Isao Yamada

Isao Yamada (山田 勇男 Yamada Isao, born 1952 in Hokkaido) is Japanese film director, graphic artist, and manga author.

Career

He started his artistic career by working at Shuji Terayama's theatre company, Tenjousajiki. In 1974, he was appointed as an artistic crew in Terayama's feature-film, Denen ni Shisu (Pastoral: To Die in the Country). He also worked for Boxer (1977), Kusameikyu (Grass Labyrinth, 1979), Saraba Hakobune (Farewell to the Ark, 1982).

At the same time in Sapporo, he started a film club, Gingagahou-sha Eiga Club, with his colleague Yumekichi Minatoya in 1977. Ever since his first 8mm film made for the club, Subaru no Yoru (An Incident of Night) was selected for Pia Film Festival, he has been constantly working with 8mm films (occasionally 16mm). Most of them are short 'private films' and named by himself ‘Yamavicascope’. Since 1991, La Camera in Tokyo has produced regular duo-screenings of his films and the works by Yamazaki Mikio. In the filmography of Yamavicascope, the film-correspondances between Yamada and Yamazaki are titled as OUFUKU (Film Letter) I~V (1986~2006). In addition to screenings in Japan, Yamada's experimental art works have been featured at Cannes,[1] Oberhausen,[2] Stockholm and other film festivals. His feature-films are Anmonaito no sasayaki wo kiita (I’ve heard the ammonite’s murmur:1992), Jouhatsu Tabinikki (The Soul Odyssey: 2003) based on the essay by Yoshiharu Tsuge, and Shutorumu unto Doranku (Sturm und Drang: 2014).

In addition to the cinema work, Yamada is also known for his work in manga, painting and graphic design. His calligraphic font is called ‘Yamada-moji’ which has been appointed for a number of publications and advertisement posters.

Film works

There are more than one hundred oeuvres, The following is only a selected list and excludes the feature-films mentioned above.

Art works

See also

References

  1. "ANMONAITO NO SASAYAKI WO KIITA (J'AI ENTENDU L'AMMONITE MURMURER)". Festival de Cannes. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  2. Ostria, Vincent (24 April 2004). "Au film du temps Oberhausen, doyen mondial des festivals de court métrage, atteint sa cinquantième année". L'Humanité. Retrieved 22 November 2015.

External links

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