
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Series title
- Those Who Survived Concentration Camps
- Title
- Near the Wisla River in Warszawa
- Original title
- ワルシャワ ビスワ川付近
- Artist Name
- OISHI Yoshino
- Year
- 1986
- Material / Technique
- Gelatine silver print
- Dimensions
- 265x396mm
- Accession number
- 10101060
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/10349/
About the creator
大石芳野 / ŌISHI Yoshino
from Art Platform Japan: https://artplatform.go.jp/resources/collections/artists/A2310
- Date of birth
- 1944-05-28
- Birth place
- Tokyo
- Medium
- Photography
- Gender
- female
- Update date
- 2023-02-14
Identifiers
- APJ ID
- A2310
- VIAF ID
- 50568133
- NDL ID
- 00105378
- AOW ID
- _d75741cb-9e01-4600-a563-02bb886d0b7d
- Wikidata ID
- Q5420992
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (39056)

#18
TSUKIJI Hitoshi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

*
KAWAHITO Tadayuki
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Epiphany
YAMAGAMI Shinpei
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Human Condition 6
MICHALS, Duane
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Educational Farm and Boys
KAWAKAMI Shigeharu
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

MINAMATA *
SMITH, W. Eugene & Aileen Mioko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Two people sitting close together on a bench)
CAPA, Robert
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Anemic Cinema
DUCHAMP, Marcel
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Asia road Turkey
FUJIWARA Shinya
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

LOVE
NAITO Tadayuki
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Beach, Naha
KIMURA Ihee
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Parallel Lives of Others-Encounter with Sorge Spy Ring Nara Park (Sorge & Ozaki)
YONEDA Tomoko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Country scenery)
MINAMI Kenji
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Houstonscapes
NARAHARA Ikko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

EGYPT AND PALESTINE Vol. 1 VIEW AT LUXOR.
FRITH, Francis
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

A family of Japanese immigrants living in a Japanese settlement in the town of Jarabacoa in the mountains of the Dominican Republic. Emigration from Japan to the Dominican republic began in the 1950s during the regime of Rafael Trujillo, but the Japanese government's recruitment promises of grants of up to 18 hectares of good farmland and other incentives were not honored. There was also friction between the Japanese immigrants and the local people. In 2006, the Japanese government formally apologized to the Japanese immigrants
OKAMURA Akihiko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum