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Tetsuya Ichimura
Japanese, b. 1930

Tetsuya Ichimura Japanese, b. 1930

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Tetsuya Ichimura, Untitled, from Come Up, c. 1970

Tetsuya Ichimura Japanese, b. 1930

Untitled, from Come Up, c. 1970
Vintage ferrotyped silver gelatin print
Paper size: 20 x 28.5 cm
Image size: 19.3 x 27.5 cm
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Literature


Ichimura Tetsuya (b. Nagasaki, 1930) is an artist who rose to prominence during Japan’s ‘Golden Age’ of photography. After gaining early recognition for his pictures referencing European Subjective photography, Ichimura began to explore the creative possibilities of the nude. His work may be positioned alongside that of peers, including Hosoe Eikō, Shinoyama Kishin, and Tatsuki Yoshihiro, who shared his interest in repositioning the body beyond figurative traditions.

These prints, taken from Ichimura’s series Come Up, constitute an extremely rare body of work, acquired directly from the artist’s wife who has not shown them before outside Japan. Conceived at a time when Japanese photography was primarily focussed on the construction of series for publication, this selection of original prints is remarkable in its range and scarcity.

Come Up is one of Ichimura’s most celebrated series, originally published in 1971. In his afterword, Ichimura describes his project as illustrating ‘the origin of the Japanese sex and its soil through the realism of photography.’ Come Up includes a series of abstracted textural landscapes, in which places and bodies are rendered with soft density in high contrast. For Ichimura, the series represented an essential materiality common across the life cycle: ‘Everyone who lives in the modern age will finally die and their bones will be buried in the soil and eroded mercilessly by the rule of Nature […] I could perceive the origin of myself as a human being, and obtained a method of thinking based primarily upon a human being itself.’ Come Up was chosen by the photohistorian Kaneko Ryūichi for his survey guide History of Japanese Photography 1956-1986 (2009).

There has been a tendency in cultural criticism to focus on the resurgence of the body in post-war Japanese art, with the rise of ‘Literature of the Flesh’ (nikutai-bungaku) and the emergence of the radically physical ankoku butō dance movement led by Hijikata Tatsumi. In the visual arts, the experiments of the Gutai group in capturing the body’s movement on canvas were complimented by Hosoe Eikō’s pioneering exploration of the nude as a source of dramatically sculptural and sensuous forms. Ichimura’s work can be situated in this context as an alternative attempt to reconnect the body with a wider natural landscape, explicitly identified in his photography as rooted in Japan.

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