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5-7 Rue de Fourcy, 75004, Paris, France
Open: Wed-Fri 11am-8pm, Sat-Sun 10am-8pm


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Wed 19 May 2021 to Sun 24 Oct 2021

5-7 Rue de Fourcy, 75004 Moriyama - Tomatsu: Tokyo

Wed-Fri 11am-8pm, Sat-Sun 10am-8pm

Artists: Daido Moriyama - Shōmei Tōmatsu

The MEP presents Moriyama – Tomatsu: Tokyo, a historic exhibition of two masters of Japanese photography.


Artworks

Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1967, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1967, from the series "Japan A Photo Theater"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1967, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1967, from the series "Japan A Photo Theater"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1987, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1987, from the series "Tights in Shimotakaido"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Water Flower, 1990, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Water Flower, 1990, from the series "Lettre à Saint Loup"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Nails Claw, 1990, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Nails Claw, 1990, from the series "Lettre à Saint Loup"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1995, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1995, from the series "Imitation"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1977, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1977, from the series "Platform"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1969, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1969, from the series "Provoke"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1971, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1971, from the series "Searching Journeys #8"

Silkscreen print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1972, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1972, from the series "Farewell Photography"

Silkscreen print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Shibuya, 1990, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Shibuya, 1990, from the series "Lettre à Saint Loup"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 1982, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 1982, from the series "Light & Shadows"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 2002, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 2002, from the series "Shinjuku"

Gelatin silver print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Autoportrait, 2012, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Autoportrait, 2012, from the series "Labyrinth"

Silver Gelatin print

1490.0 × 1080.0 mm

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 2017, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 2017, from the series "Pretty Woman"

C-Print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 2017, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 2017, from the series "Pretty Woman"

C-Print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 2017, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 2017, from the series "Pretty Woman"

C-Print

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Daido Moriyama, Untitled, 2017, from the series

Daido Moriyama

Untitled, 2017, from the series "Pretty Woman"

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Untitled, 1960, from the series

Shōmei Tōmatsu

Untitled, 1960, from the series "Chewing Gum and Chocolate"

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Fumiko Miyatani, Mask Artist, 1971, from the series

Shōmei Tōmatsu

Fumiko Miyatani, Mask Artist, 1971, from the series "Alibi"

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Nishi–Shinjuku, 1969

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Kabuki: Villain in Shibaraku, 1964

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Photographer Shomei Tomatsu, 1978

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Photographer Daido Moriyama, 1975

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Chindon Street Musician, 1961

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Ruinous Garden, 1964

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Coca–Cola, Shinjuku, 1969

Inkjet print

590.0 × 420.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Eros, 1969

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Taxis, Tokyo, 1967

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Anti War, 1968

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Blood and Roses, 1969

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Cherry Blossoms, Shinkuku Gyoen, 1980

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Protest, 1969

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Hairstyle, Yamanote Line, 1969

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Shōmei Tōmatsu, Parade, 1980

Inkjet print

420.0 × 590.0 mm

© Shomei Tomatsu – INTERFACE

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Despite his work having been acclaimed, exhibited and collected all over the world, Moriyama – Tomatsu: Tokyo is the first major exhibition of Shomei Tomatsu to take place in Paris. For Daido Moriyama, it will also be the most complete presentation of his work in France in many years.

Conceived originally by Moriyama and Tomatsu themselves, this collaborative exhibition remained unrealised during the lifetime of Shomei Tomatsu, who sadly passed away in 2012. The MEP is honoured to have the opportunity to stage this historic exhibition which was the dream of two great photographers and friends. Through a major overview of the works of both Moriyama and Tomatsu, Moriyama – Tomatsu: Tokyo highlights a shared fascination with the Japanese capital that both artists spent decades exploring.

Curated in close collaboration with Daido Moriyama and Tomatsu’s widow and collaborator, Yasuko Tomatsu, the exhibition is drawn from the two artists’ initial list of works – enriched and adapted for the occasion – in a comprehensive and coherent journey through their lives and work. Each photographer will occupy one floor of the MEP’s main galleries, and although each presentation is essentially chronological, the first part, dedicated to Tomatsu, will offer a more classical contrast to the denser, more intense scenography of the installation proposed by Moriyama.

A new three–volume catalogue has been published in both French and English by Akio Nagasawa to accompany the exhibition. This publication, with an introduction by Simon Baker, also contains previously unpublished translations of key texts by Moriyama and Tomatsu.

