Daido Moriyama
Japanese photographer Daido Moriyama is one of the most
important Japanese artists in photography today. His work has had
an enormous influence on the development of modern photography.
Moriyama (1938) began taking pictures at the age of 21. After
moving to Tokyo, he worked with the eminent photographer Eikoh
Hosoe. In 1963, he went freelance and began his extensive and
now-legendary oeuvre, which continues to expand to this day.
Moriyama generally uses a compact 35mm camera, taking photos on
the streets of Japan's main cities. The images betray the speed at
which they are made. Often the horizon is crooked and the photo is
blurred, or the grain is visible and there is too much contrast.
His subjects range from underexposed, obscure bars to strip clubs
and dark alleys. He seems to be interested more in the suggestion
of form than in a clear, well-delineated figure. His visual idiom
is rough and ready, and he often directs the lens at details that
are out of context, thereby evoking a fragmented and stifling
atmosphere.
See Moriyama's Sea
Moriyama donated Sea (2001-2002/2007) to Foam
Editions. With his donation, Moriyama supports Foam's aim to use
private revenue for educational activities. Foam featured his work
in an exhibition in 2006. Sea comes in a
limited-edition of 15.