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Japanese-American are Americans of Japanese ancestry. Japanese Americans were among the three largest Asian American ethnic communities during the 20th century; but, according to the 2000 census, they have declined in ranking to constitute the sixth largest Asi ...
photographer. His decades-long career explored expressions of modernist design in traditional architecture, the quiet anxieties of urban life in Tokyo and Chicago, and the camera's capacity to bring out the abstract in the everyday and seemingly concrete fixtures of the world around him. Born in the United States and raised in Japan, Ishimoto returned to the States as a young adult as the Second World War began to escalate, and was soon after sent to the Amache Internment Camp in Colorado after the signing of
Executive Order 9066 Executive Order 9066 was a President of the United States, United States presidential executive order signed and issued during World War II by United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. "This order authorized the fo ...
. After the war, he studied photography at the Bauhaus-inspired Institute of Design (ID) at the Illinois Institute of Technology, and established a robust photographic practice between the United States and Japan. As a transnational interlocutor between Japanese and American art and architecture circles, Ishimoto played a prominent role in bringing visions of Japanese architectural modernism to audiences abroad. His photographs of the
Katsura Imperial Villa The is an Imperial residence with associated gardens and outbuildings in the western suburbs of Kyoto, Japan. Located on the western bank of the Katsura River in Katsura, Nishikyō-ku, the Villa is 8km distant from the main Kyoto Imperial P ...
, taken in 1953-54 and published in 1960 as ''Katsura: Tradition and Creation in Japanese Architecture'', were widely celebrated in architecture and design circles for evoking the formal, geometric purity of the villa’s structural details with a deep sensitivity towards the atmospheric qualities of the space. The book, which features accompanying essays by
Kenzō Tange was a Japanese architect. Born in Sakai and raised in China, Tange was inspired from an early age by the work of Le Corbusier and designed his first buildings under Imperial Japan. He first achieved recognition for his projects to reconstruct t ...
and
Walter Gropius Walter Adolph Georg Gropius (; 18 May 1883 – 5 July 1969) was a German-born American architect and founder of the Bauhaus, Bauhaus School, who is widely regarded as one of the pioneering masters of modernist architecture. He was a founder of ...
, was instrumental in stimulating the discourse surrounding modernism’s relationship to tradition in Japanese architecture. Ishimoto’s work was exhibited widely in the United States and Japan during his lifetime, and two of his photographs were featured in the monumental 1955 Museum of Modern Art exhibition ''
The Family of Man ''The Family of Man'' was an ambitious exhibition of 503 photographs from 68 countries curated by Edward Steichen, the director of the New York City Museum of Modern Art's (MoMA) department of photography. According to Steichen, the exhibitio ...
''. He maintained close ties to Chicago and published a series titled ''Chicago, Chicago'' in 1969. In tandem with his architectural photographs, Ishimoto was a prolific recorder of everyday life. His photographs of streetscapes and ordinary people captured the candor, anxiety, paradoxes, and joy of modern urban life through a sensitive and deliberate lens.


Biography


Early life

Ishimoto was born on June 14, 1921, in
San Francisco San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco, is a commercial, Financial District, San Francisco, financial, and Culture of San Francisco, cultural center of Northern California. With a population of 827,526 residents as of ...
,
California California () is a U.S. state, state in the Western United States that lies on the West Coast of the United States, Pacific Coast. It borders Oregon to the north, Nevada and Arizona to the east, and shares Mexico–United States border, an ...
, to Ishimoto Toma and Yoshine, who both hailed from Takaoka-cho, or present-day Tosa, in
Kōchi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Shikoku. Kōchi Prefecture has a population of 669,516 (1 April 2023) and has a geographic area of 7,103 km2 (2,742 sq mi). Kōchi Prefecture borders Ehime Prefecture to the northwest and Tok ...
,
Japan Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
. His father had come to the U.S. in 1904 at the age of 17 seeking agricultural work, eventually finding success as a salt farmer in California. In 1924, the family left the United States and returned to his parents' hometown in Kochi. Ishimoto attended Nada Narukawa Elementary School (now Tosa City Takaoka Daini Elementary School) and Kōchi Agricultural High School, where he was a competitive middle- and long-distance runner and participated in races at the national level at
Meiji Jingu Gaien Stadium was a multi-use stadium in Tokyo, Japan, that could hold up to 65,000 spectators. It was the main venue for the 1930 Far Eastern Games. During the Allied occupation of Japan, from 1945 to 1952, it was renamed Nile Kinnick Stadium by the Eighth ...
. After graduating from high school, he returned to the United States in 1939 to study modern agricultural methods at the behest of his parents and teachers. Ishimoto first lived with a Japanese farmer friend of his father, before moving in with an American family in Oakland, California and attending an elementary school to learn English. He continued to study at
Washington Union High School Washington Union High School is a high school in the rural community of Easton, California, Easton in Fresno County, California, Fresno County, California. Founded in 1892 (and first accredited in 1965), Washington Union is most likely the sec ...
in Fremont and San Jose Junior College (now
San Jose City College San José City College (SJCC) is a public community college in San Jose, California. It was founded in 1921, and is one of the oldest colleges in the California Community College System. History The college was founded in 1921, opening its doo ...
), while working on a farm over the summers. In January 1942, he enrolled in the University of California, Berkeley, School of Agriculture (now the
University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis (UC Davis, UCD, or Davis) is a Public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Davis, California, United States. It is the northernmost of the ten campuses of the University ...
). His studies were cut short, however, as the
war in the Pacific The Pacific War, sometimes called the Asia–Pacific War or the Pacific Theatre, was the Theater (warfare), theatre of World War II fought between the Empire of Japan and the Allies of World War II, Allies in East Asia, East and Southeast As ...
quickly escalated. On February 19, 1942, president
Franklin D. Roosevelt Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882April 12, 1945), also known as FDR, was the 32nd president of the United States, serving from 1933 until his death in 1945. He is the longest-serving U.S. president, and the only one to have served ...
signed
Executive Order 9066 Executive Order 9066 was a President of the United States, United States presidential executive order signed and issued during World War II by United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt on February 19, 1942. "This order authorized the fo ...
, authorizing the mass incarceration of Japanese Americans across the west coast.


