
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Series title
- Tokyoites 1978-1983
- Title
- Jingu Gaien Park, Shinjuku-ku
- Original title
- 新宿区 神宮外苑
- Artist Name
- TAKANASHI Yutaka
- Year
- 1981
- Material / Technique
- Gelatin silver print on developing-out paper
- Dimensions
- 201x306mm
- Accession number
- 10010043
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/23473/
About the creator
高梨豊 / TAKANASHI Yutaka
from Art Platform Japan: https://artplatform.go.jp/resources/collections/artists/A1544
- Date of birth
- 1935-02-06
- Birth place
- Tokyo
- Medium
- Photography
- Gender
- male
- Update date
- 2023-02-14
Identifiers
- APJ ID
- A1544
- VIAF ID
- 96606749
- NDL ID
- 00078729
- ULAN ID
- 500125493
- AOW ID
- _00603318
- Wikidata ID
- Q6358238
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (40724)

The Mad Broom of Life Black Sea
TAKAHASHI Kyoji
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

TOKYO SHINJUKU
KITAJIMA Keizo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

BRONZE CENSER, SOOCHOW
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Silent People Mother and Child
OISHI Yoshino
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

PROTEST IN THE SIXTIES
SMITH, W. Eugene
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Blumenfeld Color Victoria von Hagen, Vogue
BLUMENFELD, Erwin
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Computer Graphics access 89-92
SIMS, Karl
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

JAPAN A18 THE HOLY-WATER CISTERN
unknown(FARSARI & Co.)
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Yurakucho Platform
NAKAMURA Rikko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

A Map of The East A decrepit room, Chungking, 1984
RUBINFIEN, Leo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Alfred Galopin Photo Collection Album B) (Shachi at Nagoya Castle, Tokyo)
UCHIDA Kuichi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Life Samples Untitled
HOLMGREN, Robert Everett
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

100 Underwater Views of the Japanese Archipelago Acropora nobilis. Corals are colonies composed of many individuals. Individuals can grow large but the sperm and eggs produced by a single individual do not fertilize each other. In thie way the coral avoids inbreeding. Corals seem to have known the importance of this principle from long, long ago. That is why corals always spawn at the same time.
NAKAMURA Ikuo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Untitled
MOHOLY-NAGY, László
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

100 American Families In New York Lonely old lady
ENARI Tsuneo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Net and man)
YOSHIZAKI Hitori
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum