Opening reception: Friday, February 12, 6-8 pm
Luhring Augustine is pleased to present its first exhibition featuring the work of Daido Moriyama, one of
Japan’s leading figures in photography. Witness to the spectacular changes that transformed postwar
Japan, his photographs express a fascination with the cultural contradictions of age-old traditions that
persist within modern society. Providing a harsh, crude vision of city life and the chaos of everyday
existence, strange worlds, and unusual characters, his work occupies the space between the objective
and the subjective, the illusory and the real.
Moriyama takes pictures with a small hand-held camera that enables him to shoot freely while walking or
running or through the windows of moving cars. Taken from vertiginous angles or overwhelmed by closeups,
his blurred images are charged with a palpable and frenetic energy that reveal a unique proximity to
his subject matter. Snapshots of stray dogs, posters, mannequins in shop windows, and shadows cast
into alleys present the beauty and sometimes-terrifying reality of a marginalized landscape. His
anonymous and detached approach enables him to capture the “visible present” made up of accidental
and uncanny discoveries as he experiences them.
Moriyama emerged as a photographer in the 1960’s at the tail end of the VIVO collective, a revolutionary
and highly influential group of Japanese artists who reexamined the conventions of photography during
the tumultuous postwar period. William Klein’s loose, Beat style images of New York City in the 1960s
also served as a major turning point for Moriyama, who found inspiration in Klein’s free-form photographic
style. Taken by these innovative approaches at home and abroad, Moriyama ultimately went on to forge
his own radical style.
“Hawaii”, Moriyama’s most recent body of work, was produced over a period of three years and presents
his distinct perspective on the daily lives of the people living on the islands of Hawaii and Oahu. Returning
to the island five times before feeling prepared to shoot these surroundings, Moriyama’s overall approach
is purposeful and considered despite his loose and informal style. The series was recently exhibited at the
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography and published in a volume by the institution.
Daido Moriyama was born in Osaka in 1938. He has had museum shows around the world including the
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland, the Fondation Cartier
pour l’Art Contemporain, Paris and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography. His work is part of
many major public collections such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Centre Pompidou,
Paris, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Los Angeles County Museum, the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Getty in Los Angeles.
For further information, please contact Kristen Becker at 212.206.9100 or via email at [email protected]