Internment and post-war education (1942-53)

On May 21, 1942, Ishimoto was forcibly sent to the Merced Assembly Center in central California before being transferred to the
Granada War Relocation Center Granada War Relocation Center, known to the internees as Camp Amache ( ) and later designated the Amache National Historic Site, was a concentration camp for Japanese Americans in Prowers County, Colorado. Following the Japanese attack on Pear ...
, or Camp Amache, in Colorado, where he was assigned to work as a firefighter. It was at the camp that Ishimoto first learned how to use a camera and develop film in the darkroom from fellow incarcerated Japanese Americans. Though cameras had initially been confiscated by authorities, by May 1943 restrictions on cameras had lifted in camps outside of the Western Defense Command (including Amache), and Ishimoto began taking photographs around the camp using a Kodak 35mm camera. Ishimoto and his fellow photographs used creative solutions to work through the technological limitations in the camp, recalling how his friend fashioned an
enlarger An enlarger is a specialized transparency Image projector, projector used to produce Photography, photographic prints from film or glass Negative (photography), negatives, or from reversal film, transparencies. Construction All enlargers consist ...
from a ketchup container and the bellows from a folding camera. After being granted temporary permission to leave the camp and visit Illinois in January 1944, Ishimoto was twice questioned about his responses in the loyalty questionnaire before being officially released from the camp in December 1944. The
War Relocation Authority The War Relocation Authority (WRA) was a United States government agency established to handle the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. It also operated the Fort Ontario Emergency Refugee Shelter in Oswego, New York, which was t ...
had established its first resettlement office in Chicago, with the express goal of dispersing Japanese Americans from the west coast in order to weaken the strength of ethnic enclaves and diminish their allegiance to Japan. Thus, Ishimoto found himself in Chicago, where he worked for silkscreen company Color Graphics (another skill he had picked up in the camps). In 1946, he entered
Northwestern University Northwestern University (NU) is a Private university, private research university in Evanston, Illinois, United States. Established in 1851 to serve the historic Northwest Territory, it is the oldest University charter, chartered university in ...
to study architecture. Though he dropped out shortly after enrolling, architecture would hold an important place in his photographic practice. The following year, Ishimoto joined the Fort Dearborn Camera Club through the introduction of Japanese-American photographer
Harry K. Shigeta Harry K. Shigeta (1877–1963) was a Japanese–American photographer. He was active in the Little Tokyo, Los Angeles art scene in the 1920s. He moved to Chicago in 1924. In Los Angeles, he was a teacher of Tōyō Miyatake. References Bib ...
, who co-founded the organization in 1924. Many of the club members still adhered to the late 19th-, early 20th century conventions of
pictorialism Pictorialism is an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. There is no standard definition of the term, but in general it refers to a style in which the photographer ha ...
, which sought to replicate the painterly qualities of pictorial art through photography. At the same time, Ishimoto encountered avant-garde publications such as
György Kepes György Kepes (; October 4, 1906 – December 29, 2001) was a Hungarian-born painter, photographer, designer, educator, and art theorist. After immigrating to the U.S. in 1937, he taught design at the New Bauhaus (later the School of Design, t ...
' ''The Language of Vision'' and
László Moholy-Nagy László Moholy-Nagy (; ; born László Weisz; July 20, 1895 – November 24, 1946) was a Kingdom of Hungary, Hungarian painter and photographer as well as a professor in the Bauhaus school. He was highly influenced by Constructivism (art), con ...
’s ''Vision in Motion,'' both of which had a profound impact on Ishimoto's thinking on the perceptual dimensions of the visual world and the structural qualities of the built and natural environments.


Institute of Design (1948-52)

In 1948, following the encouragement of Shigeta, Ishimoto enrolled in the Institute of Design (ID) of the
Illinois Institute of Technology The Illinois Institute of Technology, commonly referred to as Illinois Tech and IIT, is a Private university, private research university in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Tracing its history to 1890, the present name was adopted upon the m ...
, otherwise known as the "New Bauhaus." Founded by Moholy-Nagy in 1937, the school brought the pedagogical spirit of the
Bauhaus The Staatliches Bauhaus (), commonly known as the , was a German art school operational from 1919 to 1933 that combined Decorative arts, crafts and the fine arts.Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 4th edn., ...
to Chicago through its similar foundational interdisciplinary course and orientation towards human-centric design. Moholy-Nagy shifted the craft-based distinctions entrenched in the German institution, which served to enhance gendered perceptions and discrimination, and instead split the school into three departments—architecture, product design, and light workshop (advertising arts). In his teaching, Moholy-Nagy encouraged students to treat light as a "raw material," subject to experimentation and manipulation through carefully calibrated engagements with chemicals, atmospheric conditions, surfaces, camera settings, and spatial arrangements—an orientation that would percolate into Ishimoto's deliberate and meticulous arrangements of light and form in his architectural photographs. Ishimoto studied with photographers such as
Aaron Siskind Aaron Siskind (December 4, 1903 – February 8, 1991) was an American photographer whose work focuses on the details of things, presented as flat surfaces to create a new image independent of the original subject. He was closely involved with, if ...
, Gordon Coster, and Harry M. Callahan. In comparison to his fellow instructors, Callahan was less interested in the theoretical dimensions of photography, and instead encouraged his students to go out into the city and take a more freeform approach to photographing whatever interested them most. While at the ID, Ishimoto struck up a lasting friendship with fellow student Marvin E. Newman. The two frequently explored and photographed the neighborhoods of Chicago together, and created a short film titled ''The Church on Maxwell Street,'' which took as its subject an African-American outdoor revival meeting. Ishimoto's time at the ID instilled in him a range of technical and artistic ways of seeing, from the Bauhaus attitudes of avant-garde experimentalism and engagement with geometric principles, to Siskind's documentary vision, to Callahan's more subjective, instinct-driven practice, all of which played a role in shaping his orientation towards photography in the decades to follow.


Death and legacy

After returning to Japan in 1961, Ishimoto became a naturalized Japanese citizen in 1968. He taught photography at Kuwasawa Design School (1962–66) the
Tokyo College of Photography The was set up in Nakano, Tokyo in 1958, as Tokyo Photo School (, ''Tōkyō Foto Sukūru''); its current name dates from 1960. During the 1960s, it moved to Hiyoshi (Yokohama), where it has remained. Notable graduates * Tadasuke Akiyama * Taka ...
(1962-66) at
Tokyo Zokei University is a private university in Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan, founded in 1966 by Japanese art educator, fashion designer and design journalist, Yoko Kuwasawa (1910-1977). It is a four-year art college offering both bachelor's and master's degrees in studi ...
(1966–71). Ishimoto died at the age of 90 on February 6, 2012, after being hospitalized the month before for a
stroke Stroke is a medical condition in which poor cerebral circulation, blood flow to a part of the brain causes cell death. There are two main types of stroke: brain ischemia, ischemic, due to lack of blood flow, and intracranial hemorrhage, hemor ...
. Ishimoto's many accolades include winning the ''
Life Life, also known as biota, refers to matter that has biological processes, such as Cell signaling, signaling and self-sustaining processes. It is defined descriptively by the capacity for homeostasis, Structure#Biological, organisation, met ...
'' magazine Young Photographer's Contest (1951); the Japan Photo Critics Association photographer of the year award (1957); the Mainichi Art Award (1970); the annual award (1978, 1990) and distinguished contribution award (1991) of the
Photographic Society of Japan The is an organization set up in December 1952 to advance photography in Japan. Its membership of about 1,400 includes both amateur and professional photographers, as well as researchers, critics, and people in the photographic industry. Its addr ...
; and the Kochi prefectural cultural award (1996). In 1996, the Japanese government named Ishimoto a
Person of Cultural Merit is an official Japanese recognition and honour which is awarded annually to select people who have made outstanding cultural contributions. This distinction is intended to play a role as a part of a system of support measures for the promotion of ...
. In English, Yasuhiro Ishimoto signed his name "Yas Ishimoto" (see examples).


Artwork


''Katsura'' (1953-58)

While at the ID, Callahan introduced Ishimoto to renowned photography and curator
Edward Steichen Edward Jean Steichen (; March 27, 1879 – March 25, 1973) was a Luxembourgish American photographer, painter and curator and a pioneer of fashion photography. His gown images for the magazine ''Art et Décoration'' in 1911 were the first modern ...
, who aided in opening up new professional avenues for the burgeoning photographer's career. Steichen featured two of Ishimoto's images for the landmark ''
Family of Man ''The Family of Man'' was an ambitious exhibition of 503 photography, photographs from 68 countries curated by Edward Steichen, the director of the New York City Museum of Modern Art's (MoMA) department of photography. According to Steichen, ...
'' exhibition at the
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
in 1955 and its accompanying catalogue. One of the images, which was featured in a section of the exhibition on children, was a slightly blurry photograph of a young girl with her wrists bound behind her back and tied to a tree. Though presumably captured in the midst of a playful game, the image carries with it a somewhat unnerving tone that alludes to Ishimoto's resistance against excessive sentimentalism. Steichen also selected Ishimoto to be part of a group show of twenty-five emerging photographers in 1953, followed by a three-person exhibition at MoMA in 1961. In 1954, Ishimoto held his first solo exhibition at Gallery Takemiya, a prominent avant-garde art space in
Kanda, Tokyo is an area in northeastern Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It encompasses about thirty neighborhoods. Kanda was a ward prior to 1947. When the 35 Special wards of Tokyo, wards of Tokyo were reorganized into 23, it was merged with Kojimachi to form the ...
run by poet and art critic
Shūzō Takiguchi was a Japanese poet, art critic, and artist. He was the central figure of orthodox Surrealism Surrealism is an art movement, art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow th ...
. He was also featured in the
National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo The , also known as MOMAT, is the foremost museum collecting and exhibiting modern Japanese art. The museum, in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan, is known for its collection of 20th-century art and includes Western-style and ''Nihonga'' artists. It has a bra ...
's first exhibition on photography in 1953, a group show titled ''The Exhibition of Contemporary Photography: Japan and America (Gendai shashin-ten: Nihon to Amerika)'', alongside established figures such as
Ansel Adams Ansel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 – April 22, 1984) was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his Monochrome photography, black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association ...
,
Berenice Abbott Berenice Alice Abbott (July 17, 1898 – December 9, 1991) was an American photographer best known for her portraits of cultural figures of the interwar period, New York City photographs of architecture and urban design of the 1930s, and science ...
,
Walker Evans Walker Evans (November 3, 1903 – April 10, 1975) was an American photographer and photojournalist best known for his work for the Resettlement Administration and the Farm Security Administration (FSA) documenting the effects of the Great ...
, and
John Szarkowski Thaddeus John Szarkowski (December 18, 1925 – July 7, 2007) was an American photographer, curator, historian, and critic. From 1962 to 1991 Szarkowski was the director of photography at New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Early life and ca ...
. The exhibition not only marked a new shift in the Japanese art world in terms of medium, but also participated in the production of post-occupation cultural discourse between the United States and Japan, within which Ishimoto was now fully immersed. In October 1956, Ishimoto and his wife Kawamata Shigeru were married at the International House of Japan (''Kokusai bunka kaikan''), in a ceremony overseen by
Sōfū Teshigahara Sōfū Teshigahara ( 勅 使 河 原 蒼 風 ''Teshigahara Sōfū'', 17 December 1900 – 5 September 1979) was the founder of the ''Sōgetsu-ryū'' school of ''ikebana'' flower arranging. Biography He was born in Tokyo. He learned flow ...
and
Kenzō Tange was a Japanese architect. Born in Sakai and raised in China, Tange was inspired from an early age by the work of Le Corbusier and designed his first buildings under Imperial Japan. He first achieved recognition for his projects to reconstruct t ...
. The two had met at a
Sōgetsu-ryū is a school of ''ikebana'', or Japanese floral art. History Sōgetsu was founded by Sōfū Teshigahara in 1927. Sōfū's father was an ikebana master, who taught his son from childhood. Sōfū wanted to become a painter, but he found that th ...
study group, where she was an instructor and assistant to Teshigahara. Shigeru would continue to support Yasuhiro as an assistant and producer throughout his career.


