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Impressions: A German forest
engineer named Schilling lived in Japan apparently from 1899 to 1903.
He was an advisor to the Ministry of Imperial Affairs for forest management.
During this time, he collected 510 photographs printed on albumen paper.
In 1989, a Dutch bookstore called Ukiyo-e Books in Leiden acquired the
Schilling collection at an auction. This book features 179 photos from
the collection.
The first part of the book (about one-fourth of the book)
has text explaining about Schilling and the collection, the historical
background of the period, the introduction of early photographic techniques
to Japan, pioneering Japanese photographers, tourist photography in
Japan, and how early Japanese photography was influenced by traditional
woodblock prints and vice versa. This section is easy to read and interesting.
Anyone familiar with Japanese tourist photographs and woodblock prints
will quickly notice how the latter influenced the former. Many tourist
photos were obviously modeled after woodblock prints. Famous views of
famous gardens such as the Horikiri Iris Garden and Kameido Tenjin Wisteria
depicted in woodblock prints are also captured on film with a similar
composition. A woman gripping an umbrella and walking through a rainstorm
with a wind-blown kimono was also widely copied in the early photo studios.
The book adds that woodblock prints were also modeled after photographs,
such as the one of Emperor Meiji. A few of these woodblock prints are
illustrated in the book.
The rest of the book is devoted to the photographs, with
informative captions. Many of the photos are in color to show the hand-coloring
work. The photographs are in excellent condition. A wide variety of
photos is presented: Women, children, sumo wrestlers, geisha, oiran,
festivals, gardens, farming scenes, bathing women, priests, Ainu, shopkeepers
and their wares, Mt. Fuji, street scenes, temples and shrines, etc.
The typical things Japanese. Attribution is always a problem and most
of the photographs presented are not attributed to a particular photographer.
And I spotted one spelling error: "Horokiri" which should
be Horikiri (name of the iris garden). (Reviewed by Philbert Ono)
700-5
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| QUICK REVIEW
PROFILE |
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| What's Inside |
About the Artist |
Photo Evaluation |
| Genre:
Vintage photos |
Domestic acclaim: |
Varies |
Artistic value: |
8 |
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Photo:Text ratio: |
75:25 |
Dedication & effort: |
Varies |
Cultural value: |
9.5 |
| Understanding
ease: 9 |
Vision & concept: |
Varies |
Historical value: |
9.5 |
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Overall impression: |
9 |
Int'l acclaim: |
Varies |
Educational value: |
9 |
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*Rating Scale 1-10: |
10-Outstanding, 9-Very good, 8-Good,
7-Average-Good, 6-Average, 5-Average-poor,
4-Poor, 3-Very poor, 2-Extremely poor, 1-No
value, --Not applicable |
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Location/Setting: |
Japan
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Artist's Bio: |
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