Google翻訳
A collection of works by Japanese photographer Nakamura Tatsuyuki (1912-1995), "Nude Photography and Practical Skills." Born in Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture, Nakamura moved to Tokyo to continue his studies at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts (now Tokyo University of the Arts). After graduating, he became an art teacher and taught at an elementary school in Shinagawa Ward for nearly 10 years. While he was a teacher, he started taking photographs after purchasing a cheap Parlette, and in 1947, after the end of the war, he quit his job and became the photographer for the GHQ Education Center, where he began to pursue photography full-time. Around this time, he also began creating nude works, which were featured in many camera magazines, and in the 1950s, his nude photos of actress Michiko Hamamura caused a great stir. For Nakamura, who originally majored in realist painting, nudes were something that removed "eros" and depicted "formal beauty," and with this style, which was innovative at the time, he established a solid position as a photographer of nude women. This is a collection of works published in the early 1950s after the war, and is a book that introduces Nakamura's know-how regarding nude photography with a wealth of images.