Katsura Imperial Villa

Steichen introduced Ishimoto to MoMA architecture curator
Arthur Drexler Arthur Justin Drexler (13 March 1925 – 16 January 1987) was an American museum curator and director of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) for 35 years. Life Drexler was born in Brooklyn and attended the High School of Music and Art, and The Cooper ...
, who in 1953 tasked Ishimoto, along with architect
Junzō Yoshimura was a Japanese architect. Early career Yoshimura dated his desire to become an architect to the day he first entered Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel, Tokyo, Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, shortly after the Kanto earthquake of 1923. "“It was th ...
, to guide him through Japan to conduct research for his 1954 exhibition "Japanese Exhibition House." It was during this trip that Ishimoto visited the
Katsura Imperial Villa The is an Imperial residence with associated gardens and outbuildings in the western suburbs of Kyoto, Japan. Located on the western bank of the Katsura River in Katsura, Nishikyō-ku, the Villa is 8km distant from the main Kyoto Imperial P ...
(Katsura rikyū) in
Kyoto Kyoto ( or ; Japanese language, Japanese: , ''Kyōto'' ), officially , is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture in the Kansai region of Japan's largest and most populous island of Honshu. , the city had a population of 1.46 million, making it t ...
for the first time. Struck by the seventeenth-century villa's resonance with the geometries and compositional structures he encountered in his New Bauhaus education, Ishimoto brought his photos to
Kenzō Tange was a Japanese architect. Born in Sakai and raised in China, Tange was inspired from an early age by the work of Le Corbusier and designed his first buildings under Imperial Japan. He first achieved recognition for his projects to reconstruct t ...
, who saw in them a similar capacity to deconstruct and depict in lucid detail the aspects of premodern design that he believed formed the foundation of postwar modernist architecture. Designed and constructed over a fifty-year period under the auspices of Prince Toshihito and Prince Toshitada of the Hachijō-no-miya family, the villa complex consists of a series of aristocratic dwellings built in the ''shoin'' style, along with four tea-ceremony houses built in the '' sukiya'' style, and a Buddhist hall surrounded by a lavish and carefully curated garden. Architect
Arata Isozaki Arata Isozaki (磯崎 新, ''Isozaki Arata''; 23 July 1931 – 28 December 2022) was a Japanese architect, urban designer, and theorist from Ōita, Ōita, Ōita. He was awarded the Royal Gold Medal in 1986 and the Pritzker Architecture Prize i ...
described the complex as an "assemblage" of layered styles and varied construction methods, which made it a source of great intrigue and inspiration for architects throughout the 19th and early 20th century. Ishimoto returned to Katsura the following year, and was granted permission by the imperial household to photograph the site for the full month of May, between the designated hours of 9:00 a.m and 4:30 p.m. His access to the codified space (considering the little time that had elapsed since the
American occupation of Japan Japan was occupied and administered by the Allies of World War II from the surrender of the Empire of Japan on September 2, 1945, at the war's end until the Treaty of San Francisco took effect on April 28, 1952. The occupation, led by the ...
) was made possible in part due to his American passport. Many of the images Ishimoto took using his 4x5
Linhof Linhof is a German company, founded in Munich in 1887 by Valentin Linhof. The company is well known for making premium rollfilm and view camera, large format film cameras. Linhof initially focused on making camera shutters and developing the f ...
, he recalled, were shot on an up-to-date format that was not widely recognized in postwar Japan, leading to many of the negatives becoming ruined during the development process. The photographs thus emerged at a time of immense flux and cultural reinvention, with Ishimoto himself occupying a social and political threshold that enabled him with both physical access and a distinct visual perspective. Ishimoto honed in on structural and environmental details instead of capturing more conventional views of the architecture and garden as a whole. His black-and-white images reveal the strong orthographic formalisms of the ''shoji'' and ''fusuma'' sliding doors, delicate interplays between light and shadow, the textural impressions of the wooden beams, moss, bamboo, and other natural elements, and the curated naturalism of features such as the stepping stones in the garden, which were aligned to be ever so slightly askew. The stones were a particularly arresting visual feature for Ishimoto, who expressed being in awe of the fact that the did not merely indicate avenues of movement, but rather that "their placement is carefully thought out, in a sense o accommodatethe angle for a certain way of walking, to psychologically guide people to other parts of the garden or the next building, to create an atmosphere." The photographer was approached by the publisher David-sha and editor Hideo Kobayashi in 1954, and initially planned to publish a straightforward photobook of his images of the site. Over the course of the editing process, however, Tange, who Ishimoto had invited to contribute an essay, eventually became the ''de facto'' editor and publicist of the book, taking on a prominent role in the selection, cropping, order, and arrangement of the images in ways that set forth his own ideas surrounding the dialectical forces of tradition and modernity inherent in the villa. Tange cropped and grouped images to emphasize the presence of modular units in both built and natural elements (often against the wishes of Ishimoto), and coordinated them against a white background to accentuate rectilinearity and suffuse the publication with a sense of rhythmic order. After an extended, and at times fraught, editing process, which also involved the participation of
Herbert Bayer Herbert Bayer (April 5, 1900 – September 30, 1985) was an Austrian and American graphic designer, painter, photographer, sculptor, art director, environmental and interior designer, and architect. He was instrumental in the development of the ...
as book designer, ''Katsura: Tradition and Creation in Japanese Architecture'' (sometimes shortened to ''Katsura'') was published in 1960, featuring an introduction by
Walter Gropius Walter Adolph Georg Gropius (; 18 May 1883 – 5 July 1969) was a German-born American architect and founder of the Bauhaus, Bauhaus School, who is widely regarded as one of the pioneering masters of modernist architecture. He was a founder of ...
and an essay by Tange. The book had a resounding impact on architects in both Japan and abroad, fueling the ongoing ideological discourse and debates surrounding the characteristics of Japanese postwar architecture, and presenting a radical view of a previously tightly regulated traditional structure during a period of intense social and cultural upheaval in Japan.


Katsura revisited (1981-82)

From 1976 to 1982, the Imperial Household Ministry conducted a rigorous renovation of the Katsura complex's largest residential structure, the Goten. After receiving a commission from publisher
Iwanami Shoten is a Japanese publishing company based in Tokyo.Louis Frédéric, ''Japan Encyclopedia'', Harvard University Press, 2005, p. 409. Iwanami Shoten was founded in 1913 by Iwanami Shigeo. Its first major publication was Natsume Sōseki's novel '' ...
, Ishimoto revisited the site in November 1981 and February 1982, this time photographing the villa in both black-and-white and color using a
Sinar Sinar Photography AG is a Swiss company based in Zürich manufacturing specialized high-resolution view cameras for studio, reproduction, landscape and architecture photography. Sinar's view-cameras allow both the lens and the film back or se ...
camera with a variety of lenses. The color images were published as ''Katsura Villa: Space and Form'' in 1983 with Iwanami Shoten in Japan, and in 1987 with Rizzoli in the United States, and both the appearance of the villa and layout of the book differed significantly from the 1960 version edited by Tange. The second publication, for which
Arata Isozaki Arata Isozaki (磯崎 新, ''Isozaki Arata''; 23 July 1931 – 28 December 2022) was a Japanese architect, urban designer, and theorist from Ōita, Ōita, Ōita. He was awarded the Royal Gold Medal in 1986 and the Pritzker Architecture Prize i ...
provided substantial input and contributed an essay, featured images that were far more expansive in their framing, embraced ornamentation and chromatic diversity, and considered design details within their architectural contexts rather than highlighting them through isolation. Isozaki described Ishimoto's new approach to Katsura as a "de-modernist" vision, presenting the centuries-old villa in an altogether transformed field of vision that embraces the coexistence of varied, heterodox elements sharing the same environment.


