kiyoshi suzuki. soul and soul.

© Kiyoshi Suzuki Estate, Soul and Soul, 1972

November 21, 2008 – January 11, 2009
House of Photography at the Deichtorhallen Hamburg

This retrospective is comprised of vintage prints and his original book dummies, many of which have never been exhibited before. Kiyoshi Suzuki began photographing in the late 1960s in Iwaki City, Fukishima Prefecture, where he had been born. He then worked for thirty years in relative isolation, playing constantly with life, continually in movement, ferreting out stories and the connections between literature, music, theater, religion, poverty and family. Sometimes he searched in the stillness, sometimes in the midst of human activity, but always driven by a deep fascination with the fragility and integrity of the insignificant and the humane.

Suzuki’s work is mysterious; a quality which already emerges in his first book, Soul and Soul (1972). One sees there the small beginnings of the great game. The photography is dark in its meaning, sometimes absolutely obscure, but there is also something meditative about it. The explosive smile of a mine worker, his teeth glinting like Dracula's, confronts the same face on the opposite page, now at peace, gazing tenderly, warmly at the photographer. As a viewer, it makes you realize that the maker of the book is sympathetic and involved, but also that he directs rather than merely documents.

Soul and Soul appeared during a crucial period in Japanese photography. This becomes clear from the publication of a number of other books: The Map, by Kikuji Kawada (1965), For a Language to Come, by Takuma Nakahira (1970), and Goodbye Photography, by Daido Moriyama (1972). As in America and Europe, some Japanese photographers were breaking with the ‘objective’ journalistic or the ‘romantic’ image. It was a movement that began with Robert Frank and William Klein, with in their wake, for instance, Christer Strömholm and Ed van der Elsken. Suzuki is also part of this tradition, someone who breaks photography open, at the same time subtly uncovering the contradictions in society. (Michael Botman, guest curator for the survey exhibition in Groningen)

It is the first time that the works of Suzuki are presented in Germany.

A Cooperation with Noorderlicht Photogallery, Groningen.

A book with the same title is accompanying the exhibition, bringing together his images and unique way of working, with texts by Yoko Suzuki (his wife), Daido Moriyama and others.

Biographie
1943
Geboren in Iwaki City, Amtsbezirk Fukushima, Japan
1969 Abschluss am Tokyo College of Photography, Yokohama
1969 Debüt mit einer Magazinserie, Tanko No Machi, in The Monthly Camera Mainichi
1983 PSJ Shinjin Award (für die Ausstellung/Publikation Tenmaku No Machi: Mind Games)
1989 Ina No Kai Award (für die Publikation Yume No Hashiri: S Street Shuffle)
1992 Ina Nobuo Award (für die Ausstellung Haha No Umi: Southern Breeze 3)
1994 Domon Ken Award (für die Ausstellung/Publikation Shuran No Tani: Finish Dying)
2000 Gestorben im Alter von siebenundfünfzig Jahren

Pressematerial und Informationen bei:

Deichtorhallen Hamburg GmbH
Angelika Leu-Barthel
Deichtorstr. 1-2
D-20095 Hamburg
Tel. +49 (0) 40-32103-250
Fax +49 (0) 40-32103-230
presse(at)deichtorhallen.de

© Kiyoshi Suzuki Estate, Mind Games 1982
© Kiyoshi Suzuki Estate
© Kiyoshi Suzuki Estate
© Kiyoshi Suzuki Estate