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Rangefinder
Magazine
June 2004
Profile: Masami Mori by Harvey Goldstein
A Fusion of Ancient Japanese Art with 20th Century Photography
Masami Mori was born in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan,
in 1956 and grew up with photography almost as a second language. Influenced
by his father, who was a journalist, Masami lived with strips of 35mm
film hanging everywhere in the house. Photography was an everyday affair
to Masami in his childhood.
Because
photographs were indispensable to his father’s reporting, Masami
learned to use a camera at a young age. He occasionally took his
father’s expensive camera on outings to photograph his classmates,
but photography was only a passing interest for him at that time.
He did not really get started in photography until he was studying
industrial chemistry at Nihon University in Tokyo. There he realized
he was more interested in imagemaking than in chemistry, so he enrolled
in the Tokyo College of Photography (now called Tokyo Polytechnic
University).
Today, Masami
is a commercial photographer based in Tokyo. His assignments include
advertising campaigns, press ads, CD covers
and television commercials.
He continues to take and create portraits. He has also created a series
of photographs of the noted Japanese Butoh dance.
Masami is
currently producing a collaborative series, which includes images
of dancers
and flowers. Masami states, “My flower studies
are definitely influenced by traditional Japanese paintings, ink
drawings and woodcut prints, but I have also been inspired by Irving
Penn’s
work with flowers, Herb Ritts’ nudes, Robert Mapplethorpe’s
portraits and the works of Georgia O’Keefe.”
Masami has
been photographing female nudes in Los Angeles for six years. He
began photographing flowers more than 10 years ago. During
this
time, he has had five exhibitions in Japan at the Polaroid Gallery
and the
Kodak Photo Salon, both in Tokyo. Masami’s ambition is to exhibit
in Europe or the United States, perhaps publishing a collection of
flower images (with nudes or Japanese dancer images) in Europe or
the United
States.
“
I would far sooner be famous for photographing flowers than anything
else. I regard it as my most important work. Shooting for yourself
is very gratifying. You don’t need to go to meetings; there
are no restrictions, no false formalities. All I have to do is
buy the flowers.
I find them so inspiring—simply contemplating their natural
beauty is an important part of the process for me. Flowers are
so ephemeral,
their freshness is so short lived, but there is a strange beauty
in their transition to decay, too.”
All of Masami’s
images (flowers, nudes and Japanese dancers) are taken with
natural light. His camera of choice is either an 8x10 (Toyo-View
810G) or a 4x5 (Toyo-View 45G), with either a 180mm Fujinon,
210 Super-Symmar HM or a 300mm Nikon lens. For his flower and
nude studies, he uses Polaroid
films (T-809, T-804, T-59, T-55) in several ways, which are
all an important part of the creative process.
One of the techniques he
uses to image transfer is to photograph with Polacolor 59 4x5 sheet film
and transfer it to a Polacolor 809 positive
(Polacolor 809 8x10 color sheet film, which will allow the
image to transfer to papers of various materials). He also
uses the
cross-tone process,
using the Polacolor 809 color negative film processed with
the Polapan 804 black-and- white positive paper to make beautiful
sepia photographs.
He uses lith printing to make quality and beautifully toned
black-and-white
prints. With this process, he also can print beautiful, light,
sepia images. [Editor’s note: Lith printing involves
the use of a developer intended for high contrast lithographic
film. When used this way, the
developer is highly diluted and photographic paper is used
instead of film. This combination produces a final print with
deep blacks and browns
and highlights ranging from a pale white through tan, dark
red or blue.]
Masami advises
the aspiring photographer to get interested in all things. It is
important to see, hear and
experience
as much
as
possible: movies,
theater, pictures, art museums, books and travel. One should
have the capability to discern and to challenge the essence
of whatever
your
interest may be.
Even after
20 years in the photographic industry, he still loves flowers, he
still loves people and he still loves
taking
photographs
of flowers
and people. A creative work is like a hobby for Masami.
His philosophy on life: “I love communicating with people
through photography.”
Following
are Masami Mori’s
explanations of his work:
(A) Black-and-white flower prints.
(B) Black-and-white Japanese Butoh dancer prints; photographed
with 4x5 (Polapan 55 positive/negative film), lith printing.
(C) Black-and-white female nude prints; photographed
with 6x7 (black-and-white positive/negative film), lith
printing.
(D) Color flower photos; photographed with 4x5 color
positive film (masking, filter work and double exposure)
on a photograph
of flowers
using 4x5
color positive paper.
(E) Image Transfers; an image transfer to T-809 positive
paper photographed with T-809 in natural light. The color
tone is
easily influenced
by the light in the location where the image transfer
is done and the
duration
of the processing time after the transfer. It is fun
doing this work because of the possibilities.
Harvey
Goldstein from Branford, Connecticut has been in the photographic industry
for 30 years. He is a former
studio
owner and presently
edits numerous association newsletters and magazines,
as
well as being a
freelance writer.
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