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Rinko Kawauchi

Rinko Kawauchi HonFRPS (川内 倫子, Kawauchi Rinko, born 1972) is a Japanese photographer.[1][2][3] Her work is characterized by a serene, poetic style, depicting the ordinary moments in life.[4][5]

Rinko Kawauchi
HonFRPS
Born (1972-04-06) April 6, 1972 (age 50)
NationalityJapanese
EducationSeian University of Art and Design
OccupationPhotographer

Life and work

Kawauchi became interested in photography while studying graphic design and photography at Seian University of Art and Design where she graduated in 1993.[6] She first worked in commercial photography[6] for an advertising agency for several years before embarking on a career as a fine art photographer. She has mentioned that she continues to work the advertising job.[7] Her background and experience with design have influenced the edits and arrangements of photos in her series. Kawauchi often thinks about new ways to see her photographs, allowing her to continue to find new meaning and significance in her work.[7] There is little known about her personal life and family, but through her photo book Cui Cui she portrays the memories of her family, which she has said to have been shooting for over a decade.[8] The photos in said book captures all the ordinaries and emotions of life, ranging from the happiness of childbirth to the heartbreak of death.

At age 19, she began making prints of her first black-and-white photographs, and it wasn't until five years later that she started printing color photographs.[7] After experimenting with different cameras, she decided to stay with the Rolleiflex, which she still uses.

In 2001, three of her photo books were published: Hanako (a Japanese girl's name), Utatane ("catnap"), and Hanabi ("fireworks"). In the following years she won prizes for two of the books in Japan.[9] In 2004 Kawauchi published Aila; in 2010, Murmuration, and in 2011 Illuminance.

Kawauchi's art is rooted in Shinto, the ethnic religion of the people of Japan.[9] According to Shinto, all things on earth have a spirit, hence no subject is too small or mundane for Kawauchi's work; she also photographs "small events glimpsed in passing,"[10] conveying a sense of the transient. Kawauchi sees her images as parts of series that allow the viewer to juxtapose images in the imagination, thereby making the photograph a work of art[11] and allowing a whole to emerge at the end; she likes working in photo books because they allow the viewer to engage intimately with her images.[6] Her photographs are mostly in 6×6 format.[12] However, upon being invited to the Brighton Photo Biennial in 2010, Kawauchi first photographed digitally and began taking photos that were not square.[6]

Kawauchi also composes haiku poems.

She lived for many years in Tokyo and in 2018 moved to the countryside on the outskirts of the city.[13]

Style

Since she began her photographic career, Kawauchi's photographs contained a unique aesthetic and mood, capturing intimate, poetic, and beautiful moments of the world around her. They often have brilliant and radiant light that give them a dream-like quality. The sublimity of her photographs are further enhanced by her use of soft colors as well as her awareness for the beauty in even the most average moments.[14]

There is not one specific theme or concept that Kawauchi chooses to explore with her image creation; rather, she does it spontaneously, observing and reacting to everything that is around her before doing and sort of editing.[7] She focuses on just shooting, photographing everything that attracts her eyes before looking back and thinking about why she was interesting in those subjects. Another subject that she explored in her book, Ametsuchi, was the practice of religious ceremonies and rituals that hinted at an earthly cycle involving the concepts of time and impermanence. In the book, she depicts Japan's Mount Aso, a sacred site for a Shinto ritual called yakihata, and its volcanic landscape.[15] The ritual is a long-standing tradition dating back about 1,300 years in which farmland is burned yearly to maintain its sustainability for new crops as opposed to using chemicals, and the communities at Aso are among the few that continue this tradition. Ironically, witnessing essentially the rebirth of farmland take place, Kawauchi claims that she burned away her old self and was reborn herself.[15]

In her book Halo, she continues to explore that theme with different rituals at other locations. She traveled to Izumo, Japan to witness a ritual that involves the lighting of sacred flames to welcome the gods.[5] She also went to the Hebei province of China to see new year celebrations, including a 500 year old tradition of throwing molten iron at the city walls to make their own fireworks.

