Fukase, Masahisa (1934 - 2012 )

Masahisa Fukase was born in 1934 on the northern island of Hokkaido, where his family operated a photographic portrait studio. In 1956, he graduated from Nihon University with a degree in photography. He subsequently worked for an advertising agency before turning to freelance work in 1968. In 1974, he participated in the New Japanese Photography exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. His first book, Yugi - Homo Ludence (1971), was centered on his wife Yoko. Following their divorce in 1976, Fukase returned to Hokkaido, where he began a series on ravens, which was eventually turned into his acclaimed book Karasu - Ravens (in English, The Solitude of Ravens) (1991). The ominously dark photographs reflected his increasingly depressed state of mind. In 1977, he received the Ina Nobuo Award. 

Contemporary Japanese Photography

Since the 1970s Japanese photography has claimed the spotlight in collections around the world. From the raw, subjective imagery of early post-war photographers to today’s contemporary talents, these artists capture the world around them with a discerning eye. As they seek new methodologies and explore radically fresh aesthetics they continue to push the boundaries of their medium.

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Artist

  • Ishimoto, Yasuhiro
  • Magers, Michael
  • Brown, Everett
  • Fukase, Masahisa
  • Hosoe, Eikoh
  • Kawada, Kikuji
  • Moriyama, Daido
  • Nagano, Shigeichi
  • Naito, Tadayuki
  • Sato, Tokihiro
  • Shibata, Toshio
  • Suda, Issei
  • Sudo, Masato
  • Ueda, Yoshihiko
  • Yamazaki, Hiroshi

Series

  • Modern Masters of Photography

Subject

  • Birds
  • Landscapes

Period

  • 1945 - 1989 (Showa & Postwar Period)

Medium

  • Photography

Size

  • Medium (ie. Oban)

1 Product

Nayoro, 1977

Fukase, Masahisa

Nayoro, 1977

JPR-208586

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