a lot of antique shows,
and enjoy going to antique fairs, and often see prints for sale,
similar to these, by Kazumasa Ogawa (1860 – 1929), who was a pioneering Japanese photographer who lived through
the Meiji era,
He is known for a lot of photographic firsts — first photo studio in Tokyo (1884),
first collotype photo printing business (1889), the list goes
on — but he’s also known for his hand-colored photos of flowers,
plants and landscapes of Japan,
in
addition to running his business manufacturing dry plates for use by
photographers, Ogawa also kept busy editing Shashin Shinpo, the only
photographic journal at the time,
as well as for Kokka (National
flower) magazine, which perhaps helps explain his fixation with flowers,
Ogawa
began studying photography at the age of 15. He even spent time in Boston
studying photography and printing, You can see much more of his work at Rawpixel and
the Getty
Museum,
and
if you’d like to learn more about the man, here’s an
essay on him by art historian Kelly McCormick,
and what a read it is, what a life Kazumasa Ogawa must have really had, now if we could only find some of his original work in the forgotten corner of antiques shop or stall!
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