Awards

Publications

  • Hanako. 2001.
  • Hanabi (花火, Fireworks). 2001. Tokyo: Little More, 2002. ISBN 4-89815-053-5.
  • Utatane = siesta. Tokyo: Little More, 2001. ISBN 978-4898150528.
    • Reprinted edition. Tokyo: Little More, 2020.
  • blue. 2003. ISBN 978-4939102-43-1.
  • AILA. 2005. ISBN 978-4902943-10-8.
  • the eyes, the ears. 2005. ISBN 978-4902943-00-9.
  • Cui Cui. 2005. ISBN 978-4902943-02-3.
  • Rinko Diary. 2006. ISBN 978-4-902943-14-6.
  • Rinko Diary II. 2006. ISBN 978-4-902943-17-7.
  • Majun. 2007. ISBN 978-4-902943-19-1.
  • Semear. 2007. ISBN 978-4-902943-20-7.
  • Murmuration. Brighton: Photoworks, 2010. ISBN 978-1-903796-41-2.
  • One Day - 10 Photographers, Heidelberg/Berlin: Kehrer, 2010. ISBN 978-3-86828-173-6, edited by Harvey Benge.[n 1]
  • SNOWFLAKE TWELFTH. 2011.
  • Illuminance. New York: Aperture, 2011. ISBN 978-1597111447.
  • Light and Shadow. 2012.
  • Approaching Whiteness. Tokyo: Goliga, 2012.
  • Illuminance, Ametsuchi, Seeing Shadows. 2012. ISBN 978-4-86152-348-9.
  • SHEETS. 2013. ISBN 978-3981510-53-9.
  • Ametsuchi. New York: Aperture, 2013. ISBN 978-1597112161.
  • Kirakira. 2013. ISBN 978-4-904257-25-8.
  • Gift. 2014. ISBN 978-4907519-05-6.
  • Light and Shadow. Kanagawa, Japan : Super Labo, 2014[19]
  • The river embraced me. 2016. ISBN 978-4-907562-04-5.
  • Halo. New York: Aperture, 2017. ISBN 1597114111.
  • A New Day. 2018. ISBN 978-4-7630-1809-0.
  • When I Was Seven. Hehe, 2019. ISBN 978-4908062292.
  • As It Is. Marseille, France: Chose Commune, 2020. ISBN 979-10-96383-17-7. With text in English and French.[20]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

  • 2005: Autumn 2005, Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography, Netherlands, 10 September – 4 December 2005[37]
  • 2008: Creatures from the Collection and Other Themes, Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography, Netherlands, 31 May – 31 August 2008[38]
  • 2010: Summer Loves, Huis Marselle, Museum for Photography, Netherlands, 5 June – 29 August 2010[39]
  • 2011: Bye Bye Kitty!!! Between Heaven and Hell in Contemporary Japanese Art, curated by David Elliott, Japan Society, New York. With Kawauchi and Makoto Aida (会田誠), Manabu Ikeda (池田学), Tomoko Kashiki (樫木知子), Haruka Kojin (荒神明香), Kumi Machida (町田久美), Yoshitomo Nara (奈良美智), Kohei Nawa (名和晃平), Motohiko Odani (小谷元彦), Hiraki Sawa (さわひらき), Chiharu Shiota (塩田千春), Tomoko Shioyasu (塩保朋子), Hisashi Tenmyouya (天明屋尚), Yamaguchi Akira (山口晃), Miwa Yanagi (やなぎみわ) and Tomoko Yoneda (米田知子).
  • 2015: In the Wake: Japanese Photographers Respond to 3/11, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA, 5 April – 12 July 2015.[40]
  • 2018: A Beautiful Moment, Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography, Netherlands, 9 June – 2 September 2018.[41]

Collections

Kawauchi's work is held in the following collections:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The publisher's description of this set: "One Day - Kehrer Verlag". Kehrer Verlag. Retrieved 5 April 2018.