Architecture

Following the publication of ''Katsura: Tradition and Creation in Japanese Architecture'', Ishimoto would continue to photograph architectural buildings across the world, maintaining his keen interest in the atmospheric qualities of space and the intimations of structural detail. He received a commission to retrace the spread of Islam beginning in
Córdoba, Spain Córdoba ( ; ), or sometimes Cordova ( ), is a city in Andalusia, Spain, and the capital of the Province of Córdoba (Spain), province of Córdoba. It is the third most populated Municipalities in Spain, municipality in Andalusia. The city prim ...
, and traversed across Asia to
Fatehpur Sikri Fatehpur Sikri () is a town in the Agra District of Uttar Pradesh, India. Situated from the district headquarters of Agra, Fatehpur Sikri itself was founded as the capital of the Mughal Empire in 1571 by Mughal emperors, Emperor Akbar, servin ...
, India, and
Xi'an Xi'an is the list of capitals in China, capital of the Chinese province of Shaanxi. A sub-provincial city on the Guanzhong plain, the city is the third-most populous city in Western China after Chongqing and Chengdu, as well as the most populou ...
, China. The results of the journey were published as ''Islam: Space and Continent'' in 1980.Ishimoto maintained close relations with many modern architects, including Kenzo Tange, Arata Isozaki, and
Hiroshi Naito is an architect from Japan, known for his modern architecture, modern-style buildings. His work includes projects in other countries. He is the principal architect at Hiroshi Naito Architect & Associates in Tokyo. He is Professor emeritus at t ...
, and photographed many of their buildings. In 1974, he photographed the work of early 20th-century architects Charles Sumner Greene and Henry Mather Greene of
Greene and Greene Greene and Greene was an architecture, architectural firm established by brothers Charles Sumner Greene (1868–1957) and Henry Mather Greene (January 23, 1870 – October 2, 1954), influential early 20th century American architects. Active prim ...
in California for the Japanese design magazine ''Approach''. In 1993, Ishimoto was invited to photograph
Ise Grand Shrine The , located in Ise, Mie Prefecture of Japan, is a Shinto shrine dedicated to the solar goddess Amaterasu Ōmikami and the grain goddess Toyouke-hime (Toyouke Omikami). Also known simply as , Ise Shrine is a shrine complex composed of many Shi ...
during the 61st iteration of the ceremonial dismantling and rebuilding process, which takes place every twenty years. Ishimoto took cues from the series of architectural details photographed by Yoshio Watanabe in 1953, accentuating the lucid forms of the eaves and posts. In contrast to Watanabe, who captured his images at late afternoon to create a more dramatic aura using stark contrasts of light and shadow, Ishimoto opted to work under even midday lighting, infusing the setting with a softer and more brooding air.


Chicago and street photography


Early postwar work in Chicago

Ishimoto's arrival in Chicago following the war took place alongside the second great migration of African Americans to the north. Chicago was only second to New York City in the number of new residents received in both migrations. As Jasmine Alinder suggests, Ishimoto's photographs of newly settled African Americans in Chicago from the rural south to the urban north mirror his own patterns of relocation first from rural Japan, to the west coast, and eventually to the shared ground of the urban north. Ishimoto's own experiences of facing anti-Japanese discrimination, both in the camps and Chicago, may also be read as informing his sensitivity towards the plight of disenfranchised communities, and his steadfast desire to immerse himself in the nooks and crannies of the urban landscape. Many of Ishimoto's early photos in Chicago focus on children across varied neighborhoods, capturing the reckless vigor of their play, their urban stomping grounds, and their unflinching, and at times impenetrable gazes towards the camera with a frankness that was neither sentimental nor sardonic. In 1958, he published his first photobook, ''Someday Somewhere'', which featured images of Chicago and Tokyo in conversation with one another, using strategies of arrangement and seriality that could be traced back to his training at the Institute of Design.


Second stay in Chicago (1958-61)

In December 1958, Ishimoto, whose Japanese visa was close to expiry, returned to Chicago with his wife Shigeru on a fellowship from camera maker Chiyoda Kōgaku Kōgyō (now
Konica Minolta is a Japanese multinational corporation, multinational technology company headquartered in Marunouchi, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Chiyoda, Tokyo, with offices in 49 countries worldwide. The company manufactures business and industrial imaging products, in ...
). Though they had initially planned on staying for a year, they extended their stay to three years and settled in the North Side, during which Ishimoto roamed the streets of the city, taking over 60,000 photographs. The works from this period were featured in a number of Japanese magazines and exhibited at the
Nihonbashi is a business district of Chūō, Tokyo, Japan, which sprung up around the bridge of the same name that has linked two sides of the Nihonbashi River at this site since the 17th century. The first wooden bridge was completed in 1603. The curre ...
Shirokiya was a chain of department stores and other retail establishments founded in Japan and later located in Honolulu under the ownership of Shirokiya Holdings, LLC, a United States-based corporation. The company's last location closed in 2020. Compa ...
department store in 1962. In 1969, they were published by Bijustsu shuppan-sha as ''Chicago, Chicago,'' featuring accompanying texts written by Harry Callahan and
Shūzō Takiguchi was a Japanese poet, art critic, and artist. He was the central figure of orthodox Surrealism Surrealism is an art movement, art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow th ...
. The book design was conducted by Yūsaku Kamekura, and the 210 images were printed using a duotone relief process, which provided a richness to the dark tones and shadows captured in his street shots. The book captures the radical urban upheaval taking place in the late 1950s and early 60s in Chicago, with images that juxtapose the demolition of pre-war buildings against new modernist high-rises and public housing projects, and sensitively capture the intricacies of racial and political tensions as they manifested in public space . Ishimoto also immersed himself in allies and parades, and captured a dynamic image of Martin Luther King Jr. amidst an impassioned speech at a 1960 convention, flanked by a row of floating posters protesting against segregation in schools. Ishimoto was also the subject of a solo exhibition at the
Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the United States. The museum is based in the Art Institute of Chicago Building in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park. Its collection, stewa ...
in 1960.


