Daidō Moriyama

Daidō Moriyama (Japanese: 森山 大道, Hepburn: Moriyama Daidō[1], born October 10, 1938) is a Japanese photographer best known for his black-and-white street photography and association with the avant-garde photography magazine Provoke.[2]

Daidō Moriyama
Moriyama, Tokyo, 2010
Born
Hiromichi Moriyama

(1938-10-10) October 10, 1938
NationalityJapanese
Known forPhotography
Notable workJapan: A Photo Theatre, Farewell Photography, Stray Dog, Tights

Moriyama began his career as an assistant to photographer Eikoh Hosoe, a co-founder of the avant-garde photo cooperative Vivo, and made his mark with his first photobook Japan: A Photo Theater, published in 1968. His formative work in the 1960s boldly captured the darker qualities of urban life in postwar Japan in rough, unfettered fashion, filtering the rawness of human experience through sharply tilted angles, grained textures, harsh contrast, and blurred movements through the photographer's wandering gaze. Many of his well-known works from the 1960s and 1970s are read through the lenses of post-war reconstruction and post-Occupation cultural upheaval.

Moriyama continued to experiment with the representative possibilities offered by the camera in his 1969 Accident series, which was serialized over one year in the photo magazine Asahi Camera, in which he deployed his camera as a kind of copying machine to reproduce existing media images. His 1972 photobook Farewell Photography, which was accompanied by an interview with his fellow Provoke photographer Takuma Nakahira, presents his radical effort to dismantle the medium.

Although the photobook is a favored format of presentation among Japanese photographers, Moriyama was particularly prolific: he has produced more than 150 photobooks since 1968. His creative career has been honored by a number of solo exhibitions by major institutions, along with his two-person exhibition with William Klein at Tate Modern in 2012-13. He received the Hasselblad Award in 2019, among other prestigious awards.

Biography

Early life and career beginnings

Moriyama was born in Ikeda, Osaka in 1938. After abandoning a career in design, Moriyama began to shoot photography during his early 20s using an inexpensive Canon IV Sb purchased from a friend.[3] In Osaka, Moriyama studied photography under Takeji Iwamiya[4] before moving to Tokyo in 1961 to connect with the radical photography collective Vivo, whose work he admired.[5]:73 He eventually found work as an assistant to photographer and Vivo member Eikoh Hosoe, a position he remained in for three years.[6]:270 After training in studios, he shifted to taking street photography in his late 20s. As a young man coming of age in 1950s and '60s, Moriyama bore witness to the political unrest (illustrated most vividly in the 1960 Anpo protests), economic revival and mass consumerism, and radical art-making that characterized the two decades following the end of World War II. His first photobook, Nippon gekijō shashinchō (にっぽん劇場写真帖, Japan: A Photo Theater), published in 1968, captures the excitement, tension, anxiety, and rage of urban life during this critical historical juncture through a collection of images, indiscriminate in subject matter, presented in dizzying succession through full-page spreads. The photographs range from ordinary streetscapes featuring blurred faces and garish signage to snapshots alluding to the aggressive redevelopment taking place in Tokyo and the rubble left in its wake, as well as images of nightlife and darker elements of urban life. As the title of the photobook suggests, Moriyama's approach hones in on the spectacle of everyday life, in all its ugliness and splendor.[7]

Provoke (1969-70)

In 1965, a series of photographs of preserved human embryos, titled 'Mugon geki' ('Silent Theatre'), by Moriyama were published in the magazine Gendai no me and caught the attention of avant-garde poet Shūji Terayama.[6]:269–70 Terayama commissioned Moriyama to provide accompanying images for his experimental theatre and prose works, providing Moriyama with a boost in his early career and connecting him to other avant-garde creatives including Tadanori Yokoo and Takuma Nakahira.[6]:270 His connection to Nakahira, a founding member of the photography magazine Provoke, eventually led to his participation in the publication beginning with the second issue in 1969.[8]

Moriyama is largely known for his work associated with the short-lived but deeply influential magazine, which was founded by photographers Takuma Nakahira and Yutaka Takanishi, along with critic Kōji Taki and writer Takahiko Okada in 1968.[9] The publication popularized the "are, bure, bokeh" style, translated as "grainy/rough, blurry, and out-of-focus," an aesthetic rebuttal to the dominant European-style photojournalism style (exemplified by Ken Domon's realist approach) and straightforward commercial work that dominated the Japanese photography scene at the time.[9][10]:243 These visions of everyday life rejected the notion that photography captures a lucid reflection of the world undergirded by a legible ideological argument; rather, they sought to emphasize the fragmentary nature of reality and make evident the photographer's prowling, wandering gaze.[10]:243 Eroticism and masculinized subjectivity are often associated with the aesthetic of the magazine.

As stated in the magazine's 1968 manifesto, "[T]he images [eizō] themselves are not ideas. They do not possess the wholeness of concepts, neither are they a communicative code like language....But this irreversible materiality [hikagyakuteki bussitsusei] – reality cut off from the camera – constitutes the reverse side of the world defined by language; and for this reason, [the image] is at times able to provoke the world of language and ideas."[11]:232–233 Provoke sought to assert photography's role in producing a phenomenological encounter that focused on the bodily and the immediate, moving beyond preconceived notions of truth, reality, and vision to probe questions surrounding the identity of photographic matter and the roles of the photographer, subject, and viewer. Though the collective only produced three issues and a book, First, Abandon the World of Pseudocertainty – Thoughts on Photography and Language (1970), each member continued to publicize their work in close relation to the "era of Provoke," and the magazine has had an immense cultural impact and been the subject of numerous international exhibitions.[11]:232

Akushidento (Accident) (1969)

In 1968, Moriyama began producing a series focused on the theme of "equivalence" using images featured in mass media as his source material.[12] According to Moriyama, the series was prompted by an experience he had at a train terminal in Tokyo, whereupon he was shocked to see the news of Robert F. Kennedy's assassination on the front page of newspapers scattered all around him.[13]:392 Taking interest in the mediated nature of press images, Moriyama says in an interview with Nakahira that this encounter prompted him to become "determined to negate the values that are attached to one single photograph."[13]:393 Moriyama photographed images reproduced from different mass media, including a television still of Lyndon B. Johnson announcing the suspension of the bombing of North Vietnam, newswire shots of Richard Nixon shortly after winning the presidential election, and the corpses of brutally killed Vietcong soldiers, along with the aforementioned image of Robert F. Kennedy.[12]:464 Moriyama treated the camera as a device that copies reality and thus produces "equivalents," rendering insignificant the distance that the original photographs, the endlessly reproduced press images, and Moriyama's own versions have from the initial event.[12]:465 The twelve-part series was published in Asahi Camera alongside his own texts, where he describes the unpredictability of fate and the precariousness of human experience, believing that the camera has the capacity to reveal the "possibility of tragedy [that] has somehow seeped into the surrounding environment."[6]:275

Shashin yo sayōnara (Farewell Photography) (1972)

Published in April 1972, Shashin yo sayōnara ("Farewell Photography") emerged within the context of Japan's aggressive cultural and economic revival—best exemplified in the creative sphere by Expo '70—and continued suppression of left-wing politics, as illustrated by the failure of the 1970 Anpo protests and the subsequent renewal of the United States-Japan Security Treaty.[12]:470 The photobook, as suggested by the title, takes a nihilistic turn from his prior work, turning its attention towards the incidental and evocative nature of photography rather than the visual subject itself.[5]:74[6]:283 The images highlight the physical detritus of the photographic process, such as the edges of discarded film, flecks of dust, and light leaks, along with the material dimensions of image-making as evidenced through the sprocket holes on negative strips and the brand names of the film, challenging the indexical relationship between photographer, camera, and image and the established conventions of viewing photographs as referents of reality.[5]:74[6]:283

His photography production waned during the mid to late-1970s, owing to depression, drug use, and creative stasis, but he returned to the public eye with the series Hikari to Kage (Light and Shadow) in the magazine Shashinjidai in 1981.[12]:472 He has continued to shoot commercial and artistic work over the decades both in and outside of Japan, and is one of the most active and prolific contemporary photographers in Japan.

Influences

Moriyama's photography has been influenced by Seiryū Inoue, Shōmei Tōmatsu, William Klein, Andy Warhol,[14] Eikoh Hosoe, Yukio Mishima, Shūji Terayama and Jack Kerouac's On the Road.[15] Inspired by the liberatory and indeterminate qualities of Sal Paradise's journey, Moriyama similarly embarked on a solo road trip across Japan, borrowing a friend's old Toyota and capturing photographs along the trip that would become the basis for Karyudo ("A Hunter") (1972).[16]

Format

Moriyama often presents his work in the form of photobooks, which he describes as open-ended sites, allowing the reader to decide on the sequence of images that they view.[17] Since 1968, he has published more than 150 photobooks.[18] He has cited his preference for having a third party work on the formatting and recomposition of the images, as it frees him from the influences of his own memory and filters the images through the eye of an outsider.[19]:24–27 A collection of Moriyama's writings, compiled from a fifteen-part series published in Asahi Camera beginning in 1983, have been published as an autobiographical photobook titled Inu no kioku ("Memories of a Dog").

