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Kiyoji Ōtsuji

Kiyoji Ōtsuji (大辻 清司, Ōtsuji Kiyoji, 1923–2001) was a Japanese photographer, photography theorist, and educator. He was active in the avant-garde art world in Japan after World War II, both creating his own experimental photographs, and taking widely circulated documentary photographs of other artists and art projects. He became an authority in Japanese photography, extensively publishing commentaries and educating future generations of photographers.[1]

Biography edit

Early life: 1923–1945 edit

Ōtsuji was born in the Kōtō ward of Tokyo on July 27, 1923. He first became interested in photography when he purchased back issues of the photography periodical Photo Times from a used book store. Through Photo Times he first encountered avant-garde photography from Europe, the United States, and Japan, and was deeply inspired by the photography criticism of Shūzō Takiguchi and Abe Nobuya.[2]

In 1942, Ōtsuji enrolled in the art department at the Tokyo Professional School of Photography (today Tokyo Polytechnic University). In 1943, in the middle of his studies, he was drafted into the army and trained as an aircraft mechanic. He later graduated from the Tokyo Professional School of Photography in 1944.[2]

Early career: 1945–1952 edit

In 1945, after World War II, Ōtsuji returned to Tokyo and began work as a photographer at Takabayashi Studio, a photography studio run by Takabayashi Takafusa and Takabayashi Yasushi. In 1946, he met the artist Yoshishige Saitō, who invited him to join the magazine Katei Bunka (Home Culture). Ōtsuji worked as a staff photographer for Katei Bunka for one year. In 1947, he opened his own photography studio in Sendagaya, Tokyo.[2]

In 1949, Ōtsuji joined the modernist exhibition society Bijutsu Bunka Kyōkai ("Art and Culture Association") and showed his photograph Itamashiki Buttai ("Painful Object").[3] The same year, he and other alumni from the Tokyo Professional School of Photography began to publish the magazine Fotogurafii ("Photography"), to which Ōtsuji contributed several written essays on photography.

Ōtsuji's early individual works are often viewed as a re-exploration of prewar Surrealist photography in Japan.[4] For example, his work Aishi ni tsuite ("About Feet") (1949) captures a raw chicken positioned upside down with its legs dramatically crossed in mid-air, thus offering a strange, almost lifelike view of the dead animal. Another early series of photographs, shot in the leading Bijutsu Bunka member Nobuya Abe's studio in 1950, depict the future Jikken Kōbō member Hideko Fukushima and other women, both clothed and nude, posing within a geometric network of strings, thus appearing like dolls or puppets.[5] Following these examples, for the rest of his career, Ōtsuji's individual work continued to explore the presence of objects (もの, mono) – ready-made or found objects – and to capture their ephemerality with his camera.[4]

Additionally, Ōtsuji continued to take on contract jobs, including photographing the pianist Alfred Cortot during his visit to Japan.[2]

Work with avant-garde groups: 1953–1959 edit

In 1953, Ōtsuji collaborated with the avant-garde art collective Jikken Kōbō on a project for the weekly graphic magazine Asahi Picture News, a serialized section of Asahi Graph. Each artist constructed a three-dimensional assemblage containing the letters "A," "P," and "N" and Ōtsuji photographed the object.[6] Each photograph was printed as a small header in the top corner of the Asahi Picture News double-page spread. After this project, Ōtsuji joined the group as an official member. He contributed photographs made into autoslide projections for the 5th Experimental Workshop Presentation in 1953, and continued to photograph the group's events and rehearsals until they split up in 1957.

In 1953, Ōtsuji also joined Gurafikku Shudan ("Graphic Group"), a group of photographers and designers, with whom he exhibited photography and collaborated on publications and other projects.[7] In 1955, Ōtsuji screened the experimental film Kine Calligraph at the 2nd Graphic Group Presentation. The film, produced with Yasuhiro Ishimoto and Saiko Tsuji, with a score by Tōru Takemitsu, involved painting directly onto film to create purely abstract effects.[8] It was an early example of abstract film in Japan.

