- Shima Ryū
was a
Japan ese artist and pioneering photographer. Originally from Kiryū, in what is nowGunma Prefecture , she studied at an art school inEdo (nowTokyo ) where she metShima Kakoku (1827–1870), a fellow student. The two married in 1855 and soon began moving about theKantō region , possibly exhibiting their works along the way. At some point the couple learned photography, and in the spring of 1864 Ryū photographed her husband, thereby creating the earliest known photograph by a Japanese woman. [As asserted by both Bennett and "Nihon no shashinka."] A wet-plate print of this portrait remains in the Shima family archives. The Shimas operated aphotographic studio in Edo ["Nihon no shashinka" specifies Shitaya.] in about 1865 to 1867, until Kakoku accepted a teaching position at Kaiseijo. Following her husband's death in 1870, Ryū returned to Kiryū where she opened her own studio. She died in 1900.Notes
References
* Bennett, Terry. "Photography in Japan: 1853–1912" Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle, 2006. ISBN 0804836337 (hard)
*"Nihon no shashinka" (nihongo2|日本の写真家) / "Biographic Dictionary of Japanese Photography." Tokyo: Nichigai Associates, 2005. ISBN 4-8169-1948-1. P.209.ja icon Despite the English-language alternative title, all in Japanese.
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