Color and digital work

While Moriyama is most recognized for his black and white film photography, he has been shooting with color since the 1970s, and since the late 2000s has turned increasingly to compact digital photography, now working almost exclusively in this medium.[3]:78–79 In 1970, he helped produce the Asahi Journal's new color photography series Dai go shōgen ("The Fifth Quadrant") and published photo essays on new development projects in Osaka and Tokyo, cherry blossoms in Osaka, and American military base towns in the Kantō region. These projects employed his unconventional framing styles along with white balance and color exposure distortions that enhanced the uncanny, unsettling features of the world around him.[6]:281

Due to his tendency to take a large number of shots when photographing, Moriyama finds the digital format more amenable to his needs, and rejects critics who fixate on the preciousness of film photography.[3]:79 In response to a question posted by writer Takeshi Nakamoto's regarding Moriyama's advice for beginner street photographers, Moriyama states, "Get outside. It’s all about getting out and walking. That’s the first thing. The second thing is, forget everything you’ve learned on the subject of photography for the moment, and just shoot. Take photographs—of anything and everything, whatever catches your eye. Don’t pause to think."[3]:11

The solo exhibition Daido Tokyo at Fondation Cartier pour l’art Contemporain, Paris in 2016 was the first major solo show to display his color photographs.[20] Between 2008 and 2015, Moriyama revisited Tokyo, with a focus on the Shinjuku district—where much of his early career was spent—to take 86 chromogenic prints ("Tokyo Colour" series, 2008–2015) and black-and-white photographs ("Dog and Mesh Tights," 2014–2015).[20]

