Hakuyō Fuchikami (淵上 白陽, Fuchikami Hakuyō) (November 14, 1889 – February 8, 1960) was one of the most prominent Japanesephotographers in the first half of the 20th century.
In 1922 Fuchikami organized Nihon Kōga Geijutsu Kyōkai (Japan Photographic Art Association, 日本光画芸術協会) and published the first issue of the photography magazine Hakuyō (白陽). He continued the publication of this magazine until 1926.
In 1928 Fuchikami moved to Manchuria and was temporarily employed by the South Manchuria Railway Company (南満洲鉄道, 満鉄), and in 1933 became a chief editor of the Company's photography magazine Manshū Gurafu (満洲グラフ, "Pictorial Manchuria").
In 1932, with other photographers in Manchuria, Fuchikami organized Manshū Shashin Sakka Kyōkai (満洲写真作家協会, Manchuria Photographic Artists Association) and published Hikaru oka (光る丘, "Shining Hills") as its journal.[1][2]
Fuchikami's Manchuria-based works grew out of Japanese pictorialism and drew inspiration from French Barbizon School paintings and 20th Century pastoralist paintings and photographs. However, after the establishment of Manchukuo in 1932 they also reflected the influence of European 'New Photography' and Soviet Constructivist photography. The Soviet periodical USSR in Construction was an especially important source of inspiration for Fuchikami's depictions of mining and industrial installations in Manchukuo.[3][4]
In an article published in 2014 Philip Charrier argues that Fuchikami's depiction of Manchukuo as a timeless agricultural paradise was misleading in relation to the aggressive and disruptive industrialization and urbanization projects being carried out by the Japanese in northeast China. In the context of the times it functioned as propaganda in support of the Japanese colonial project in the region.[5]
In 1941 Fuchikami returned to Japan and continued photography until his death.
Exhibitions
Art Deco Photography in Japan (Kosei-ha no Jidai, Shōki Modanizumu no Shashin Hyōgen, 構成派の時代 初期モダニズムの写真表現) at Nagoya City Art Museum (名古屋市美術館), 1992
The Depicted Utopia (Ikyō no Modanizumu, 異郷のモダニズム), at Nagoya City Art Museum (名古屋市美術館), 1994
References
^Charrier, Philip "Fuchikami Hakuyō and the 'Manchukuo Pastoral' in 1930s Japanese Art Photography," Japanese Studies, Volume 34, Number 2, pages 169–192, September 2014.
^Culver, Annika A., Glorify the Empire: Japanese Avant-Garde Propaganda in Manchukuo, Vancouver: UBC Press, 2013.
^Charrier, Philip "Fuchikami Hakuyō and the 'Manchukuo Pastoral' in 1930s Japanese Art Photography," Japanese Studies, Volume 34, Number 2, pages 169–192, September 2014.
^Takeba Joe "'The Sun of a New Nation'--Ikyō no modanizumu, aruiwa mō hitotsu no riarizumu", in Takeba Joe and Miura Noriko, Ikyō no modanizumu--Fuchikami Hakuyō to Manshū Shashin Sakka Kyōkai, Nagoya: Nagoya-shi Bijutsukan and Mainichi Shimbun, 1994.
^Charrier, Philip, "Fuchikami Hakuyō and the 'Manchukuo Pastoral' in 1930s Japanese Art Photography" Japanese Studies, Volume 34, Number 2, pages 169-192, September 2014.
(in English) Kaneko Ryūichi. Modern Photography in Japan 1915-1940. San Francisco: Friends of Photography, 2001. ISBN0-933286-74-0
(in English) Tucker, Anne Wilkes, et al. The History of Japanese Photography. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN0-300-09925-8
(in Japanese) Exhibition Catalogue for "Art Deco Photography in Japan" (構成派の時代 初期モダニズムの写真表現) (Nagoya City Art Museum, 1992) (no ISBN)
(in Japanese) Exhibition Catalogue for "The Depicted Utopia" (異郷のモダニズム) (Nagoya City Art Museum and The Mainichi Newspapers, 1994) (no ISBN)
(in Japanese)Hakuyō Fuchikami to Manshū Shashin Sakka Kyōkai (淵上白陽と満洲写真作家協会). Nihon no shashinka (日本の写真家), vol. 6. Tokyo: Iwanami, 1998. ISBN4-00-008346-5