Shomei Tomatsu’s Tokyo
Among the images of Tokyo selected for the initial project, 140 of Tomatsu’s works have been chosen for the exhibition at MEP. The journey through the exhibition begins with the artist's first photographs after his arrival in Tokyo in 1954. At that time, Tomatsu had developed an interest in the lives of ordinary people in Japan: a country still suffering the aftereffects of the Second World War. As early as 1958, fascinated with the Americanization of his country and its impact on the Japanese way of life and culture, Tomatsu began to photograph American soldiers on military bases in Japan, culminating in his landmark project "Chewing Gum and Chocolate". Tomatsu also had a strong interest in the new ways of life that emerged in the post–war years. In the "Chindon" series, for example, he focused on the poor actors and musicians called chindon’ya who, dressed in their traditional Edo–period costume, became advertising models for department stores.

With "Asphalt", another key early series, Tomatsu experimented with form, revealing previously unimagined worlds. He devoted a whole series of photographs to asphalt in the streets, which he viewed as the "skin" of the city, in which fragments of metallic objects encrusted in the tarmac looked like star dust.

The exhibition also features a wide selection of photographs from one of his major books, Oh! Shinjuku, published in 1969, in which he included his early series "Eros" and "Protest". This book recounts the chronicle of the famous Tokyo district and its central place in the mythology of Japanese counter–culture. A neighbourhood filled with department stores where huge crowds congregated on weekends, by night Shinjuku gave way to a youthful counter–culture surrounding strip clubs and hostess bars: taboo subjects shown openly and honestly by Tomatsu.

Already by the 1960s, Tomatsu had begun to work with colour photography and this aspect of his practice – present throughout the exhibition – features more prominently as the years pass. In some works from the early 1980s, like Cherry Blossoms, Tomatsu works with scale and proximity, magnifying details of the hugely symbolic Japanese flowering cherry trees. At the end of Tomatsu’s exhibition, we see the baton passing to the generation of photographers he inspired with remarkable colour portraits of the flagship photographers of late 1970s in Japan: Nobuyoshi Araki, Masahisa Fukase, Moriyama (who appears disguised as a Japanese bride) as well as a brilliant costumed self–portrait of Shomei Tomatsu himself.

Daido Moriyama’s Tokyo
Designed by the artist himself in close collaboration with gallery owner and art publisher Akio Nagasawa, the selection of works and the scenography of Daido Moriyama’s installation highlight both his most iconic series and the great diversity of his practice: silver prints, colour photographs, silkscreen prints, Polaroids, wallpapers, light boxes, books and magazines including the magazine Record, which Moriyama has published periodically since the 1970s.

The exhibition starts with images from the artist’s first book, Japan: A Photo Theatre (1968), in which he mixed street photographs and portraits of traveling actors. The book would go on to cause a scandal, with an aesthetic very similar to that of the magazine Provoke, to which Moriyama contributed in 1969. The same year, inspired by Andy Warhol’s "Death and Disaster" series of silkscreen prints which he discovered in 1968, he shot his series "Accident", distorting photographs of brutal night–time road accidents found in magazines, on television, and even in pre–existing road–safety campaigns, appropriating them for his own work. This part of the exhibition also features large-format silkscreen prints on canvas, again inspired by Andy Warhol's practice, which Moriyama considered to be a natural extension of his own photographic language.

The evolution of Moriyama’s photographic language is then depicted through a large selection of photographs from Farewell Photography – one of the most avant–garde photobooks published at that time – involving blurred, grainy, distorted images which become almost completely abstract.

After a break in his photographic practice, Moriyama produced the book Light and Shadow, in which he asserted a new approach, this time with high–contrast still–life images in smooth dark tones and tight compositions which would build his reputation in the years that followed.

The exhibition then proposes an immersive visit to the Shinjuku district of Tokyo – a lively and thriving but chaotic neighbourhood that has never ceased to fascinate Moriyama, and that he has always photographed instinctively. This section of the show is followed by an installation around the now iconic series "Tights", in which the artist transformed fishnet stockings into
a variety of geometric patterns before transposing the photographic images onto various mediums. This is followed by the series "Platform" (1977), shot in one day along the route from Zushi and Yokohama to Tokyo, featuring photographs of rows of commuters gathered on the platforms of busy train stations. This part of the show also features the controversial series "Pantomime", made in 1963, and that remains a very personal project for Moriyama, in which he photographed foetuses preserved in formalin from a maternity hospital in Tokyo.

The conclusion of Moriyama’s installation brings together the various, very different ways that he used colour throughout his career, from numerous small–format Polaroids to large–scale colour prints, wallpapers and more recently lightboxes. Even to this day, Moriyama roams the streets of his home city, searching for new points of view, scrutinising shops and billboards, shops streets and the people who live in them. The last room, completely covered, presents the series "Pretty Woman", a selection of colour photographs taken in 2017 in the chaos of crowded streets and the reflections of shop windows. The exhibition also includes a comprehensive selection of Moriyama’s magazine Record, published by Akio Nagasawa and entirely designed and produced by Moriyama from his own photographs. Record has just published its 44th issue.

© Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. Courtesy of Akio Nagasawa Gallery

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