
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Series title
- (Photographs of China)
- Title
- *
- Artist Name
- Photographer unknown
- Material / Technique
- Albumen paper
- Accession number
- 20101615
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/2748/
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (38868)

Takada Unit, Snow Tactical Exercise
KATO Kyohei
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Ku-Emptiness Inner Flower: Gilias
NARAHARA Ikko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

(Yokohama Album) 1686 LANTERN MAKER.
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Two men working on pipe underground
SMITH, W. Eugene
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Tokyo, Town #157
ISHIMOTO Yasuhiro
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Salsa Gumtape
OMORI Katsumi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Shin-Sekai Railroad crossing, Taishi, Tobita-shinchi area, Nishinari Ward
DODO Shunji
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Happy Together Lydia and Hillary
KIM, Oksun
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

untitled
KURIGAMI Kazumi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Pantheon Henri Dutilleux
KATZ, Nancy Lee
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Faith in the Unknown
KIMURA Tsunehisa
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Quietly Burning City
KIMURA Tsunehisa
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Crystal Palace
NEGRETTI & ZAMBRA
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

WIELICZKA
KITAJIMA Keizo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Fukushima 2011-2017 The Pond in Nozawa(Sekisawa, Iidate-mura, Soma-gun, Fukushima)1.78μSievert
TSUCHIDA Hiromi
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