Color photography

Though perhaps best known for his black-and-white work in ''Katsura'' and ''Chicago, Chicago'', Ishimoto had begun experimenting with color photography since his days at the ID, and he began to utilize it more heavily later in his career. During his second stay in Chicago, Ishimoto began experimenting with multiple exposures in color film, overlapping silhouettes with colored filters to create abstracted, transparent forms that were subject to the whims of photographic chance and inevitability. These techniques were later utilized in his series ''Color and Form'' (''Iro to Katachi'') (2003), an examination of the sensuous and abstracted forms of various types of flora.


Mandalas of the Two Worlds (1976)

In 1973, he photographed hundreds of Buddhist deities depicted in the Mandalas of the Two Worlds (''Ryōkai Mandala)'' preserved inside the
Tō-ji , also known as is a Shingon Buddhist temple in the Minami-ku, Kyoto, Minami-ku ward of Kyoto, Japan. Founded in 796, Tō-ji Temple was one of the only three Buddhist temples allowed in the city at the time it became the capital of Japan. As s ...
temple (also known as Kyō-ō-gokoku-ji) in Kyoto. By using color film and flash, Ishimoto captured the vibrant tones and intricate details of works that were typically kept in darkness for conservation purposes. His experience photographing the mandalas intensified his interests in the presence of tradition in contemporary life, and played a part in shifting his earlier penchant for "subtractive" beauty (reflected in his austere photographs of Katsura) towards an aesthetic mode that embraced the seemingly contradictory forces of the world and instead read them as co-constitutive and mutually interdependent—a way of thought shaped by the tenets of esoteric Buddhism Ishimoto expressed the following reflections on the mandalas' effect on his attitude towards photographic vision: “Photographers tend to pick up the good things and push everything else out of the frame. But with the mandala Buddhas, the mandalas boldly affirm the lowly elements of human existence instead of excising them when attempting to achieve enlightenment. Instead of cutting out the bad things, I came to think that the framed space instead needed to be a condensed version of everything.” The photographs were published by
Heibonsha Heibonsha (平凡社) is a Japanese publishing company based in Tokyo, which publishes encyclopedias, dictionaries and books in the fields of science and philosophy. Since 1945 it has also published books on art and literature.Ikko Tanaka Ikko Tanaka (田中 一光, ''Tanaka Ikkō'', January 13, 1930 – January 10, 2002) was a Japanese graphic designer. Tanaka is widely recognized for his prolific body of interdisciplinary work, which includes graphic identity and visual matte ...
.


"Food Journal/Wrapped Foods"

In "Food Journal/Wrapped Foods" (''Shokumotsushi/Tsutsumareta shokumotsu'') (1984), Ishimoto photographed everyday food items from the supermarket, accentuating the strangeness of fish and vegetables stretching against plastic wrap and styrofoam by highlighting the intense chromatic qualities of his subjects against stark black backgrounds, and casting them in a blue-green tone that recalled the clinical appearance of x-ray radiographs . The series also calls attention to the rise of mass consumerism in 1980s Japan, and the anxieties that Ishimoto, as someone who grew up in a working-class family during an era of scarcity, felt with regards to the loss of distinctiveness and food safety that came in tandem with rapid industrial and commercial growth.


Exhibitions


Solo exhibitions

*Ishimoto Yasuhiro Photo Exhibition, Gallery Takemiya, Tokyo, 1954 *''Chicago, Chicago,'' Nihonbashi Shirokiya, Tokyo, 1962 *''Mandalas of the Two Worlds'',
Seibu Museum of Art Seibu may refer to: *Seibu Holdings or a subsidiary thereof **Saitama Seibu Lions **Seibu Railway *Sogo & Seibu **Seibu Department Stores, owned by Sogo & Seibu *Seibu Kaihatsu was a Japanese manufacturer of arcade games. The company was foun ...
, Tokyo, 1977 *''Machi - Hito - Katachi ities - people - shapes'' P.G.I, Tokyo, 1986 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto'',
Rencontres d'Arles The Rencontres d'Arles (formerly called ''Rencontres internationales de la photographie d'Arles'') is an annual summer photography festival founded in 1970 by the Arles photographer Lucien Clergue, the writer Michel Tournier and the historian ...
festival, France, 1994 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: Remembrance of Things Present'', National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, 1996 *''Ishimoto Yasuhiro-ten: Shikago, Tōkyō'' () / ''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: Chicago and Tokyo'',
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography The is an art museum concentrating on photography. As the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, it was founded by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, and is in Meguro-ku, a short walk from Ebisu station in southwest Tokyo. The museum also ...
, Tokyo, 1998 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: A Tale of Two Cities'', Art Institute of Chicago, 1999 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: Mandalas of the Two Worlds at the Kyoo Gokokuji'',
National Museum of Art, Osaka is a subterranean Japanese art museum located on the island of Nakanoshima, located between the Dōjima River and the Tosabori River, about 10 minutes west of Higobashi Station in central Osaka. The official Japanese title of the museum trans ...
, Osaka, 1999 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto Photographs: Traces of Memory'',
Cleveland Museum of Art The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) is an art museum in Cleveland, Ohio, United States. Located in the Wade Park District of University Circle, the museum is internationally renowned for its substantial holdings of Asian art, Asian and Art of anc ...
, 2000–2001 *''Ishimoto Yasuhiro Shashinten 1946–2001'' ( 1946–2001) / ''Yasuhiro Ishimoto'', The Museum of Art, Kōchi, Kōchi, Japan, 2001 *''Tokyo: Yasuhiro Ishimoto'',
Canadian Centre for Architecture The Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA; ) is a Architecture museum, museum of architecture and research centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located at 1920, rue Baile (1920, Baile Street), between rue Fort (Fort Street) and rue Saint-Ma ...
, Montreal, 2012 *''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: Someday, Chicago'', DePaul Art Museum, Chicago, 2018


Select group exhibitions

*''
The Family of Man ''The Family of Man'' was an ambitious exhibition of 503 photographs from 68 countries curated by Edward Steichen, the director of the New York City Museum of Modern Art's (MoMA) department of photography. According to Steichen, the exhibitio ...
'', Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1955 *''NON'', Matsuya, Tokyo, 1962 *''Japanese Industry'', Japan Pavilion,
1964 New York World's Fair The 1964 New York World's Fair (also known as the 1964–1965 New York World's Fair) was an world's fair, international exposition at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States. The fair included exhibitions, activ ...
(photomurals) *''Photography in the Twentieth Century,''
National Gallery of Canada The National Gallery of Canada (), located in the capital city of Ottawa, Ontario, is Canada's National museums of Canada, national art museum. The museum's building takes up , with of space used for exhibiting art. It is one of the List of large ...
, 1967 *''New Japanese Photography'', Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1974 *''The Photographer and the City'', Art Institute of Chicago, 1977 *''Eight Japanese Photographers'', P.G.I, Tokyo, 1988 *''water,''
21 21 Design Sight 21_21 Design Sight is a museum in Roppongi in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, which opened in 2007. The museum, a design museum, was created by architect Tadao Ando and fashion designer Issey Miyake. "The idea was to create not only a museum that shows e ...
, Tokyo, 2007


