Tomio Kondō
Photographer, Visual Artist
1900 – 1957
Who was Tomio Kondō?
Tomio Kondō was an amateur photographer who lived on and energetically photographed Sado island in the Sea of Japan.
Kondō was born to a landowning family in Kanazawa village. He started with a camera at 18, and also had a keen interest in archaeology. Kondō photographed landscapes and a great variety of life on the island, as well as the figures from literary and artistic circles on the mainland who came to visit during the infancy of Sado's tourism industry. He financed this by gradually selling off land owned by the family.
Kondō was keen to keep up with the latest news on the island. He helped set up the Sado museum, of which he became a trustee, and organizations devoted to mountain walking and botany.
Kondō left a collection of about 8,840 plates on his death. These were bought by the bus company Niigata Kōtsū, which presented them to the Sado museum, but they were little known until 1979, when they were seen by Haruo Tomiyama and others. Four years later they became an Asahi Camera cover story, and thanks to the effort of Tomiyama and others they have been exhibited in Sado and anthologized in two books.
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- Born
- Jan 24, 1900
- Profession
- Lived in
- Niigata Prefecture
- Died
- 1957
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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