Hachiro Suzuki

Hachiro Suzuki is a key figure for understanding the history of photography around Japanese Photography. This page follows the photographer's place in photography history through Japanese Photography, related photographers, movements, and sources.

Basic facts
Country Japan
Years 1900–1985

Essay

Suzuki Hachiro belongs to the generation of Japanese photographers working in the interwar period when photography was being redefined through modernist experimentation, publishing, and urban visual culture*1*2. Public documentation remains more limited than for some of his better-known contemporaries, but he is part of the field through which modern photographic practice in Japan was consolidated.

His historical value lies in that position within the network of makers, editors, and exhibitors who shaped Japanese photography between salon tradition and modernist transformation. In a history of photography, Suzuki is useful for understanding that modern photographic change was not the work of only a few canonical figures, but of a wider professional and artistic milieu*1*2.

Hachiro Suzuki Photobooks

Hachiro Suzuki related photobooks
Not a photobook but a related book that helps frame the history of photographic culture.
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A History of Camera Culture
Not a photobook but a related book on photographic culture.
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External links

Sources