Collections

Ishimoto's family donated 34,753 prints, approximately 100,000 negatives and 50,000 positives, along with correspondences, camera equipment, and other archival materials to the Museum of Art, Kōchi. On June 14, 2013, the museum established the Ishimoto Yasuhiro Photo Center in order to foster continued preservation efforts and encourage further research on the photographer's work. Ishimoto's work is also held in numerous major museum collections, including the
National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo The , also known as MOMAT, is the foremost museum collecting and exhibiting modern Japanese art. The museum, in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan, is known for its collection of 20th-century art and includes Western-style and ''Nihonga'' artists. It has a bra ...
, the
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum The is an art museum concentrating on photography. As the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, it was founded by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, and is in Meguro-ku, a short walk from Ebisu station in southwest Tokyo. The museum also ...
, Kawasaki City Museum, Yamaguchi Prefectural Art Museum,
Yokohama Museum of Art , founded in 1989, is located in the futurism, futuristic Minato Mirai 21 district of the Japanese city Yokohama, next to the Yokohama Landmark Tower. The collections The museum has works by many influential and well-known modern artists includin ...
,
Musashino Art University or is a private university in Kodaira, Western Tokyo, founded in 1962 with roots going back to 1929. It is known as one of the leading art universities in Japan. History In October 1929, was founded. In December 1948, it became , and in ...
,
Tokyo Polytechnic University is a private university in Honchō, Tokyo, Honchō, Nakano, Tokyo. Its nickname is ''Shadai'' (写大). It was formerly known as Tokyo College of Photography (, ''Tōkyō Shashin Daigaku''). The university was founded as Konishi Professional Sc ...
, the
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street (Manhattan), 53rd Street between Fifth Avenue, Fifth and Sixth Avenues. MoMA's collection spans the late 19th century to the present, a ...
, the
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the Houston Museum District of Houston, Texas. The permanent collection of the museum spans more than 5,000 years of history with nearly 80,000 works from six continents. Follo ...
, the
Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest and largest art museums in the United States. The museum is based in the Art Institute of Chicago Building in Chicago's Grant Park (Chicago), Grant Park. Its collection, stewa ...
, the
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art is an art gallery, art museum in Kansas City, Missouri, Kansas City, Missouri, known for its encyclopedic collection of art from nearly every continent and culture, and especially for its extensive collection of A ...
, the
George Eastman Museum The George Eastman Museum, also referred to as George Eastman House and the International Museum of Photography and Film, is a photography museum in Rochester, New York. Opened to the public in 1949, is the oldest museum dedicated to photography ...
, and the
Bauhaus Archive The Bauhaus Archive () is a state archive and Museum of Design located in Berlin. It collects art pieces, items, documents and literature which relate to the Bauhaus School (1919–1933), and puts them on public display. Currently, the museum ...
.


Publications


Photobooks by Ishimoto

* ''Aru hi aru tokoro'' () / ''Someday somewhere.'' Geibi Shuppansha, 1958. Tuttle, 1959. * ''Katsura: Nihon kenchiku ni okeru dentō to sōzō'' () / '' Katsura: Tradition and Creation in Japanese Architecture.'' Zōkeisha and Yale University Press, 1960. Second edition (without English text): Tokyo: Chūōkōronsha, 1971. English-language edition: New Haven: Yale University Press, 1972. * ''Shikago, Shikago'' () / ''Chicago, Chicago.'' Tokyo: Bijutsu Shuppansha, 1969. Second edition Tokyo: Japan Publications, 1983. * ''Toshi'' (都市, "City"). Tokyo: Chūōkōronsha, 1971. * (With
Haruo Tomiyama , 1935-15 October 2016 was a versatile Japanese photographer, active since the 1960s. Life and work Born in Kanda (Tokyo) on 25 February 1935, Tomiyama dropped out of evening high school in 1956 to study photography for himself.Yoshiko Suzuki ( ...
.) ''Ningen kakumei no kiroku'' () / ''The Document of Human Revolution.'' Tokyo: Shashin Hyōronsha, 1973. * ''Nōmen'' (, "Noh masks"). Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1974. * ''Den Shingonin Ryōkai Mandara'' () / ''The Mandalas of the Two Worlds.'' Tokyo: Heibonsha, 1977. Photographs on folded screens, lavishly produced and packed in two very large boxes. (An edition of 500, priced at 880,000
yen The is the official currency of Japan. It is the third-most traded currency in the foreign exchange market, after the United States dollar and the euro. It is also widely used as a third reserve currency after the US dollar and the euro. T ...
.) * ''Eros und Cosmos in Mandala: The Mandalas of the Two Worlds at the Kyoo Gokoku-ji.'' Seibu Museum of Art. *''Den Shingon in mandara'' (). Kyoto: Sanburaito Shuppan, 1978. *''Kunisaki kikō'' (, "Kunisaki travelogue"). Nihon no Bi. Tokyo: Shūeisha, 1978. A large-format collection of colour photographs of the Kunisaki peninsula in
Kyūshū is the third-largest island of Japan's four main islands and the most southerly of the four largest islands (i.e. excluding Okinawa and the other Ryukyu (''Nansei'') Islands). In the past, it has been known as , and . The historical regio ...
. * ''Karesansui no niwa'' (, "Dry gardens"). Tokyo: Kōdansha, 1980. * ''Yamataikoku gensō'' (). Nihon no Kokoro. Tokyo: Shūeisha, 1980. * ''Isuramu: Kūkan to mon'yō'' () / ''Islam: Space and Design.'' Kyoto: Shinshindō, 1980. * ''Kōkoku no jūichimen kannon'' (). Tokyo: Iwanami, 1982. * ''Shikago, Shikago: Sono 2'' () / ''Chicago, Chicago.'' Tokyo: Libro Port, 1983. . * ''Shikago, Shikago: Sono 2'' () / ''Chicago, Chicago.'' Tokyo: Canon, 1983. More black and white photographs of Chicago. No captions; foreword and chronology of the photographer in Japanese. * ''Katsura rikyū: Kūkan to katachi'' (). Tokyo: Iwanami, 1983. English translation: ''Katsura Villa: Space and Form.'' New York: Rizzoli, 1987. * ''Hana'' () / ''Hana.'' Tokyo: Kyūryūdō, 1988. . English edition: ''Flowers'', San Francisco: Chronicle, 1989. . * ''Kyō no tewaza: Takumi-tachi no emoyō'' (). Tokyo: Gakugei Shorin, 1988. . * ''The Photography of Yasuhiro Ishimoto: 1948–1989.'' Tokyo: Seibu Museum of Art, 1989. *''Ishimoto Yasuhiro Shashinten 1946–2001'' ( 1946–2001) / ''Yasuhiro Ishimoto.'' Kōchi, Kōchi: The Museum of Art, Kochi, 2001. Text in Japanese and English. * ''Arata Isozaki Works 30: Architectural Models, Prints, Drawings.'' Gingko, 1992. . * ''Ise Jingū'' (, "Ise shrine"). Tokyo: Iwanami, 1995. . * ''Genzai no kioku'' () / ''Remembrance of Things Present.'' Tokyo: National Museum of Modern Art, 1996. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the National Film Center in 1996. Captions and text in both Japanese and English. * ''Ishimoto Yasuhiro'' ().
Nihon no Shashinka Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea in th ...
. Tokyo: Iwanami, 1997. . A compact survey of Ishimoto's monochrome work; text in Japanese only. * ''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: A Tale of Two Cities.'' Ed.
Colin Westerbeck Colin Leslie Westerbeck Jr. is a curator, writer, and teacher of the history of photography. Before moving to Los Angeles, where he has taught at UCLA and USC, he was curator of photography at the Art Institute of Chicago. He is a regular contri ...
. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago, 1999. . Catalogue of an exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, May–September 1999. * ''Toki'' () / ''Moment.'' Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2004. . A survey of Ishimoto's monochrome work; text in Japanese and English. * ''Shibuya, Shibuya'' (). Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2007. . Monochrome images, mostly of the backs of individual people waiting for the lights to change at the main
crossroads Crossroads is a junction where four roads meet. Crossroads, crossroad, cross road(s) or similar may also refer to: Film and television Films * ''Crossroads'' (1928 film), a 1928 Japanese film by Teinosuke Kinugasa * ''Cross Roads'' (film), a ...
in front of
Shibuya Station is a major railway station in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East), Keio Corporation, Tokyu Corporation, and Tokyo Metro. It serves as a terminal for six railway lines, five of which are operated by Tokyo Metro ...
. No captions; the minimal text is in Japanese and English. * ''Meguriau iro to katachi'' () / ''Composition.'' Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2008. . Compositions of colors. The minimal text is in Japanese only. *''Tajū rokō'' () / ''Multi Exposure.'' Exhibition catalogue. *''Katsura rikyū'' (). 2010. . *Nakamori, Yasufumi. ''Katsura: Picturing Modernism in Japanese Architecture.'' Museum of Fine Arts Houston, 2010. . *Moriyama Akiko (). ''Ishimoto Yasuhiro: Shashin to iu shikō'' () / ''Yasuhiro Ishimoto: Beyond the Eye that Shapes.'' 武蔵野美術大学出版局, 2010. 。


