Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Hamaya Hiroshi, Uranihon: hamaya hiroshi shashinshū, [foreword by Kawabata Yasunari, colophon by Munakata Shikô], Tōkyō: Shinchōsha, 1957, includes statements that might amount to non-Marxist humanist manifestos in post-1945 Japan. Hamaya, 1971, 24. Moholy-Nagy met the Japanese banker Munakata Hisakata on April 19, 1923, in Weimar.

  2. Hiroshi Hamaya (Tokyo, 28 marzo 1915 – Ōiso, 6 marzo 1999) è stato un fotografo giapponese. Biografia. Suo padre era un poliziotto. Ebbe qualche problema con la formazione scolastica dato che cambiò scuola molte volte. Iniziò ad avere familiarità con la fotografia a 15 anni quando gli regalarono ...

  3. Born and raised in Tokyo, Hiroshi Hamaya (1915 - 1999) is considered to have been one of the most eminent Japanese documentary photographers of the 20th century. Working as an aeronautical photographer and a freelance contributor to magazines during the 1930s, Hamaya began his career documenting his hometown from the sky and the streets.

  4. 30 de ene. de 2017 · Hiroshi Hamaya, A Chronicle of Grief and Anger. Hamaya began his photographic career in the 1930s with a series of images taken in the streets of his native city of Tokyo. After the war, Hamaya spent over a decade focusing on the folklore and lifestyle of a remote rural area of Northern Japan, which led to the series “Yukiguni” [Snow Land ...

  5. michaelhoppen.viewingroom.com › viewing-room › 5-hiroshi-hamaya-ishiuchi-miyakoHiroshi Hamaya | Michael Hoppen Gallery

    Michael Hoppen. Born and raised in Tokyo, Hiroshi Hamaya (1915 - 1999) is considered to have been one of the most eminent Japanese documentary photographers of the 20th century. Working as an aeronautical photographer and a freelance contributor to magazines during the 1930s, Hamaya began his career documenting his hometown from the sky and the ...

  6. 1 de oct. de 2016 · Hiroshi Hamaya. The Hasselblad award was presented for the seventh time on Tuesday 20 October 1987. The award winner, Hiroshi Hamaya, Tokyo, Japan, received the award from Her Royal Highness Princess Lilian, at a ceremony at the Röhsska museum in Göteborg. The award sum was USD 25,000.

  7. Hiroshi Hamaya, a pioneer man of the generation that inaugurated the reportage photography in the Japanese press, but whose work did not focus solely on the journalistic aspect. Defined as “photographer of the sky” by Japanese poet Daigaku Horiguchi, most of his works are full of tranquility, beauty and strength that reflect shots of moments that would become eternal.