References

  1. ^ Shearer, Benjamin F.; Shearer, Barbara Smith (1996). Notable women in the life sciences : a biographical dictionary (1. publ. ed.). Westport, Conn. [u.a.]: Greenwood Press. p. 440. ISBN 0313293023.
  2. ^ "Celebrated Japanese photographers come to London". British Journal of Photography. 12 May 2009. Retrieved 1 February 2010.[dead link]
  3. ^ (in Japanese). www.public-image.org]. 22 April 2008. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
  4. ^ Sooke, Alastair (6 June 2006). "Joyless, creepy - and sublime". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Her intimate imagery is worlds apart from that of her co-exhibitors: a newborn with umbilical cord still attached; a green shoot sprouting from a bulb; and, most startling, a cracked egg containing a fluffy hatchling. You come away from her gentle show refreshed.
  5. ^ a b O'Hagan, Sean (7 May 2006). "Sublime to meticulousJapan's young master finds magic in bugs, clouds and trees". The Guardian. Rinko Kawauchi's subject is the everyday sublime
  6. ^ a b c d e Florian Heine & Brad Finger. Rinko Kawauchi. 50 Contemporary Photographers You Should Know. Munich: Prestel 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d Risch, Conor (2011). "In a moment: with her first collaboration with a U.S. publisher, renowned Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi shares her take on our collective experience". Photo District News.
  8. ^ "Cui Cui". Rinko Kawauchi. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  9. ^ a b Boris Friedewald. Women Photographers: From Julia Margaret Cameron to Cindy Sherman. Munich - London - New York 2014, S. 108, ISBN 978-3-7913-4814-8
  10. ^ Ian Jeffrey. Rinko Kawauchi: Murmuration.Photoworks, 15(Autumn-Winter, 2010), 26-35 https://photoworks.org.uk/project-news/photoworks-issue-15/
  11. ^ Yumi Goto, "Rinko Kawauchi's Illuminance". Time, April 11, 2011.
  12. ^ "10 questions to Rinko Kawauchi about photography". pingmag.jp. 11 August 2006. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  13. ^ Rinko Kawauchi. "Rinko Kawauchi on leaving Tokyo for the serenity of the countryside". www.ft.com. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  14. ^ O'Hagan, Sean (21 August 2017). "Halo by Rinko Kawauchi -- images of the everyday sublime; A book celebrating the earth, the heavens and all points between confirms Kawauchi's standing as a singular presence in modern photography". The Observer. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  15. ^ a b Kawauchi, Rinko (1 June 2020). "FIELDS OF FIRE; For her latest project the Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi observed the 1,300-year-old tradition of burning farmland, an idea that came to her in a dream". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  16. ^ "The rain of blessing". Gallery 916. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  17. ^ . Royal Photographic Society. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  18. ^ "Exhibition of the 29th Higashikawa Award Winners 2013-06-09 at the Wayback Machine" (in English) Accessed 15 April 2020.
  19. ^ Kawauchi, Rinko (2014). Light and shadow. ISBN 9784905052678. OCLC 907485744.
  20. ^ "Rinko Kawauchi: Toward the light". www.ft.com. 12 September 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  21. ^ "The Lapis Press". www.lapispress.com.
  22. ^ "London Town".
  23. ^ "Rinko Kawauchi, 5 May - 9 July 2006, The Photographers' Gallery"
  24. ^ Rinko Kawauchi, Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo, São Paulo 20 jul-23 set 2007 . Archived from the original on 7 October 2010. Retrieved 16 February 2010.
  25. ^ Strange & Familiar: Three Views of Brighton, Brighton Photo Biennial 2010, Oct 2nd - Nov 14th 2010 . Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  26. ^ "Illuminance".
  27. ^ "TRAUMARIS - SPACE - Photo Gallery". traumaris.tumblr.com.
  28. ^ Wakeling, Emily (14 June 2012). "In the light of Rinko Kawauchi". The Japan Times. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  29. ^ "Rinko Kawauchi".
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 April 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  31. ^ "RINKO KAWAUCHI, Ametsuchi – PRISKA PASQUER". 6 December 2013.
  32. ^ "The Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA) on art-report - de". www.art-report.com. 8 December 2015.
  33. ^ "College of Art & Design - Lesley University". www.lesley.edu.
  34. ^ [1][dead link]
  35. ^ "Home Page – Kunst Haus Wien. Museum Hundertwasser". www.kunsthauswien.com.
  36. ^ "Halo".
  37. ^ "Autumn 2005". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  38. ^ "Creatures from the Collection and Other Themes". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  39. ^ "Summer Loves". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  40. ^ "In the Wake". 21 January 2015.
  41. ^ "A Beautiful Moment". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  42. ^ "Rinko Kawauchi". sfmoma. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  43. ^ "Results for rinko kawauchi". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  44. ^ "tokyo photographic art museum". tokyo photographic art museum. Retrieved 15 April 2020.