From 1956 to 1959, Ōtsuji worked as a part-time photographer for the art magazine Geijutsu Shinchō, contributing photographs for articles covering art, design, architecture, music, theater, dance and film.[3][7] His photographs ranged from portraits of artists to documentation of performances, putting him in contact with some of the most prominent figures in the Japanese art world. He notably photographed works by Gutai members at the 2nd Gutai Art Exhibition in 1956, as well as Tatsumi Hijikata’s performances of Butoh, among other major events.[9]

Throughout the 1950s, Ōtsuji continued to experiment both with photographic expression and with the photographic apparatus. In 1956, he took a series of close-up photographs of Lake Ōnuma, focusing on such images as slanted lines left behind on its frozen surface by ice skates. With none of the surrounding landscape depicted, the icy surface resembled gestural abstraction.[10] He built his own camera and even devised a cinematic device called an "autoscope" that was used to project images at the Sekiya Industries booth at the Japan International Trade Fair in Tokyo in 1957.[7]

Teaching, publishing, and writing: 1960s–1970s edit

Ōtsuji began to spend more time teaching in the 1960s. From 1960 to 1970, Ōtsuji was a lecturer at the Tokyo College of Photography. This was his first teaching position. He also lectured at the Musashino Art University in the 1960s, and was appointed a professor at Tokyo Zōkei University from 1967 to 1976. Ōtsuji became a professor at University of Tsukuba in 1976, where he taught until 1987.[11]

Around 1965, Ōtsuji began to frequently contribute essays and articles to photography magazines such as Camera Mainichi, Camera Jidai, S D: Space Design, and Shashin Hihyō, among others. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, he also continued to experiment with his individual works and publish them, often alongside his texts. In the 1970s, his published works became increasingly theoretical. A series of photographs for Asahi Camera, "Ōtsuji Kiyoji Experimental Workshop of Photography" (1975), featured both essays and photographs that considered the theoretical issues surrounding photography as a process and discipline.[12] His series Hitohako no kako ("Past of One Tin Can") was created for his first solo exhibition in 1977, and featured a 23-photograph sequence showing a can of memories being unpacked and individual elements examined by the camera – including old photographs.[13] The series can be seen as a prolonged meditation on the object, which had interested him since his early career.[4]

Although no longer working on the staff of Geijutsu Shinchō, Ōtsuji continued to take on contract work for the magazine and others, including S D and Bijutsu Techō. He also began photographing artwork for books and exhibition catalogues, and continued to do so until late in his career.[11]

In 1968, he famously coined the term konpora, derived from kontenporarī fotogurafī (contemporary photography), which he used to describe a certain type of documentary photography newly present in Japan that had affinities with the work of Western documentary photographers Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand.[14] Exemplified by two photo books published in 1971 – Hibi (Day to Day) by Ōtsuji’s student Shigeo Gochō, and A Sentimental Journey by Araki Nobuyoshikonpora photography’s clear, steady images were a contrasting response to the 'are-bure-boke' ( 'grainy/rough, blurry, out-of-focus') style of documentary photography published in Provoke. Instead of Provoke’s negative, anti-establishment attitude, konpora photographers attempted to capture the world dispassionately, with simple, straightforward snapshots of commonplace, ordinary subjects.[15][16]

By the 1970s, Ōtsuji’s authority in the Japanese photography world had solidified, and in addition to publishing frequently, he was asked to become a regular guest in a series of roundtable discussions published in Asahi Camera titled "Roundtable: On Talked-About Photographs," where he was joined by other prominent photographers. He participated in these discussions in 1974, from 1976 to 1978, and again in 1985.[11]

Ōtsuji's students include Yutaka Takanashi, Shinzō Shimao, Tokuko Ushioda, Shigeo Gochō and Naoya Hatakeyama.

Later career: 1980s–2001 edit

After leaving University of Tsukuba in 1987, Ōtsuji was a professor at Kyushu Sangyō University until 1996. He spent the later decades continuing to publish his photographs and essays widely, but his contract work decreased and he began to show his own works in such prominent venues as the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, the Chiba City Museum of Art, Meguro Museum of Art, Tokyo, and others. In the last few years of his life, an initiative was established to preserve his negatives, and he received recognition through several major solo exhibitions and the publication of the photo book Kiyoji Ōtsuji (Japanese Photographers 21) by Iwanami Shoten in 1999.[17]