Other publications including Ishimoto's work

*Szarkowski, John, and Shoji Yamagishi. ''New Japanese Photography.'' New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1974. (hard), (paper) Four photographs (1953–1954) from ''Katsura'' (1960). *''Nihon nūdo meisakushū'' (, Japanese nudes). ''Camera Mainichi'' bessatsu. Tokyo: Mainichi Shinbunsha, 1982. Pp. 166–69 show nudes by Ishimoto. *''Nihon shashin no tenkan: 1960 nendai no hyōgen'' () / ''Innovation in Japanese Photography in the 1960s.'' Tokyo: Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 1991. Exhibition catalogue, text in Japanese and English. Pp. 68–77 show examples from "Chicago, Chicago". *''Densha ni miru toshi fūkei 1981–2006'' ( / ''Scenes of Tokyo City: Prospects from the Train 1981–2006.'' Tama City, Tokyo: Tama City Cultural Foundation Parthenon Tama, 2006. Exhibition catalogue; pp. 4–13 are devoted to Ishimoto. Captions and text in Japanese and English.


References


General references

* Auer, Michèle, and Michel Auer. ''Encyclopédie internationale des photographes de 1839 à nos jours/Photographers Encyclopaedia International 1839 to the Present.'' Hermance: Editions Camera Obscura, 1985.
Yasuhiro Ishimoto, photographs
Canadian Centre for Architecture The Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA; ) is a Architecture museum, museum of architecture and research centre in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located at 1920, rue Baile (1920, Baile Street), between rue Fort (Fort Street) and rue Saint-Ma ...
*
Colorado Department of Personnel & Administration. WWII Japanese Internment Camp; 'The Granada Relocation Center Site'
Accessed 31 March 2006

Accessed 31 March 2006
I Photo Central. 'E-Photo Newsletter, Issue 84, 1/17/2005'
Accessed, cited 31 March 2006 * Ishimoto, Yasuhiro. 'Postscript'. In ''Katsura Villa: Space and Form'' (New York: Rizzoli, 1987), 265, 266. * Isozaki, Arata, Osamu Sato and Yasuhiro Ishimoto. ''Katsura Villa: Space and Form'' (New York: Rizzoli, 1987). * Longmire, Stephen. "Callahan's Children: Recent Retrospectives of Photographers from the Institute of Design". ''Afterimage'', vol. 28, no. 2 (September/October 2000), 6.
Photo Gallery International. 'Gallery; Gallery Artists; Yasuhiro Ishimoto'
Accessed 29 October 2003 *Stephen Daiter Gallery
Yasuhiro Ishimoto Photographs
Accessed 26 May 2008. * Tucker, Anne Wilkes, et al. ''The History of Japanese Photography.'' New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003.
Union List of Artist Names, s.v. "Ishimoto, Yasuhiro"
Accessed 31 March 2006

''Clevescene.com'' (originally published by ''Cleveland Scene'', 2000-11-16). Accessed 31 March 2006 {{DEFAULTSORT:Ishimoto, Yasuhiro Naturalized citizens of Japan 1921 births 2012 deaths Photographers from Chicago Illinois Institute of Technology alumni Japanese photographers Japanese-American internees Photography academics Academic staff of Tokyo the College of Photography Street photographers American artists of Japanese descent Artists from San Francisco Artists from Kōchi Prefecture American expatriates in Japan Academic staff of Tokyo Zokei University