External links

  • Official website

rinko, kawauchi, honfrps, 川内, 倫子, kawauchi, rinko, born, 1972, japanese, photographer, work, characterized, serene, poetic, style, depicting, ordinary, moments, life, honfrpsborn, 1972, april, 1972, shiga, japannationalityjapaneseeducationseian, university, de. Rinko Kawauchi HonFRPS 川内 倫子 Kawauchi Rinko born 1972 is a Japanese photographer 1 2 3 Her work is characterized by a serene poetic style depicting the ordinary moments in life 4 5 Rinko KawauchiHonFRPSBorn 1972 04 06 April 6 1972 age 50 Shiga JapanNationalityJapaneseEducationSeian University of Art and DesignOccupationPhotographer Contents 1 Life and work 2 Style 3 Awards 4 Publications 5 Exhibitions 5 1 Solo exhibitions 5 2 Group exhibitions 6 Collections 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksLife and work EditKawauchi became interested in photography while studying graphic design and photography at Seian University of Art and Design where she graduated in 1993 6 She first worked in commercial photography 6 for an advertising agency for several years before embarking on a career as a fine art photographer She has mentioned that she continues to work the advertising job 7 Her background and experience with design have influenced the edits and arrangements of photos in her series Kawauchi often thinks about new ways to see her photographs allowing her to continue to find new meaning and significance in her work 7 There is little known about her personal life and family but through her photo book Cui Cui she portrays the memories of her family which she has said to have been shooting for over a decade 8 The photos in said book captures all the ordinaries and emotions of life ranging from the happiness of childbirth to the heartbreak of death At age 19 she began making prints of her first black and white photographs and it wasn t until five years later that she started printing color photographs 7 After experimenting with different cameras she decided to stay with the Rolleiflex which she still uses In 2001 three of her photo books were published Hanako a Japanese girl s name Utatane catnap and Hanabi fireworks In the following years she won prizes for two of the books in Japan 9 In 2004 Kawauchi published Aila in 2010 Murmuration and in 2011 Illuminance Kawauchi s art is rooted in Shinto the ethnic religion of the people of Japan 9 According to Shinto all things on earth have a spirit hence no subject is too small or mundane for Kawauchi s work she also photographs small events glimpsed in passing 10 conveying a sense of the transient Kawauchi sees her images as parts of series that allow the viewer to juxtapose images in the imagination thereby making the photograph a work of art 11 and allowing a whole to emerge at the end she likes working in photo books because they allow the viewer to engage intimately with her images 6 Her photographs are mostly in 6 6 format 12 However upon being invited to the Brighton Photo Biennial in 2010 Kawauchi first photographed digitally and began taking photos that were not square 6 Kawauchi also composes haiku poems She lived for many years in Tokyo and in 2018 moved to the countryside on the outskirts of the city 13 Style EditSince she began her photographic career Kawauchi s photographs contained a unique aesthetic and mood capturing intimate poetic and beautiful moments of the world around her They often have brilliant and radiant light that give them a dream like quality