こんにちは70年 市民・学生・労働者はたたかう / Hello70s:Civilians, Students, Workers in Struggle

佐藤 元洋 / Motohiro Sato

SOLD OUT

Publisher/創土社

   Published/1969
Format/ソフトカバー   Pages/50   Size/180*260*5
Google翻訳
Hello 70s: Civilians, Students, Workers in Struggle is a photo collection by Japanese photographer Motohiro Sato. Born in Tokyo in 1948, he enrolled in the Department of Photography at Nihon University College of Art in the late 1960s, where he began photographing struggles, student demonstrations, and anti-war movements (such as the Beheiren movement). In 1969, while still a student, he received the 6th Taiyo Award. At the award ceremony, when the then-Dean of Nihon University College of Art, a leading figure in photography, took to the stage to give a congratulatory speech, Sato is said to have heckled him, saying, "Get out of the way! I didn't take these photos for you to see." He also went on to say, "(Omitted) That person has no right to see my photographs." Sato continued to publish the mini-magazine "Cope" with his friends in the 1970s and 1980s, but this book is his first, self-published in 1970, and is a record of people who were active in various parts of Tokyo in 1968 for anti-war and anti-security treaty reasons. (Included in The Japanese Photobook 1912–1990)
<Related Artists> 佐藤 元洋 / Motohiro Sato
<Condition> Good.
order

TOP