Awards

Select publications

  • にっぽん劇場写真帖 = Nippon Gekijo Shashincho = Japan: A Photo Theater. Muromachi Shob, 1968. With text in two places by Shūji Terayama in Japanese. 216 pages.
    • Revised edition. Shinchosha; Photo Musée, 1995. ISBN 978-4-10-602418-4.
  • Documentary = Kiroku = Record 1–5. Privately published, 1972–73.
  • Sashin yo Sayonara = Bye Bye Photography.
    • Tokyo: Shashin hyoron-sha, 1972.
    • Farewell Photography. Tokyo: PowerShovel, 2006.
    • Farewell Photography. Bookshop M / Getsuyousha, 2019.
  • Another Country. Privately published, 1974
  • Tales of Tono. Asahi Sonorama, 1976.
  • Japan, A Photo Theater II. Asahi Sonorama, 1978. With an essay by Shoji Yamagishi.
  • Hikari to Kage = Light and Shadow. Tojusha, 1982
  • Memories of a Dog – Places in My Memory. Asahi Shinbunsha, 1984 (Essays)
  • A Dialogue with Photography. Seikyūsha, 1985 (Essays)
  • A Journey to Nakaji. Tokyo: Sokyusha, 1987
  • Moriyama Daidō 1970–1979. Tokyo: Sokyusha, 1989
  • Lettre a St. Lou. Kawade Shobo Shinsha, 1990
  • Daido hysteric No.4. Hysteric Glamour, 1993
  • Color. Tokyo: Sokyusha, 1993
  • Daido hysteric No.6. Hysteric Glamour, 1994
  • A Dog's Time. Sakuhinsha, 1995
  • Imitation. Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, 1995
  • From/ Toward Photography. Seikyūsha, 1995 (Essays)
  • A Dialogue with Photography. (Revised) Seikyūsha, 1995 (Essays)
  • Daido hysteric Osaka No.8. Hysteric Glamour, 1997
  • Moriyama Daidō. Nihon no shashinka 37. Iwanami Shoten, 1997
  • Hunter. (Reprint) Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, 1997
  • Fragments. Composite, Tokyo, 1998
  • Memories of a Dog – Places in My Memory, the final. Asahi Shinbunsha, 1998 (Essays)
  • Passage. Wides, 1999
  • Dream of water. Tokyo: Sokyusha, 1999
  • Visions of Japan: Daido Moriyama. Korinsha, Tokyo, 1999
  • Color 2. Tokyo: Sokyusha, 1999
  • Past is every time new, the future is always nostalgic. Seikyūsha, 2000
  • Memories of a Dog – Places in My Memory. (Revised) Kawade Shobo Shinsha, 2001
  • Memories of a Dog – Places in My Memory, the final. (Revised) Kawade Shobo Shinsha, 2001
  • Platform. Daiwa Radiator Factory and Taka Ishii Gallery, 2002
  • '71- NY Daido Moriyama. PPP Editions, 2002
  • Shinjuku. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2002
  • transit. Eyesencia, 2002
  • Daido Moriyama 55. Phaidon, 2002
  • Daido Moriyama, The Complete Works vol. 1. Daiwa Radiator Company, 2003
  • Daido Moriyama: Actes Sud. Foundation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, 2003
  • Remix. Galerie Kamel Mennour, 2004
  • Daido Moriyama. Guiding Light, 2004
  • Memories of a Dog. Portland, OR: Nazraeli, 2004
  • Daido Moriyama, The Complete Works vols 2–4. Daiwa Radiator Factory, 2004
  • Wilderness!. Parco, 2005
  • Shinjuku 19XX-20XX. Codax, 2005
  • Tokyo. Reflex New Art Gallery, 2005
  • Buenos Aires. Kodansha, 2005
  • Lettre a St. Lou. Kawade Shobo Shinsha, 2005
  • Shinjuku Plus. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2006
  • t-82. PowerShovelBooks, 2006
  • it. Rat Hole, 2006
  • Snap. (Record extra issue No. 1) Akio Nagasawa, 2007
  • Kagero & Colors. PowerShovelBooks, 2007
  • Hawaii. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2007
  • Osaka Plus. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2007
  • Erotica. Asahi Shinbunsha, 2007
  • Yashi. Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, Paris, and Taka Ishii Gallery, Tokyo, 2008
  • Record No. 1-5 Complete Reprint Edition. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2008. Issues 1–5 of his magazine Record.
    • Portland, OR: Nazraeli, 2009. ISBN 978-1-59005-273-0.
  • Magazine Work 1971 1974. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2009.
  • Tsugaru. Tokyo: Taka ishii Gallery, 2010. Hardback. ISBN 978-600-00-0694-5. Catalog of an exhibition held at Taka Ishii Gallery, November 2010. 81 of the 82 photographs taken in Goshogawara and other villages in the Tsugaru-plain area of Aomori Prefecture in 1976. Edition of 1000 copies.
  • Auto-portrait. MMM label 1. Tokyo: Match and Company Co., 2010. With a text by Simon Baker. Edition of 1000 copies.
  • Gekijo. Tokyo: Super Labo, 2011. Edition of 500 copies.
  • Remix. Galerie Kamel Mennour, 2012
  • Paris 88/89. Paris and Arles, France: Poursuite, 2012.
  • Light & Shadow Magazine. 2013. Edition of 250 Copies.
  • Mirage. MMM label 4. Tokyo: Match and Company Co., 2013. Edition of 1000 copies.
  • Dog and Mesh Tights. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2015. With an afterword by Moriyama. Text in English and Japanese.
  • Self. One Picture Book 90. Portland, OR: Nazraeli, 2015. ISBN 978-1-59005-426-0. Edition of 500 copies.
  • Fukei. Tokyo: Super Labo, 2015. Edition of 700 copies in two different covers (one with fish, the other with a flower), 350 of each cover.
  • Daido Moriyama in Color: Now, and Never Again. Milan: Skira, 2016. ISBN 978-88-572-2226-4.
  • Scandalous. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2016. Edition of 350 copies.
  • Osaka. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2016. With essays "Osaka no koto" (in Japanese) and "Dark Pictures" (in English).
  • Pantomime. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2017. Edition of 600 copies.
  • Pretty Woman. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2017. Edition of 900 copies.
  • K. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2017. ISBN 978-4-86503-050-1
  • Record. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2017. A digest edition of his Record magazines containing selected work from Record No.1 to Record No.30. Edited by Mark Holborn.
  • Aa, Koya. Kadokawa, 2017. With a story by Shūji Terayama.
  • Uwajima. Switch, 2018. Photographs made in Uwajima, Ehime, some of which were previously published in Coyote magazine in 2004. With an essay by Shinro Ohtake (in Japanese).
  • Tokyo Boogie Woogie. Tokyo: Super Labo, 2018. ISBN 978-4-908512-26-1. Edition of 1000 copies.
  • Tights in Shimotakaido. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2018. Edition of 600 copies.
  • Lips! Lips! Lips!. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2018. Edition of 350 copies.
  • Daido Moriyama in Color: Now, and Never Again. Yokosuka. Milan: Skira, 2018. ISBN 978-88-572-3116-7
  • Daido Moriyama in Color: Now, and Never Again. Nocturnal Nude. Milan: Skira, 2018. ISBN 978-88-572-3630-8.
  • Daido Moriyama in Color: Now, and Never Again. Self-portrait. Milan: Skira, 2018. ISBN 978-88-572-3631-5.
  • Akai Kutsu Vol. 1. Kanagawa: Super Labo, 2019. ISBN 978-4-908512-76-6.
  • Akai Kutsu Vol. 2. Kanagawa: Super Labo, 2019. ISBN 978-4-908512-77-3.
  • Daido Moto. Paso Robles, CA: Nazraeli, 2019. Edition of 500 copies.
  • How I Take Photographs. Laurence King, 2019. ISBN 978-1-78627-424-3. Photographs by Moriyama and text co-written with Takeshi Nakamoto.[27]
  • Letters to N. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2021

