Seiji Kurata

Seiji Kurata (倉田精二 Kurata Seiji, born 1945 in Chūō-ku, Tokyo) is a Japanese photographer.

Career

Kurata graduated from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music in 1968.[1] He taught in secondary school and worked in oils, printmaking, and experimental movies.[2]

He practised under Daidō Moriyama in an independent photography workshop in 1976.[3]

Kurata won the fifth Kimura Ihei Award in 1980 for his first book, Flash Up. For the black-and-white photographs here, Kurata used flash and a medium format camera,[4] resulting in a detailed portrait of a world of bōsōzoku, gangsters, rightists, strippers, transvestites, and so on: as Parr and Badger point out, these are old subjects; but in his "highly polished, detailed" work, Kurata "has an unerring instinct for pictures that suggest stories".[5] Photo Cabaret and 80's Family continued in this direction. This Japanese work of Kurata's is anthologized in his later volume Japan.

Kurata won the PSJ award in 1992. A long stay in Mongolia in 1994 led to the book Toransu Ajia, which continued color work of the Asian mainland started with Dai-Ajia.

In 1999 Kurata's book Japan won the Kodansha Publishing Culture Award (講談社出版文化賞) for a work of photography.[6]

Prints of Kurata's photographs are in the permanent collections of ICP (New York), the Brooklyn Museum, and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography.[7]

Solo exhibitions

Publications by Kurata

Following a title in Japanese script, an italicized roman-letter title is one provided on or in the book itself; a non-italicized roman-letter title is a mere gloss of the original title.

Notes

  1. Super Labo's page about the booklet is here.

References

  1. 1968: Iizawa, Tōkyō Shashin, p.260; also Sanjūroku fotogurafāzu, p.11. According to the blurb on the front and back flaps of Kurata's Japan, 1976.
  2. Sanjūroku fotogurafāzu, p.11.
  3. Wākushoppu Shashin-juku, taught by Shōmei Tōmatsu, Nobuyoshi Araki, Masahisa Fukase, Eikoh Hosoe, Noriaki Yokosuka, as well as Moriyama. Sources: Iizawa, p.143; Sanjūroku fotogurafāzu, p.11.
  4. The array of specific hardware used is listed at the back of the book; it does include a 35mm SLR camera as well.
  5. Martin Parr; Gerry Badger (2004). The Photobook: A History, Volume I. London: Phaidon. p. 305. ISBN 0-7148-4285-0.
  6. List of past award winners, Kodansha. Accessed 7 December 2009.
  7. TPO Photo School profile.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 List of exhibitions, last (non-numbered) page, "Trans Asia, again!" (Tokyo: Place M, 2013).

Links and sources


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