013 accessed 15 September 2014 Exhibition notice Archived 29 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine In between Gallery accessed 6 November 2013 Exhibition notice L Œil de la Photographie 11 November 2013 accessed 15 September 2014 Jean Sebastien Stehli Hiroh Kikai un maitre japonais Photo sensible Le Figaro fr Madame 10 November 2013 accessed 2 September 2015 Exhibition notice Canon accessed 15 September 2014 Exhibition notice Misuzu Shobō accessed 15 September 2014 Exhibition notice Ministry of Education Culture and Sport accessed 15 September 2014 Exhibition notice XTRart accessed 15 September 2014 Los retratos de Asakusa desde 1973 hasta hoy de Hiroh Kikai Xatakafoto 20 September 2014 Accessed 22 September 2014 ArteTabacalera PromociondeArte Presentacion Retratos de Asakusa Hiroh Kikai InfoArte fotoBlog 18 September 2014 Accessed 22 September 2014 Retratos de Asakusa del Hiroh Kikai en Madrid Archived 24 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Eikyo Influencias japonesas 21 September 2014 Accessed 22 September 2014 Retratos de Asakusa hoyesarte com 18 September 2014 Accessed 25 September 2014 美術の秋開幕 注目の展覧会 pitibo2000のブログ 25 September 2014 accessed 27 April 2019 Exposition de photographies de Kikai Hiro Tokyo voyage a Asakusa Espace Mendes France インドの時の流れに身も心も浮かべて 鬼海弘雄写真展 India 1979 2016 Fujifilm accessed 27 April 2019 photographs See accessed 27 April 2019 2017年收官特展 lt 人物 gt 鬼海弘雄的肖像摄影 自由微信 FreeWeChat 5 December 2017 accessed 27 April 2019 鬼海弘雄 40多年 我在寻找对方内心深处的自己 界面 Jiemian 28 December 2017 accessed 27 April 2019 Persona 鬼海弘雄 Blue Hole accessed 27 April 2019 鬼海弘雄写真展 PERSONA Archived 27 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Nippon Travel Agency accessed 27 April 2019 鬼海弘雄写真展 PERSONA Imanani accessed 27 April 2019 Sagae shi Bijutsukan 寒河江市美術館 Sagae City accessed 27 April 2019 Kikai Hiroo shashinten 鬼海弘雄 写真展 Facebook accessed 27 April 2019 鬼海弘雄 PERSONA 最終章 Irie Taikichi Memorial Museum of Photography Nara City 7 September 2019 Accessed 14 September 2019 鬼海弘雄 PERSONA 最終章 permanent dead link Internet Museum Accessed 14 September 2019 Persona The Final Chapter 最終章 In between record vol 42 In between Gallery Accessed 24 November 2019 Luigi Clavaro in between record vol 42 Hiroh Kikai Persona The Final Chapter Actuphoto 12 October 2019 Accessed 24 November 2019 Persona The Final Chapter Hiroh Kikai Le Japon a Paris Accessed 24 November 2019 鬼海弘雄作品展 王たちの肖像 exhibition notice JCII Camera Museum 2020 Accessed 27 August 2020 Tokyo City of Photos n p Kikai India n p for the latter book see Books by Kikai Shashin wa nani o katareru ka 写真は何を語れるか Tokyo Canon 1997 3 Kikai Hiroo Sekino Yoshiharu shashinten Tōkyō meiro Andesu Kuero mura Archived 14 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine 鬼海弘雄 関野吉晴 写真展 東京迷路 アンデスケロ村 Hiroh Kikai Yoshiharu Sekino photograph exhibition Tokyo labyrinth Andes Qero Shōmeidō Gallery 2007 accessed 25 May 2008 Heavy Light Archived 13 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine ICP 2008 accessed 5 June 2008 Exhibition notice Archived 25 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Kunstmuseum Bonn accessed 9 May 2016 Exhibition notice New York Art Beat Accessed 14 June 2016 Meyers William 10 June 2016 Portraits Painterly Photographs and the Pacific Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 19 October 2020 Search results Archived 29 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography Accessed 11 March 2013 Kikai Hiroh Walther Collection Accessed 28 October 2020 Emily S Burke Photography Modern and Contemporary Art at Dartmouth Highlights from the Hood Museum of Art Hanover N H University Press of New England 2009 ISBN 1 58465 786 3 p 195 Annual report for the year 2010 2011 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine PDF Amherst College 2011 p 9 Accessed 16 September 2014 Catalogue entry Philadelphia Museum of Art Accessed 16 September 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hiroh Kikai Official website Website accompanying the 2015 Paris exhibition Tokyo voyage a Asakusa in French and Japanese Hiroh Kikai Crevis クレヴィス Fallis Greg Hiroh Kikai Sunday Salon Utata Tribal Photography in English Feustel Marc Hiroh Kikai talks about photography LensCulture 2008 Interview with 10 sample photographs in English Feustel Marc Hiroh Kikai A man in the cosmos Eyecurious 10 February 2010 Interview with sample photographs in English Hiroh Kikai Studio Equis Short biography with a set of images whose display requires Flash Player 8 in English Hiroh Kikai Yancey Richardson Gallery New York Photographs from the Persona Asakusa Portraits series Hiroh Kikai Asakusai portrei Interview with Hiroh Kikai Liget Gallery Translations of a long interview of Kikai by Noriko Fuku in Hungarian and English Kikai Hiroh Yurari yurayura ki ゆらりゆらゆら記 A series of essays each illustrated with photographs in Japanese Kikai Hiroo Shashin shika dekinai koto 写真しかできないこと The Photographer 2007 Fujifilm Samples of Kikai s work in Japanese Mirapaul Evan Musings from a Trip to Japan III Kikai Fugitive Vision 13 November 2007 Mirapaul comments on the Asakusa portrait series in English Asakusa Portraits by Hiroh Kikai PDF Liget Galeria Budapest Lavishly illustrated proposal for an exhibition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hiroh Kikai amp oldid 1215442462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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