Selected solo and group exhibitions edit

  • 9th–12th Bijutsu Bunka Exhibitions, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, 1949–1952
  • Ogawa Yoshikazu and Ōtsuji Kiyoji Two-Man Show, Takemiya Gallery, Tokyo, 1952
  • The 5th Experimental Workshop Presentation, Daiichi Seimei Hall, Tokyo, 1953
  • 1st–3rd Graphic Group Exhibitions, Matsuya Department Store, Ginza, 1953, 1955–1956; 4th Graphic Group Exhibition, Konishiroku Gallery, Tokyo, 1956
  • From Space to Environment, Matsuya Department Store, Ginza, Tokyo, 1966
  • Past of One Tin Can, Prism, Tokyo, 1977
  • Exhibition Ōtsuji Kiyoji, Tokyo Gallery, Tokyo, 1987
  • Ōtsuji Kiyoji 1948–1987 Exhibition, University of Tsukuba Gallery, Tsukuba, 1987
  • The Age of Modernism, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 1995
  • Ōtsuji Kiyoji Portfolio, Mole, Tokyo, 1997
  • Kiyoji Ōtsuji Retrospective: Experimental Workshop of Photography, National Film Center, National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, 1999
  • Kiyoji Ōtsuji and Fifteen Photographers, Tokyo Zōkei University Yokoyama Memorial Manzu Art Museum, Tokyo, 1999
  • Kiyoji Ōtsuji: Shūzō Takiguchi & Yoshishige Saitō on Photo, Museum of Modern Art, Toyama, 2003
  • Kiyoji Ōtsuji: Photographs as Collaborations, Shoto Museum of Art, Tokyo, 2007
  • APN Research, Kunsthalle Bern, 2012
  • Kiyoji Ōtsuji "Photographic Archive": The Traces of the Photographer and the Art of His Era 1940–1980, Musashino Art University Museum & Library, Tokyo, 2012
  • Gutai: Splendid Playground, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2013
  • Jikken Kōbō: Experimental Workshop, Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura, 2013
  • Ōtsuji Kiyoji, Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, 2013
  • For a New World to Come: Experiments in Japanese Art and Photography, 1968–1979, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 2015
  • Japanese Photography from Postwar to Now, SF MoMA, San Francisco, 2016

Collections and archives edit

Ōtsuji’s photographic archives are held by the Musashino Art University Museum & Library. Prints of his photographs are also held in the collections of the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, the Tate Modern, the Museum of Modern Art, SF MoMA, and M+ Hong Kong.

Sources edit

  • Obinata Kin’ichi, ed. 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library. Tokyo: Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan + Toshokan, 2016.
  • The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, ed. 大辻清司写真実験室 = Kiyoji Ohtsuji retrospective--experimental workshop of photography. Tokyo: Tōkyō Kokuritsu Kindai Bijutsukan, 1999.
  • Nakamori Yasufumi, ed. For a New World To Come: Experiments in Japanese art and photography, 1968–1979. Houston: The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin'ichi, eds. 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション: 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵. 1 = Musashino Art University Museum & Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection. 1. Tōkyō: Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan, Toshokan, 2017.
  • Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin'ichi, eds. 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション: 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵. 2, 人間と物質 = Musashino Art University Museum & Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection. 2, Between man and matter. Tōkyō: Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan, Toshokan, 2018.
  • Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin'ichi, eds. 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション: 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵. 3, アトリエ訪問 = Musashino Art University Museum & Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection. 3, Studio visit. Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan, Toshokan, 2019.
  • Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin'ichi, eds. 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション = Kiyoji Otsuji photography archive film collection: 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵. 4 = Musashino Art University Museum & Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection. 4. Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan, Toshokan, 2020.

