
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Title
- (Cherry Blossom Tree Line at Nogeyama, Yokohama)
- Original title
- (横浜野毛山の桜並木)
- Artist Name
- Photographer unknown
- Year
- 1871-1880
- Material / Technique
- Albumen paper
- Accession number
- 10112287
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/31716/
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (38847)

While Leaves Are Falling... My Mother Smoking at Home 2
KANEYAMA Takahiro
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Self-portrait.
REGNAULT, Henri-Victor
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Snow Land "Echigo" Takada heavy snowfall
HAMAYA Hiroshi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Untitled
KAWAUCHI Rinko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Moment Monument
MORINAGA Jun
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Documentary Photographs of Sino-Japanese War (13) Imperial warship Sanseong-go cruises the sea between Busan and Incheon.
KASHIMA Seibee
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Laid off Person Hunting
KIMURA Tsunehisa
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Side wall of stairs)
NAKAGAWA Susumu
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Keep up the Fight. Tasty Life
KIMURA Tsunehisa
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

#7
HOSOE Eikoh
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

MATSUMOTO Hiroko
MATSUSHIMA Susumu
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Rephotographic Survey Project Salt Lake City, Utah (left half)
Rephotographic Survey Project
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Camera Sanderson Tropical Model
Sanderson
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Nakayama Race Course
KIMURA Ihee
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

The Empire of the Ornaments The Empire of the Ornaments
KAWADA Kikuji
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Attempting to make contact with the NLF Central Committee, Okamura was captured in the jungle in War Zone D (a hazardous area controlled by the NLF, north of Saigon). After 53 days of imprisonment, he succeeded in interviewing Huynh Tan Phat, deputy chairman of the NLF, who became president of the South Vietnamese Provisional Revolutionary Government in 1969
OKAMURA Akihiko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum