舞阪・大太鼓まつり

鈴木 康友 / Yasutomo Suzuki

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Publisher/ひくまの出版

   Published/1981
Format/ソフトカバー   Pages/-   Size/245*258*13
Google翻訳
A photo book by the Japanese photographer, Yasutomo Suzuki, "My Osaka Daikoko Festival". Born in 1949. Yasutomo Suzuki said that his father ran a photo studio but his interest in photography was weak when he was a student. His father shuts down the photo studio when he graduated from high school, but contrary to that, Suzuki himself began to be interested in photography, and it was Kishin Shinoyama that triggered him. Inspired by Oreyama's masterpiece "Orere Olala", he grabbed a camera, made a darkroom that was once gone, and started shooting the Taiko Drum Festival of the local Hamamatsu city Maisaka. After 10 years of continuous photography, some of them were announced in "Camera Daily", which led to the permanent preservation of 67 photographs of Suzuki on MoMA in New York in 1979. This book is a collection of photographs published in 1981. It is a book that summarizes the state of the Daikokoko Festival. The appearance of children and adolescents with painted faces and bodies that are characteristic of this festival (temporary), children and adolescents, and men and women are impressive. The scenes of the townspeople who are being
<Related Artists> 鈴木 清 / Kiyoshi Suzuki
<Condition> Jacket: small thread · small yogore, obi missing body: heaven · earth small yogore, others aged
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