References edit

  1. ^ (in Japanese) Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, editor. 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers (『日本写真家事典』, Nihon shashinka jiten). Kyoto: Tankōsha, 2000. ISBN 4-473-01750-8.
  2. ^ a b c d Obinata, Kin'ichi, ed. (2016). 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library. Tokyo: Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan + Toshokan. p. 325.
  3. ^ a b Hatakeyama Naoya (March 2003). "実験中断:大辻清司". 美術手帖 (in Japanese): 149.
  4. ^ a b c Tezuka, Miwako (2015). "Kiyoji Otsuji". In Nakamori, Yasufumi (ed.). For a new world to come: Experiments in Japanese art and photography, 1968–1979. Houston Museum of Fine Arts. Houston. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-300-20782-8. OCLC 886474974.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Obinata Kin'ichi, "The Creation of Song Without Words – Kiyoji Otsuji’s 1956," 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library, 39.
  6. ^ Mermod, Melanie; Rossetti, Emmanuel (2012). APN research [an exhibition], Kunsthalle Bern, 25.08.2012 – 10.10.2012. Bern: Kunsthalle Bern.
  7. ^ a b c 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library, 326.
  8. ^ Kusahara, Machiko (2016). "Proto-media art: Revisiting Japanese Postwar Avant-garde Art". A companion to digital art. Christiane Paul. Chichester, West Sussex. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-118-47521-8. OCLC 925426732.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Ōtani, Shogo (1999). "Documentation and Expression, Kiyoji Otsuji". In Masuda Rei, and Ōtani Shogo (ed.). 大辻清司写真実験室 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji Retrospective: Experimental Workshop of Photography. Tokyo: The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. p. 127.
  10. ^ Obinata Kin'ichi, "The Creation of Song Without Words – Kiyoji Otsuji’s 1956," 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library, 36.
  11. ^ a b c Obinata, Kin'ichi, ed. (2016). 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library. Tokyo: Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan + Toshokan. pp. 327–330.
  12. ^ The history of Japanese photography. Anne Tucker, Kōtarō Iizawa, Naoyuki Kinoshita, 耕太郎 飯沢, 直之 木下, Houston Museum of Fine Arts. New Haven: Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. 2003. p. 357. ISBN 0-300-09925-8. OCLC 50511438.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  13. ^ Masuda, Rei (1999). Masuda Rei, Ōtani Shogo (ed.). 大辻清司写真実験室 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji Retrospective: Experimental Workshop of Photography. Tokyo: The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. p. 123.
  14. ^ Nakamori, Yasufumi (2015). "Experiments with the Camera: Art and Photography in 1970s Japan". In Nakamori, Yasufumi (ed.). For a new world to come: Experiments in Japanese art and photography, 1968–1979. Houston Museum of Fine Arts. Houston. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-300-20782-8. OCLC 886474974.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Iizawa, Kōtarō (2003). "The Evolution of Postwar Photography". The history of Japanese photography. Anne Tucker, Kōtarō Iizawa, Naoyuki Kinoshita, 耕太郎 飯沢, 直之 木下, Houston Museum of Fine Arts. New Haven: Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. p. 222. ISBN 0-300-09925-8. OCLC 50511438.
  16. ^ Minoru Shimizu (2014). "Premature Postmodernism: A Matrix for Japanese Photography of the 1970s". Image and Matter in Japanese Photography from the 1970s. New York: Marianne Boesky Gallery. p. 8.
  17. ^ Obinata Kin'ichi, "The Creation of Song Without Words – Kiyoji Otsuji’s 1956," 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館・図書館所蔵作品目錄 = Ōtsuji Kiyoji: Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum & Library, 330–331.

