Yurie Nagashima

Yurie Nagashima
Born October 1973 (age 42)
Nagano, Tokyo, Tokyo
Nationality Japanese
Known for Photography

Yurie Nagashima (長島 有里枝 Nagashima Yurie, born 1973) is a Japanese photographer and contemporary artist working predominantly in the genres self-portraiture, portraiture, street photography and still life. In 2000, Nagashima was awarded the prestigious Kimura Ihei Award. Nagashima is a photography tutor at Musashino Art University in Tokyo.

Biography

Yurie Nagashima rose to national fame in Japan after receiving the second annual Urbanart award hosted by the Parco Gallery in Tokyo in 1993 for a series of photographs depicting herself and her family in the nude.[1] Nagashima was nominated for the award by Nobuyoshi Araki, one of Japan's best known photographers. At the time, Nagashima was still a student at Musashino Art University in Tokyo from where she graduated in 1995 with a BA in visual communication design.[2] In 1995, Nagashima had a two-person exhibition with the American photographer Catherine Opie at the Parco Gallery, Tokyo.[2] Following this encounter with Opie, Nagashima embarked on a MFA at the California Institute of the Arts under her tutelage.

Nagashima has published numerous important photography monographs that deal with the family, gender, identity and sexuality. In the West, Nagashima has been compared to American photographer Nan Goldin.[3] In at times provocative photographs, Nagashima has tested public perceptions on obscenity and censorship in Japan.[4] Nagashima is represented by the gallery SCAI the Bathhouse in Tokyo, where she had numerous solo and group exhibitions.[2] In addition to her work as a photographer and photography tutor, Nagashima has published (as Senaka no kioku, meaning "Memories of a back") a series of biographical stories from her childhood in 2009.[5]

In August 2014, Nagashima was a Master at the International Summer School of Photography, in Latvia. She led a workshop titled 'Photography as a Subversive Tactic: Being the Other'.[6]

Books

References

  1. Warner Marien, Mary (2006). Photography: A Cultural History. London: Laurence King, p. 464.
  2. 1 2 3 "Yurie Nagashima", SCAI the Bathhouse.
  3. Friis-Hansen, Dana (2003). Internationalization, Individualism, and the Institutionalization of Photography. In: Tucker, Anne Wilkes (et al.), The History of Japanese Photography. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  4. Roscoe, Bruce (2007). Windows on Japan: a walk through place and perception. New York: Algora, p. 278.
  5. Masatsugu Ono, "A Year in Reading", The Millions.
  6. http://issp.lv/en/summer-school/2014/masters-workshops/Yurie%20Nagashima
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