The sublimity of her photographs are further enhanced by her use of soft colors as well as her awareness for the beauty in even the most average moments 14 There is not one specific theme or concept that Kawauchi chooses to explore with her image creation rather she does it spontaneously observing and reacting to everything that is around her before doing and sort of editing 7 She focuses on just shooting photographing everything that attracts her eyes before looking back and thinking about why she was interesting in those subjects Another subject that she explored in her book Ametsuchi was the practice of religious ceremonies and rituals that hinted at an earthly cycle involving the concepts of time and impermanence In the book she depicts Japan s Mount Aso a sacred site for a Shinto ritual called yakihata and its volcanic landscape 15 The ritual is a long standing tradition dating back about 1 300 years in which farmland is burned yearly to maintain its sustainability for new crops as opposed to using chemicals and the communities at Aso are among the few that continue this tradition Ironically witnessing essentially the rebirth of farmland take place Kawauchi claims that she burned away her old self and was reborn herself 15 In her book Halo she continues to explore that theme with different rituals at other locations She traveled to Izumo Japan to witness a ritual that involves the lighting of sacred flames to welcome the gods 5 She also went to the Hebei province of China to see new year celebrations including a 500 year old tradition of throwing molten iron at the city walls to make their own fireworks Awards Edit2002 Kimura Ihei Award 16 2009 Infinity Award for Art from the International Center of Photography 6 2012 Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society 17 2013 Minister of Education Award for New Artists citation needed 2013 Domestic Photographer Award Higashikawa Prize Higashikawa Hokkaidō Japan 18 Publications EditHanako 2001 Hanabi 花火 Fireworks 2001 Tokyo Little More 2002 ISBN 4 89815 053 5 Utatane siesta Tokyo Little More 2001 ISBN 978 4898150528 Reprinted edition Tokyo Little More 2020 blue 2003 ISBN 978 4939102 43 1 AILA 2005 ISBN 978 4902943 10 8 the eyes the ears 2005 ISBN 978 4902943 00 9 Cui Cui 2005 ISBN 978 4902943 02 3 Rinko Diary 2006 ISBN 978 4 902943 14 6 Rinko Diary II 2006 ISBN 978 4 902943 17 7 Majun 2007 ISBN 978 4 902943 19 1 Semear 2007 ISBN 978 4 902943 20 7 Murmuration Brighton Photoworks 2010 ISBN 978 1 903796 41 2 One Day 10 Photographers Heidelberg Berlin Kehrer 2010 ISBN 978 3 86828 173 6 edited by Harvey Benge n 1 SNOWFLAKE TWELFTH 2011 Illuminance New York Aperture 2011 ISBN 978 1597111447 Light and Shadow 2012 Approaching Whiteness Tokyo Goliga 2012 Illuminance Ametsuchi Seeing Shadows 2012 ISBN 978 4 86152 348 9 SHEETS 2013 ISBN 978 3981510 53 9 Ametsuchi New York Aperture 2013 ISBN 978 1597112161 Kirakira 2013 ISBN 978 4 904257 25 8 Gift 2014 ISBN 978 4907519 05 6 Light and Shadow Kanagawa Japan Super Labo 2014 19 The river embraced me 2016 ISBN 978 4 907562 04 5 Halo New York Aperture 2017 ISBN 1597114111 A New Day 2018 ISBN 978 4 7630 1809 0 When I Was Seven Hehe 2019 ISBN 978 4908062292 As It Is Marseille France Chose Commune 2020 ISBN 979 10 96383 17 7 With text in English and French 20 Exhibitions EditSolo exhibitions Edit 1998 Utatane Guardian Garden Tokyo 21 2006 Rinko Kawauchi The Photographers Gallery London 22 23 2007 Semear Museu de Arte Moderna de