- Takanobu Hayashi
is a Japanese photographer.
Hayashi was born in
Dalian , China, in 1946, but his family then quickly moved to Japan, first to Beppu (Ōita, Japan) and then toKyoto . [Biographical information from Sekiji's profile in "328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers" and "Tokyo / City of Photos."] He worked in a darkroom for a year after graduating from high school, and in 1965 moved toTokyo , where he studied at theTokyo College of Photography . After graduating, he worked for two years as an assistant ofHajime Sawatari , and then started to freelance for fashion magazines. Since 1983 he has been teaching at the Tokyo College of Photography.Hayashi works in black and white, often depicting a Tokyo rendered off-kilter by speculative and showy development. [Kazuko Sekiji, “Looking at Tokyo, City of Photographs”, introduction to "Tokyo / City of Photos" n.p.; Takanobu Hayashi, “Scenes from a Gala Occasion, from 'A Picture of Happiness'”, in "Tokyo / City of Photos," n.p.] Hayashi has participated in group exhibitions including “Empathy”, which went to Rochester (NY) and elsewhere in 1987. His first solo exhibition (in the Shinjuku
Nikon Salon ) came in 1983; he has exhibited intermittently since then.Hayashi's only book to date is "Zoo," a collection of photographs in zoos that managed to show the animals in (and sometimes dwarfed by) their man-made environs while barely showing any people; it has been praised for the purity (achieved with the help of retouching) and composition of its images. [Obinata, p. 200.] "Zoo" won the
Higashikawa Prize in 1986. A series of photographs of roof spaces, "Roof," won praise as a continuation of the themes of "Zoo." [Iizawa, p. 75]Hayashi also won an award from Konica in 1995. ["Gendai Shashin no keifu" (nihongo2|現代写真の系譜) / "History of Modern Photos" II, p. 14.]
Book
*"Zoo." Tokyo: the author, 1986. Includes 28 black and white plates. Captions (the names of the zoos) in English; no other text.
Notes
References
*ja icon "Gendai Shashin no keifu" (nihongo2|現代写真の系譜) / "History of Modern Photos" II. Tokyo: Nikkor Club, 2001.
*ja icon Iizawa Kōtarō (nihongo2|飯沢耕太郎). Review of "Roof." In "Shashin no genzai: Kuronikuru 1983–1992" (nihongo2|写真の現在:クロニクル1983–1992, Photography now: A chronicle 1983–1992). Tokyo: Mirai-sha, 1993. ISBN 4-624-71061-4. Review originally published in "Nippon Camera ," July 1985.
*ja icon Obinata Kin'ichi (nihongo2|大日方欣一). Capsule review of "Zoo." P. 200. In "Shashinshū o yomu: Besuto 338 kanzen gaido" (nihongo2|写真集を読む:ベスト338完全ガイド, Reading photobooks: A complete guide to the best 338). Tokyo: Metarōgu, 1997. ISBN 4-8398-2010-4.
* Sekiji Kazuko (nihongo2|関次和子). "Hayashi Takanobu". In "Nihon shashinka jiten" (nihongo2|日本写真家事典) / "328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers." Kyoto: Tankōsha, 2000. P. 257. ISBN 4-473-01750-8. Despite its alternative title in English, the text is all in Japanese.
*"Shashin toshi Tōkyō" (nihongo2|写真都市Tokyo) / "Tokyo/City of Photos." Tokyo: Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, 1995. Catalogue of an exhibition held in 1995. Plates 76–93 are from the series “A picture of happiness” (nihongo2|晴れの風景, "Hare no fūkei"). (Other photographers whose work appears areHiroh Kikai ,Ryūji Miyamoto , Daidō Moriyama,Shigeichi Nagano ,Ikkō Narahara ,Mitsugu Ōnishi ,Masato Seto ,Issei Suda ,Akihide Tamura ,Tokuko Ushioda , andHiroshi Yamazaki .) Captions and texts in both Japanese and English.
* [http://www.skjstudio.com/japanese2/hayashi.html Exhibition notice] by S K Josefsberg Studio (Portland, Oregon) with two sample photos.
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