kiyoji, Ōtsuji, 大辻, 清司, Ōtsuji, kiyoji, 1923, 2001, japanese, photographer, photography, theorist, educator, active, avant, garde, world, japan, after, world, both, creating, experimental, photographs, taking, widely, circulated, documentary, photographs, othe. Kiyoji Ōtsuji 大辻 清司 Ōtsuji Kiyoji 1923 2001 was a Japanese photographer photography theorist and educator He was active in the avant garde art world in Japan after World War II both creating his own experimental photographs and taking widely circulated documentary photographs of other artists and art projects He became an authority in Japanese photography extensively publishing commentaries and educating future generations of photographers 1 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1923 1945 1 2 Early career 1945 1952 1 3 Work with avant garde groups 1953 1959 1 4 Teaching publishing and writing 1960s 1970s 1 5 Later career 1980s 2001 2 Selected solo and group exhibitions 3 Collections and archives 4 Sources 5 Further reading 6 ReferencesBiography editEarly life 1923 1945 edit Ōtsuji was born in the Kōtō ward of Tokyo on July 27 1923 He first became interested in photography when he purchased back issues of the photography periodical Photo Times from a used book store Through Photo Times he first encountered avant garde photography from Europe the United States and Japan and was deeply inspired by the photography criticism of Shuzō Takiguchi and Abe Nobuya 2 In 1942 Ōtsuji enrolled in the art department at the Tokyo Professional School of Photography today Tokyo Polytechnic University In 1943 in the middle of his studies he was drafted into the army and trained as an aircraft mechanic He later graduated from the Tokyo Professional School of Photography in 1944 2 Early career 1945 1952 edit In 1945 after World War II Ōtsuji returned to Tokyo and began work as a photographer at Takabayashi Studio a photography studio run by Takabayashi Takafusa and Takabayashi Yasushi In 1946 he met the artist Yoshishige Saitō who invited him to join the magazine Katei Bunka Home Culture Ōtsuji worked as a staff photographer for Katei Bunka for one year In 1947 he opened his own photography studio in Sendagaya Tokyo 2 In 1949 Ōtsuji joined the modernist exhibition society Bijutsu Bunka Kyōkai Art and Culture Association and showed his photograph Itamashiki Buttai Painful Object 3 The same year he and other alumni from the Tokyo Professional School of Photography began to publish the magazine Fotogurafii Photography to which Ōtsuji contributed several written essays on photography Ōtsuji s early individual works are often viewed as a re exploration of prewar Surrealist photography in Japan 4 For example his work Aishi ni tsuite About Feet 1949 captures a raw chicken positioned upside down with its legs dramatically crossed in mid air thus offering a strange almost lifelike view of the dead animal Another early series of photographs shot in the leading Bijutsu Bunka member Nobuya Abe s studio in 1950 depict the future Jikken Kōbō member Hideko Fukushima and other women both clothed and nude posing within a geometric network of strings thus appearing like dolls or puppets 5 Following these examples for the rest of his career Ōtsuji s individual work continued to explore the presence of objects もの mono ready made or found objects and to capture their ephemerality with his camera 4 Additionally Ōtsuji continued to take on contract jobs including photographing the pianist Alfred Cortot during his visit to Japan 2 Work with avant garde groups 1953 1959 edit In 1953 Ōtsuji collaborated with the avant garde art collective Jikken Kōbō on a project for the weekly graphic magazine Asahi Picture News a serialized section of Asahi Graph Each artist constructed a three dimensional assemblage containing the letters A P and N and Ōtsuji photographed the object 6 Each photograph was printed as a small header in the top corner of the Asahi Picture News double page spread After this project Ōtsuji joined the group as an official member He contributed photographs made into autoslide projections for the 5th Experimental Workshop Presentation in 1953 and continued to photograph the group s events and rehearsals until they split up in 1957 In 1953 Ōtsuji also joined Gurafikku Shudan Graphic Group a group of photographers and designers with whom he exhibited photography and collaborated on publications and other projects 7 In 1955 Ōtsuji screened the experimental film Kine Calligraph at the 2nd Graphic Group Presentation The film produced with Yasuhiro Ishimoto and Saiko Tsuji with a score by Tōru Takemitsu involved painting directly onto film to create purely abstract effects 8 It was an early example of abstract film in Japan From 1956 to 1959 Ōtsuji worked as a part time photographer for the art magazine Geijutsu Shinchō contributing photographs for articles covering art design architecture music theater dance and film 3 7 His photographs ranged from portraits of artists to documentation of performances putting him in contact with some of the most prominent figures in the Japanese art world He notably photographed works by Gutai members at the 2nd Gutai Art Exhibition in 1956 as well as Tatsumi Hijikata s performances of Butoh among other major events 9 Throughout the 1950s Ōtsuji continued to experiment both with photographic expression and with the photographic apparatus In 1956 he took a series of close up photographs of Lake Ōnuma focusing on such images as slanted lines left behind on its frozen surface by ice skates With none of the surrounding landscape depicted the icy surface resembled gestural abstraction 10 He built his own camera