Sao Paulo Sao Paulo 24 2010 Brighton Museum amp Art Gallery during Brighton Photo Biennial New Documents curated by Martin Parr Brighton UK 25 2011 Illuminance Foil Gallery Tokyo 26 2012 Light and Shadow Traumaris Photography Space Tokyo 27 2012 Illuminance Ametsuchi Seeing Shadow Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography Tokyo 28 2013 Illuminance Christophe Guye Galerie Zurich 29 2013 Ametsuchi Aperture Gallery New York 30 2014 Ametsuchi Galerie Priska Pasquer Cologne 31 2014 New Pictures 9 Rinko Kawauchi Minneapolis Institute of Arts Minneapolis 32 2014 Ametsuchi Main Gallery Lesley University College of Art and Design 33 2014 Light and Shadow Colissimo Hyogo 34 2015 Illuminance KunstHausWien Vienna 20 March 5 July 2015 35 2017 Halo Christophe Guye Galerie Zurich 36 Group exhibitions Edit 2005 Autumn 2005 Huis Marseille Museum for Photography Netherlands 10 September 4 December 2005 37 2008 Creatures from the Collection and Other Themes Huis Marseille Museum for Photography Netherlands 31 May 31 August 2008 38 2010 Summer Loves Huis Marselle Museum for Photography Netherlands 5 June 29 August 2010 39 2011 Bye Bye Kitty Between Heaven and Hell in Contemporary Japanese Art curated by David Elliott Japan Society New York With Kawauchi and Makoto Aida 会田誠 Manabu Ikeda 池田学 Tomoko Kashiki 樫木知子 Haruka Kojin 荒神明香 Kumi Machida 町田久美 Yoshitomo Nara 奈良美智 Kohei Nawa 名和晃平 Motohiko Odani 小谷元彦 Hiraki Sawa さわひらき Chiharu Shiota 塩田千春 Tomoko Shioyasu 塩保朋子 Hisashi Tenmyouya 天明屋尚 Yamaguchi Akira 山口晃 Miwa Yanagi やなぎみわ and Tomoko Yoneda 米田知子 2015 In the Wake Japanese Photographers Respond to 3 11 Museum of Fine Arts Boston MA 5 April 12 July 2015 40 2018 A Beautiful Moment Huis Marseille Museum for Photography Netherlands 9 June 2 September 2018 41 Collections EditKawauchi s work is held in the following collections San Francisco Museum of Modern Art San Francisco 7 works 42 Huis Marseille Museum for Photography Amsterdam 43 Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography Tokyo 44 See also EditLieko Shiga one of Kawauchi s contemporariesNotes Edit The publisher s description of this set One Day Kehrer Verlag Kehrer Verlag Retrieved 5 April 2018 References Edit Shearer Benjamin F Shearer Barbara Smith 1996 Notable women in the life sciences a biographical dictionary 1 publ ed Westport Conn u a Greenwood Press p 440 ISBN 0313293023 Celebrated Japanese photographers come to London British Journal of Photography 12 May 2009 Retrieved 1 February 2010 dead link Interview RINKO KAWAUCHI 川内倫子 Photographer in Japanese www public image org 22 April 2008 Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 1 February 2010 Sooke Alastair 6 June 2006 Joyless creepy and sublime The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Her intimate imagery is worlds apart from that of her co exhibitors a newborn with umbilical cord still attached a green shoot sprouting from a bulb and most startling a cracked egg containing a fluffy hatchling You come away from her gentle show refreshed a b O Hagan Sean 7 May 2006 Sublime to meticulousJapan s young master finds magic in bugs clouds and trees The Guardian Rinko Kawauchi s subject is the everyday sublime a b c d e Florian Heine amp Brad Finger Rinko Kawauchi 50 Contemporary Photographers You Should Know Munich Prestel 2016 a b c d Risch Conor 2011 In a moment with her first collaboration with a U S publisher renowned Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi shares