Shunji Dodo

Shunji Dodo (百々 俊二 Dodo Shunji) is a Japanese photographer of the Kii Peninsula, Osaka, and other subjects.

Life and career

Dodo was born in Osaka in 1947.[1] He graduated in fine arts from Kyushu Sangyo University in 1970,[1] and started teaching at Tōkyō Shashin Senmon Gakkō (now Visual Arts College Tokyo).[2] Two years later he started work as a teacher of photography at Ōsaka Shashin Senmon Gakkō; in 1998 he was made head of the school, by that time renamed Visual Arts College Osaka.[1]

Dodo was present when the film director Naomi Kawase, who had first been a student of his[3][4] and was later teaching at Visual Arts Senmon Gakkō, had her first baby on 24 April 2004, in Nara. This was filmed as Tarachime (垂乳女) and Dodo photographed the event; the photographs were exhibited in Nara, Tokyo, and Locarno,[1] and published as Haha (花母).

Dodo's book of large-format black-and-white photographs A Radiant Land: Kii Peninsula won the PSJ's Annual Award for 1995; his later collection of large-format colour photographs of the peninsula, A Radiant Land with Thousands of Years, was exhibited in Nara City Museum of Photography in 2000.[1] The latter work also won him the Ina Nobuo Award in 1999.[5]

Dodo has said that his major influences were Shōmei Tōmatsu, especially his Ryūkyū series "Pencil of the Sun", and Yutaka Takanashi, for the way in which Takanashi's concentration on Tokyo showed Dodo his own possibilities in Osaka.[6] Among the photographers he admires are Robert Frank and William Klein.[6]

Awards

Exhibitions by Dodo

"Osaka" exhibition in the Osaka Nikon Salon, December 2011

Film, video

Publications by Dodo

Some photobooks by Shunji Dodo

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Potted biography for the Nara International Film Festival, 2010. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-08-24. (An English-language version is hard to understand.)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Biography, Osaka, p.186.
  3. Description of the book Haha, Match & Co. Accessed 2010-08-24.
  4. As stated by the continuity voice in a program about Dodo broadcast on MBS on 21 May 2010. (Transcription, accessed 2010-08-25.) (Japanese)
  5. 1 2 Ina Nobuo Award page for 1999. Nikon. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-08-24.
  6. 1 2 Interview with Dodo, Faces of Humanity 93/94, pp. 16669.
  7. Exhibition notice, Higashikawa Photo Festival. (Japanese) Accessed 2012-05-19.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Shunji Dodo / Naomi Kawase: 百々俊二 / 河瀬直美". Gallery Out of Place. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-08-24.
  9. Press kit, Visions du Réel, 2007. Accessed 2010-08-25.
  10. Exhibition notice, Gallery Bauhaus. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-08-25.
  11. Exhibition notice (Ginza), Nikon. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-12-07.
  12. Exhibition notice (Osaka), Nikon. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-12-28.
  13. Exhibition notice, Tokyo Art Beat. (English) Accessed 2010-12-24.
  14. Press release, Gallery Out of Place. (Japanese) Accessed 2010-12-24.
  15. Exhibition notice, Tokyo Art Beat. (English) Accessed 2010-12-24.
  16. "The Mourning Forest by Naomi Kawase", Fest21.com. Accessed 2010-08-25.
  17. Diary entries by Kawase, 27 and 30 April 2009. Accessed 2010-08-25.
  18. 1 2 Hard to find in library catalogues, but listed in for example the biography in Osaka, p.186.

External links


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