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Miyako Ishiuchi

*anese photographer (born 1947)

Miyako Ishiuchi (石内 都, Ishiuchi Miyako, born March 27, 1947), is a *anese photographer.

In 2005, she represented *an at the Venice Biennale. In March 2014, she became the third *anese photographer, following Hiroshi Hamaya and Hiroshi Sugimoto, to received the H*elblad Foundation International Award in Photography.

Ishiuchi's work is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, and the Art Ins*ute of Chicago.

Contents

  • 1 Life and work
  • 2 Exhibitions
    • 2.1 Solo exhibitions
    • 2.2 Group exhibitions
  • 3 Awards
  • 4 Collections
  • 5 References

Life and work

Ishiuchi was born March 27, 1947 in Nitta District, Gunma, *an, and raised in Yokosuka, Kanagawa. She graduated from Yokosuka City Public High school and was admitted to the design department at Tama Art University, where she specialized in textile dying and weaving. She left the department in her second year.

Ishiuchi grew up in Kiryu and Yokosuka, home to the largest Navel base in the East. There, she remained until she was 19. "The scars of adolescence that I sustained there had a big effect on me, and you could say that Yokosuka was the starting point for my photography," the artist tells Ocula Magazine in 2021.

Ishiuchi began photographing with one of the most renowned generations in *anese photography, which included such photographers as Daido Moriyama and Shomei Tomatsu. These photographers were dealing with postwar trauma while also exploring new directions in photography for the new, postwar era.

Ishiuchi has produced full collections of photography since the late 1970s. Her first photo series was a study of Yokosuka, Yokosuka Stories (1976-1977), do*enting the city where she grew up. While working with them, Ishiuchi organized the all-women photography exhibition Hyakka Ryoran at the Shimizu Gallery in 1976. In 1979, she won the Kimura Ihei Award for her photoalbum APARTMENT and her photography exhibition Apaato.

Her work favors the oversize grainy prints and gritty subject matter that characterize the pictures of many photographers in the late 1960s and 1970s who preferred the are-bure, or grainy-blurry. She began to take close-ups of the bodies of the very old in the early 1990s. More recently, her photographs have addressed themes of skin, clothing, and time. In Hiroshima (2008), she photographed the clothes of victims from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. In Frida: Love and Pain (2012), she was invited by the Frida Kahlo Museum in Mexico City to photograph the Frida Kahlo's personal artifacts, including corsets, clothing, shoes, rings, combs and other accessories, makeup, and medicines.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

  • Ishiuchi Miyako: Postwar Shadows, Getty Center, Los Angeles, CA, October 2015 – February 2016. A retrospective.
  • Grain and Shadow, Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, *an, December 2017 – March 2018. A retrospective.

Group exhibitions

  • 1994: *anese Art After 1945: Scream Against the Sky, Guggenheim Museum, New York
  • 2005: Venice Biennale
  • 2016-2017: *anese Photography from Postwar to Now, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco

Awards

  • 1979: Kimura Ihei Award
  • 1999: Higashikawa Prize, Domestic Photographer Prize
  • 1999: Society of Photographer Award
  • 2006: The Photographic Society of *an
  • 2009: Mainichi Art Award
  • 2013: Medal of Honor, Purple Ribbon
  • 2014: H*elblad Foundation International Award in Photography

Collections

Ishiuchi's work is held in the following public collections:

  • Museum of Modern Art, New York
  • J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
  • San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

References