her take on our collective experience Photo District News Cui Cui Rinko Kawauchi Retrieved 13 April 2020 a b Boris Friedewald Women Photographers From Julia Margaret Cameron to Cindy Sherman Munich London New York 2014 S 108 ISBN 978 3 7913 4814 8 Ian Jeffrey Rinko Kawauchi Murmuration Photoworks 15 Autumn Winter 2010 26 35 https photoworks org uk project news photoworks issue 15 Yumi Goto Rinko Kawauchi s Illuminance Time April 11 2011 10 questions to Rinko Kawauchi about photography pingmag jp 11 August 2006 Retrieved 12 May 2011 Rinko Kawauchi Rinko Kawauchi on leaving Tokyo for the serenity of the countryside www ft com Retrieved 16 April 2020 O Hagan Sean 21 August 2017 Halo by Rinko Kawauchi images of the everyday sublime A book celebrating the earth the heavens and all points between confirms Kawauchi s standing as a singular presence in modern photography The Observer Retrieved 12 April 2020 a b Kawauchi Rinko 1 June 2020 FIELDS OF FIRE For her latest project the Japanese photographer Rinko Kawauchi observed the 1 300 year old tradition of burning farmland an idea that came to her in a dream Daily Telegraph Retrieved 12 April 2020 The rain of blessing Gallery 916 Retrieved 12 April 2020 Honorary Fellowships HonFRPS Royal Photographic Society Archived from the original on 27 January 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Exhibition of the 29th Higashikawa Award Winners Archived 2013 06 09 at the Wayback Machine in English Accessed 15 April 2020 Kawauchi Rinko 2014 Light and shadow ISBN 9784905052678 OCLC 907485744 Rinko Kawauchi Toward the light www ft com 12 September 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2020 The Lapis Press www lapispress com London Town Rinko Kawauchi 5 May 9 July 2006 The Photographers Gallery Rinko Kawauchi Museu de Arte Moderna de Sao Paulo Sao Paulo 20 jul 23 set 2007 Mam MUSEU DE ARTE MODERNA DE SAO PAULO Archived from the original on 7 October 2010 Retrieved 16 February 2010 Strange amp Familiar Three Views of Brighton Brighton Photo Biennial 2010 Oct 2nd Nov 14th 2010 Brighton Photo Biennial 2010 BPB Curated Strange amp Familiar Three Views of Brighton Archived from the original on 17 May 2011 Retrieved 16 June 2011 Illuminance TRAUMARIS SPACE Photo Gallery traumaris tumblr com Wakeling Emily 14 June 2012 In the light of Rinko Kawauchi The Japan Times Retrieved 15 April 2020 Rinko Kawauchi Traveling exhibition Rinko Kawauchi Ametsuchi Aperture Foundation NY Archived from the original on 27 April 2015 Retrieved 13 May 2015 RINKO KAWAUCHI Ametsuchi PRISKA PASQUER 6 December 2013 The Minneapolis Institute of Arts MIA on art report de www art report com 8 December 2015 College of Art amp Design Lesley University www lesley edu 1 dead link Home Page Kunst Haus Wien Museum Hundertwasser www kunsthauswien com Halo Autumn 2005 Huis Marseille Retrieved 12 April 2020 Creatures from the Collection and Other Themes Huis Marseille Retrieved 12 April 2020 Summer Loves Huis Marseille Retrieved 12 April 2020 In the Wake 21 January 2015 A Beautiful Moment Huis Marseille Retrieved 12 April 2020 Rinko Kawauchi sfmoma Retrieved 12 April 2020 Results for rinko kawauchi Huis Marseille Retrieved 12 April 2020 tokyo photographic art museum tokyo photographic art museum Retrieved 15 April 2020 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rinko Kawauchi amp oldid 1105697855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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