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Hiroji Kubota was
born on August 2, 1939, in Tokyo. After graduating from Waseda University with a degree in political science in
1962, he told his mother that he wanted to be a photographer. Her reaction was to sob "How can you do this?"
Nevertheless, determined to follow his vocation, he moved to the United States and began working as a free-lance
photographer in 1965. One of his first assignments, for the London Times, was to take a picture of Jackson Pollock's
grave in East Hampton.
In 1968 he returned to live in Japan where his work as a photo-journalist was recognized by a Publishing Culture
Award from Kodansha in 1970, the same year he became associated with Magnum Photos, the renowned photographers'
cooperative. As a photo-journalist in 1975, he witnessed the fall of Phnom Penh and Saigon. After his experience
in Vietnam, he continued to focus his attention on Asia, photographing Korea in 1978 and then China. From 1979
through 1984, Kubota explored the whole country, a 1,000-day tour during which he made more than 200,000 photographs.
The result was the comprehensive book and exhibit China, published in 1988.
In 1982, Kubota received the Nedo Sho (Annual Award) from the Photographic Society of Japan, and in 1983 the prestigious
Mainichi Art Prize. In 1989 he became a full member of Magnum.
Kubota has had one-man shows in Tokyo, Osaka, Beijing, New York, Washington, London, Vienna, and Paris. He is currently
working on a book about his homeland.
Hiroji Kubota and tribesmen, Wamena,
Irian Jaya, Indonesia © 1998
Hiroji Kubota/Magnum Photos.
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