Shigeichi Nagano

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Shigeichi Nagano (長野 重一, Nagano Shigeichi, March 30, 1925 – January 30, 2019) was a Japanese

Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
in 2000.

Life and work

Nagano was born in

Iwanami Shoten where, again under Natori, he did the photography for about fifty of the slim volumes in Iwanami Shashin Bunko
. In 1954 he went freelance, concentrating on magazine work.

During the 1960s Nagano observed the period of intense economic growth in Japan, depicting the lives of Tokyo's

sarariman
with some humor. The photographs of this period were only published in book form much later, as Dorīmu eiji and 1960 (1978 and 1990 respectively).

In 1964 Nagano worked on the cinemaphotography for Ichikawa Kon's film Tokyo Olympiad, and he then moved to work in film and television, particularly television commercials.

Nagano exhibited recent examples of his

Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
in 2000.

Nagano died two months short of his 94th birthday, on January 30, 2019.[1][2]

Books of Nagano's works

Books by Nagano, left to right: Kogai satsuei jōtatsu 50 no hiketsu; Dokyumentarī shashin; Japan's Dream Age; The Hospital at Night (later edition); Inka teikoku no zanshō; 1960; Taiheiki; Nagano Shigeichi sakuhinten: 1960 Berurin Nihon; Tōkyō kōjitsu; Jidai no kioku 1945–1995; Nagano Shigeichi (Nihon no shashinka); Distant Gaze; Nagano Shigeichi (Hysteric 14); Distant Gaze: Dark Blossom of Winter; Hongkong Reminiscence 1958; surrounded by irrelevant Pelicans, and lying on top of the unusually large-format A Strange Perspective in Tokyo

Works with contributions by Nagano

References

  1. Sankei Shinbun
    , February 8, 2019. Accessed February 9, 2019.
  2. Nihon Keizai Shinbun
    , February 8, 2019. Accessed February 9, 2019.

External links