Hiroshi Hamaya

(c) Magnum Photos

Slate.com has a nice gallery of Hiroshi Hamaya photographs to accompany a post about his retrospective book (Fifty Years of Photography 1930-1981).

Born in 1915, Hiroshi Hamaya began his career studying aerial photography and started his Yukiguni (Snow Land) series, which focused on farming practices and daily life in the remote mountains of Niigata prefecture, in 1940, then followed it with his Ura Nihon (Japan’s Back Coast) series in 1954. His work was included in Edward Steichen’s 1955 “Family of Man” exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, and Hamaya later became the first Japanese photographer to work for Magnum, in 1960. After covering the demonstration against the U.S.–Japan Security Treaty, he returned to aerial and landscape photography, personally adopting an anti-government stance.

One Response to “Hiroshi Hamaya”

John Edelmann Said:

I have a two volume set of Hamaya books with photographs from 1940 to 1980 with dust jacket in “perfect” condition. It is signed by the author and by Richard Avedon. The author gave this book to Avedon while I was Avedon’s studio manager. I would like to sell the book. The book is written in Japanese. Is there any thing you can tell me about it’s value, or how I can sell it?
Thank you for the information.
John Edelmann

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