and even devised a cinematic device called an autoscope that was used to project images at the Sekiya Industries booth at the Japan International Trade Fair in Tokyo in 1957 7 Teaching publishing and writing 1960s 1970s edit Ōtsuji began to spend more time teaching in the 1960s From 1960 to 1970 Ōtsuji was a lecturer at the Tokyo College of Photography This was his first teaching position He also lectured at the Musashino Art University in the 1960s and was appointed a professor at Tokyo Zōkei University from 1967 to 1976 Ōtsuji became a professor at University of Tsukuba in 1976 where he taught until 1987 11 Around 1965 Ōtsuji began to frequently contribute essays and articles to photography magazines such as Camera Mainichi Camera Jidai S D Space Design and Shashin Hihyō among others Throughout the 1960s and 1970s he also continued to experiment with his individual works and publish them often alongside his texts In the 1970s his published works became increasingly theoretical A series of photographs for Asahi Camera Ōtsuji Kiyoji Experimental Workshop of Photography 1975 featured both essays and photographs that considered the theoretical issues surrounding photography as a process and discipline 12 His series Hitohako no kako Past of One Tin Can was created for his first solo exhibition in 1977 and featured a 23 photograph sequence showing a can of memories being unpacked and individual elements examined by the camera including old photographs 13 The series can be seen as a prolonged meditation on the object which had interested him since his early career 4 Although no longer working on the staff of Geijutsu Shinchō Ōtsuji continued to take on contract work for the magazine and others including S D and Bijutsu Techō He also began photographing artwork for books and exhibition catalogues and continued to do so until late in his career 11 In 1968 he famously coined the term konpora derived from kontenporari fotogurafi contemporary photography which he used to describe a certain type of documentary photography newly present in Japan that had affinities with the work of Western documentary photographers Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand 14 Exemplified by two photo books published in 1971 Hibi Day to Day by Ōtsuji s student Shigeo Gochō and A Sentimental Journey by Araki Nobuyoshi konpora photography s clear steady images were a contrasting response to the are bure boke grainy rough blurry out of focus style of documentary photography published in Provoke Instead of Provoke s negative anti establishment attitude konpora photographers attempted to capture the world dispassionately with simple straightforward snapshots of commonplace ordinary subjects 15 16 By the 1970s Ōtsuji s authority in the Japanese photography world had solidified and in addition to publishing frequently he was asked to become a regular guest in a series of roundtable discussions published in Asahi Camera titled Roundtable On Talked About Photographs where he was joined by other prominent photographers He participated in these discussions in 1974 from 1976 to 1978 and again in 1985 11 Ōtsuji s students include Yutaka Takanashi Shinzō Shimao Tokuko Ushioda Shigeo Gochō and Naoya Hatakeyama Later career 1980s 2001 edit After leaving University of Tsukuba in 1987 Ōtsuji was a professor at Kyushu Sangyō University until 1996 He spent the later decades continuing to publish his photographs and essays widely but his contract work decreased and he began to show his own works in such prominent venues as the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography the Chiba City Museum of Art Meguro Museum of Art Tokyo and others In the last few years of his life an initiative was established to preserve his negatives and he received recognition through several major solo exhibitions and the publication of the photo book Kiyoji Ōtsuji Japanese Photographers 21 by Iwanami Shoten in 1999 17 Selected solo and group exhibitions edit9th 12th Bijutsu Bunka Exhibitions Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum 1949 1952 Ogawa Yoshikazu and Ōtsuji Kiyoji Two Man Show Takemiya Gallery Tokyo 1952 The 5th Experimental Workshop Presentation Daiichi Seimei Hall Tokyo 1953 1st 3rd Graphic Group Exhibitions Matsuya Department Store Ginza 1953 1955 1956 4th Graphic Group Exhibition Konishiroku Gallery Tokyo 1956 From Space to Environment Matsuya Department Store Ginza Tokyo 1966 Past of One Tin Can Prism Tokyo 1977 Exhibition Ōtsuji Kiyoji Tokyo Gallery Tokyo 1987 Ōtsuji Kiyoji 1948 1987 Exhibition University of Tsukuba Gallery Tsukuba 1987 The Age of Modernism Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography 1995 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Portfolio Mole Tokyo 1997 Kiyoji Ōtsuji Retrospective Experimental Workshop of Photography National Film Center National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo 1999 Kiyoji Ōtsuji and Fifteen Photographers Tokyo Zōkei University Yokoyama Memorial Manzu Art Museum Tokyo 1999 Kiyoji Ōtsuji Shuzō Takiguchi amp Yoshishige Saitō on Photo Museum of Modern Art Toyama 2003 Kiyoji Ōtsuji Photographs as Collaborations Shoto Museum of Art Tokyo 2007 APN Research Kunsthalle Bern 2012 Kiyoji Ōtsuji Photographic Archive The Traces of the Photographer and the Art of His Era 1940 1980 Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Tokyo 2012 Gutai Splendid Playground Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York 2013 Jikken Kōbō Experimental Workshop Museum of Modern Art Kamakura 2013 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Taka Ishii Gallery Tokyo 2013 For a New World to Come Experiments in