Hiroji Kubota: Photographer
By (Author) Hiroji Kubota
Aperture
Aperture
5th January 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
779.092
Hardback
512
Width 230mm, Height 300mm
3460g
Hiroji Kubota (born in Tokyo, 1939) began his career by assisting photographers Rene Burri, Burt Glinn, and Elliott Erwitt on their visit to Japan in 1961. In 1965 he joined Magnum Photos, producing major bodies of work, many in book form, on the United States, Japan, China, North and South Korea, and Southeast Asia. His numerous publications include From Sea to Shining Sea: A Portrait of America (1992) and Out of the East: Transition and Tradition in Asia (1999). This is the first comprehensive survey of a key Japanese photographer, with four hundred photographs, some of which are previously unpublished.
Wherever Mr. Kubota worked he maintained a Japanese aesthetic sensibilityand a passion to create beauty that was his reaction to growing up in devastated postwar Japan. The Wall Street Journal The new Aperture monograph Hiroji Kubota Photographer is a stunning document. In more than 500 large, luscious pages, it provides a showcase for a pageant of images offering a concentrated examination of the cameras power to record and reveal, and of the vision of a skilled photographer who seemed, almost instinctively, to have been in the right place at the right time over and over and again. Hyperallergic serves as a compelling starting point for exploring the themes, inquisitive spirit and technical innovations that characterized some of the most original documentary-photography artists of postwar Japan Hyperallergic It's the work of a photographer for whom making an excellent picture seems second nature. Mother Jones Kubota gives us a truly unique look at the transition of the world from the tumultuous '60s to the 2000s. Mother Jones
Hiroji Kubota began his career by assisting photographers Ren Burri, Burt Glinn, and Elliott Erwitt on their visit to Japan in 1961. In 1965 he joined Magnum Photos, producing major bodies of work, many in book form, on the United States, Japan, China, North and South Korea, and Southeast Asia. His numerous publications include From Sea to Shining Sea: A Portrait of America (1992) and Out of the East: Transition and Tradition in Asia (1999). Alison Nordstrm (introductory essay) is an independent scholar, curator, and writer. She was senior curator of photographs at George Eastman House, Rochester, New York, from 2004 to 2013. She is currently scholar-in-residence at Lesley University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; curator for international programs at the Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, Massachusetts; and artistic director of Fotofestiwal dz in Poland. Elliott Erwitt has made some of the most memorable photographs of our time, from his observations of daily life to portraits of iconic personalities, including Marilyn Monroe and Che Guevara. Erwitt has produced more than twenty-five books, including Eastern Europe (1965), To the Dogs (1992), Personal Best (2010), and Kolor (2013). Mark Lubell is executive director of the International Center of Photography, New York. He served as director of Magnum Photos, New York, between 2004 and 2011. Chris Book is executive director of Aperture Foundation, New York. He was previously director of Magnum Photos, London and New York, editorial director at Phaidon Press, and publisher of his own list of photobooks, Chris Boot Ltd.