Magazines by Moriyama

  • Record No.1. Self-published, 1972.
  • Record No.2. Self-published, 1972.
  • Record No.3. Self-published, 1972.
  • Record No.4. Self-published, 1973.
  • Record No.5. Self-published, 1973.
  • Record No.6.Record No.39. Tokyo: Akio Nagasawa, 2006–2018. Various individual editions.

Publications with others

  • 4. Mazu tashikarashisa no sekai o sutero: shashin to gengo no shisō = First Abandon the World of Pseudo-Certainty: Thoughts on Photography and Language. Tokyo: Tabata Shoten, 1970. OCLC 53405730. With Nakahira Takuma, Takanashi Yutaka and Taki Kōji.
  • The Japanese Box – Facsimile reprint of six rare photographic publications of the Provoke era, Edition 7L / Göttingen: Steidl, 2001.
  • Terayama. Tokyo: Match and Company Co., 2015. English and Japanese editions. With text by Shuji Terayama and an afterword by Satoshi Machiguchi, "The Spell Moves On."
  • Dazai. MMM label 5. Tokyo: Match and Company Co., 2014. With a text by Osamu Dazai, "Villon's Wife."
  • Odasaku. Tokyo: Match and Company Co., 2016. With a short story by Sakunosuke Oda, "At the Horse Races," and an afterword by Satoshi Machiguchi.
  • Teppo yuri no Shateikyori. Tokyo: Getsuyosha, 2017. With haiku in Japanese by Misa Uchida.
  • Witness #2 (Number Two): Daido Moriyama. Portland: Nazraeli, 2007. By Moriyama, Emi Anrakuji, and Ken Kitano. ISBN 1-59005-199-8.

Select solo exhibitions

Exhibition by Daido Moriyama, Daido Tokyo, Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art, Paris (2016).
Exhibition by Daido Moriyama, Daido Tokyo, Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art, Paris (2016).

Source:[28][29]

Further reading

  • From Postwar to Postmodern : Art in Japan 1945-1989 : Primary Documents. Edited by Doryun Chong. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012.
  • Fujii, Yuko. “Photography as Process: A Study of the Japanese Photography Journal Provoke”. PhD Diss., The City University of New York, 2012.
  • Moriyama, Daidō, and Gabriel Bauret. Daido Moriyama. London: Thames & Hudson, 2012.
  • Moriyama, Daidō. Daido Moriyama. Paris: Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, 2003.
  • Phillips, Sandra S., Daidō Moriyama, and Alexandra Munroe. Daido Moriyama : Stray Dog. San Francisco. San Francisco: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 1999.
  • Sas, Miryam B. Experimental Arts in Postwar Japan: Moments of Encounter, Engagement, and Imagined Return. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 2011.
  • 光の狩人 森山大道1965-2003. 島根県立美術館/NHKエデュケーショナル, 2003.
  • Provoke: Between Protest and Performance : Photography in Japan 1960-1975. Edited by Diane Dufour, Matthew S. Witkovsky, with Duncan Forbes and Walter Moser. Göttingen: Steidl, 2016.