Japanese Art and Photography 1968 1979 Museum of Fine Arts Houston 2015 Japanese Photography from Postwar to Now SF MoMA San Francisco 2016Collections and archives editŌtsuji s photographic archives are held by the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Prints of his photographs are also held in the collections of the National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo the Tate Modern the Museum of Modern Art SF MoMA and M Hong Kong Sources editObinata Kin ichi ed 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Tokyo Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan 2016 The National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo ed 大辻清司写真実験室 Kiyoji Ohtsuji retrospective experimental workshop of photography Tokyo Tōkyō Kokuritsu Kindai Bijutsukan 1999 Nakamori Yasufumi ed For a New World To Come Experiments in Japanese art and photography 1968 1979 Houston The Museum of Fine Arts Houston 2015 Further reading editMurai Takefumi and Obinata Kin ichi eds 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵 1 Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection 1 Tōkyō Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan 2017 Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin ichi eds 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵 2 人間と物質 Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection 2 Between man and matter Tōkyō Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan 2018 Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin ichi eds 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵 3 アトリエ訪問 Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection 3 Studio visit Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan 2019 Murai Takefumi and Obinata Kin ichi eds 大辻清司アーカイブフィルムコレクション Kiyoji Otsuji photography archive film collection 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵 4 Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Kiyoji Otsuji Photography Archive Film Collection 4 Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan 2020 References edit in Japanese Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography editor 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers 日本写真家事典 Nihon shashinka jiten Kyoto Tankōsha 2000 ISBN 4 473 01750 8 a b c d Obinata Kin ichi ed 2016 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Tokyo Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan p 325 a b Hatakeyama Naoya March 2003 実験中断 大辻清司 美術手帖 in Japanese 149 a b c Tezuka Miwako 2015 Kiyoji Otsuji In Nakamori Yasufumi ed For a new world to come Experiments in Japanese art and photography 1968 1979 Houston Museum of Fine Arts Houston p 168 ISBN 978 0 300 20782 8 OCLC 886474974 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Obinata Kin ichi The Creation of Song Without Words Kiyoji Otsuji s 1956 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library 39 Mermod Melanie Rossetti Emmanuel 2012 APN research an exhibition Kunsthalle Bern 25 08 2012 10 10 2012 Bern Kunsthalle Bern a b c 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library 326 Kusahara Machiko 2016 Proto media art Revisiting Japanese Postwar Avant garde Art A companion to digital art Christiane Paul Chichester West Sussex p 141 ISBN 978 1 118 47521 8 OCLC 925426732 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ōtani Shogo 1999 Documentation and Expression Kiyoji Otsuji In Masuda Rei and Ōtani Shogo ed 大辻清司写真実験室 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Retrospective Experimental Workshop of Photography Tokyo The National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo p 127 Obinata Kin ichi The Creation of Song Without Words Kiyoji Otsuji s 1956 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library 36 a b c Obinata Kin ichi ed 2016 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library Tokyo Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku Bijutsukan Toshokan pp 327 330 The history of Japanese photography Anne Tucker Kōtarō Iizawa Naoyuki Kinoshita 耕太郎 飯沢 直之 木下 Houston Museum of Fine Arts New Haven Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts Houston 2003 p 357 ISBN 0 300 09925 8 OCLC 50511438 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Masuda Rei 1999 Masuda Rei Ōtani Shogo ed 大辻清司写真実験室 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Retrospective Experimental Workshop of Photography Tokyo The National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo p 123 Nakamori Yasufumi 2015 Experiments with the Camera Art and Photography in 1970s Japan In Nakamori Yasufumi ed For a new world to come Experiments in Japanese art and photography 1968 1979 Houston Museum of Fine Arts Houston p 19 ISBN 978 0 300 20782 8 OCLC 886474974 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Iizawa Kōtarō 2003 The Evolution of Postwar Photography The history of Japanese photography Anne Tucker Kōtarō Iizawa Naoyuki Kinoshita 耕太郎 飯沢 直之 木下 Houston Museum of Fine Arts New Haven Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts Houston p 222 ISBN 0 300 09925 8 OCLC 50511438 Minoru Shimizu 2014 Premature Postmodernism A Matrix for Japanese Photography of the 1970s Image and Matter in Japanese Photography from the 1970s New York Marianne Boesky Gallery p 8 Obinata Kin ichi The Creation of Song Without Words Kiyoji Otsuji s 1956 大辻清司 武蔵野美術大学美術館 図書館所蔵作品目錄 Ōtsuji Kiyoji Photographs in the Collection of the Musashino Art University Museum amp Library 330 331 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kiyoji Ōtsuji amp oldid 1182262832, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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