
Tokyo
<p>The United States’s occupation of Japan following the end of World War II irreversibly changed Japanese culture, deeply impacting a young Shomei Tomatsu. He later re-marked that during that time, “darkness and light became clearly visible and values shifted 180 degrees . . . and that intense experience became a filter through which I’ve seen things ever since.” Here, Tomatsu encapsulates this dizzying period of foreign interference in his country: a ghostly figure rises off-center, its blurry expression in marked contrast to the highly legible advertisements in the background. This apparition, surrounded by signs of Western consumerism, represents Tomatsu’s awareness of a faltering Japanese national identity and its tension with American culture.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1960
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- Image: 38.8 × 27 cm (15 5/16 × 10 11/16 in.); Paper: 42.5 × 30.2 cm (16 3/4 × 11 15/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Shomei Tomatsu
Artist

Printmaking
Shomei Tomatsu was a Japanese photographer who documented postwar Japan with unflinching attention to the material traces of American occupation, industrial transformation, and everyday life. Working primarily in black and white, he combined documentary precision with a modernist formal sensibility, capturing both the debris of war and the texture of urban surfaces. His photographs from the 1950s and 1960s constitute a visual archive of Japan's rapid reconstruction and cultural displacement.
Full artist profile →More
More by Shomei Tomatsu
Naha, Okinawa
2007 · Inkjet print
Plastics
1991 · Silver dye bleach print
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1991 · Silver dye bleach print
Plastics, Kujukuri Beach, Chiba
1988 · Chromogenic print
Plastics, Kujukuri Beach, Chiba
1988 · Chromogenic print
Miyako Island, Okinawa
1987 · Silver-dye bleach print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Shomei Tomatsu
- Year
- 1960
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- Image: 38.8 × 27 cm (15 5/16 × 10 11/16 in.); Paper: 42.5 × 30.2 cm (16 3/4 × 11 15/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1960-028182
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