References

  1. Earlier, well-informed Japanese publications give "Hiromichi Moriyama" as the romanized form of his name. One example is Shashinka hyakunin: Kao to shashin (写真家100人 顔と写真, 100 photographers: Profiles and photographs), a special publication of Camera Mainichi magazine (1973).
  2. Celii, Alana. "Daido Moriyama And the Cultural Landscape of Post-War Japan". Time. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  3. Nakamoto, Takeshi (2019). Daido Moriyama: How I Take Photographs. London: Laurence King Publishing. p. 11.
  4. Akie Moriyama (森山明絵), "Moriyama Daidō" (森山大道); page 308 within Nihon shashinka jiten (日本写真家事典) / 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers. Kyoto: Tankōsha, 2000. ISBN 4-473-01750-8. Despite the English-language alternative title, all in Japanese.
  5. Holborn, Mark (March 1, 2004). "Out of the Shadows". Modern Painters. 17 (1).
  6. Charrier, Philip (2010). "The Making of a Hunter: Moriyama Daidō 1966–1972". History of Photography. 34 (3): 268–290. doi:10.1080/03087290903361431. S2CID 192047349.
  7. Lederman, Russet (May 14, 2012). "The Daido Moriyama Photobook Collection at the ICP Library: Nippon Gekijo Shashincho / Japan: A Photo Theater". Monsters & Madonnas: International Center of Photography Library. Retrieved August 27, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. Daido, Moriyama; Maggia, Filippo; Lazzarini, Francesca (2010). The World Through My Eyes. Milan: Skira. p. 437. ISBN 978-88-572-0061-3.
  9. "For the sake of thought: Provoke, 1968–1970", Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  10. Forbes, Duncan (2016). "Photography, Protest and Constituent Power in Japan, 1960-1975". Provoke: Between Protest and Performance. Göttingen: Steidl.
  11. Kim, Gyewon (2016). "Paper, Photography, and a Reflection on Urban Landscape in 1960s Japan". Visual Resources. 32 (3–4): 230–246. doi:10.1080/01973762.2016.1229334. S2CID 191787953.
  12. Fukugawa, Masafumi; Fritsch, Lena (2012). "Is the World Beautiful? Moriyama Daidō's Provocation of the History of Photography". Art in Translation. 4 (4).
  13. Moriyama, Daidō; Nakahira, Takuma (2016) [April 1969]. "'Shashin to iwu kotoba wo nakuse!' (Get Rid of the Word Photography!)". In Dufour, Diane (ed.). Provoke: Between Protest and Performance. Göttingen: Steidl.
  14. "Theme Magazine – Daido Moriyama Photographs His Beloved Shinjuku By Jiae Kim". Archived from the original on April 1, 2010. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
  15. "Culture Vulture – Daido Moriyama: Stray Dog". Archived from the original on October 3, 2009. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
  16. Moriyama, Daidō (2004). Memories of a Dog. Translated by Junkerman, John. Tucson, Arizona: Nazraeli Press. p. 31. ISBN 1590050673.
  17. Deng, Tianyuan (October 11, 2019). "Daido Moriyama: The Erotics of Photography". Ocula.
  18. Iizawa, Kohtaro; Fraser, Karen M. (August 1, 1996). "Moriyama, Daido". In Fraser, Karen M. (ed.). Moriyama, Daido. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t059652. ISBN 978-1-884446-05-4.
  19. Moriyama, Daido; Vartanian, Ivan (May 1, 2011). "Daido Moriyama: The Shock from Outside: Interview with Ivan Vartanian". Aperture. 203.
  20. Paik, Sherry. "Daido Moriyama". Ocula.
  21. Foundation, Moriyama Daido Photo. "Biography Moriyama Daido Official WebSite". www.moriyamadaido.com. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  22. List of award winners, PSJ. (in Japanese) Accessed August 28, 2010.
  23. "The Cultural Award of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie (DGPh)". Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie e.V.. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  24. "Infinity Awards 2012". International Center of Photography. Retrieved December 24, 2014.
  25. "Hasselblad Award Winner 2019 – Hasselblad Foundation". Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  26. "THE ASAHI PRIZE (English version) | 朝日新聞社の会社案内". 朝日新聞社インフォメーション (in Japanese). Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  27. "Explore the backstreets of Tokyo with Daido Moriyama in the legendary photographer's new book". British GQ. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  28. "Exhibition "Moriyama - Tomatsu; Tokyo" Maison européenne de la photographie, Paris, 2021". La MEP (in French). Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  29. Foundation, Moriyama Daido Photo. "Biography Moriyama Daido Official WebSite". www.moriyamadaido.com. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
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