Shōmei
Tōmatsu (東松
照明, January 16, 1930 – December 14, 2012) was a
Japanese photographer.
Born
Teruaki Tōmatsu (東松照明, Tōmatsu
Teruaki) in Nagoya in 1930, Tōmatsu studied economics
at Aichi University, graduating in 1954. While still a student,
he had his photographs published by the major Japanese photography
magazines. He entered Iwanami and worked on the
series Iwanami Shashin Bunko. Two years later, he left in order
to freelance.
In
1959, Tōmatsu formed Vivo with Eikoh Hosoe and Ikkō
Narahara. Two years later, his and Ken Domon's
book Hiroshima–Nagasaki Document 1961, on the effects of
the atomic bombs, was published to great acclaim.
In
1972, he moved to Okinawa; in 1975, his prizewinning book of
photographs of Okinawa, Pencil of the Sun (太陽の鉛筆, Taiyō
no enpitsu) was published.
Tōmatsu
moved to Nagasaki in 1998.
Tōmatsu
died in Naha (Okinawa) on 14 December 2012 (although this
was not publicly announced until January 2013).
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