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Letters from Iwo Jima (DVD)
Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya, Tsuyoshi Ihara, Ryo Kase, Shidō Nakamura, …
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Clint Eastwood's completion of the Iwo Jima saga. Here the action
is seen from the Japanese point of view and the film is based on
the book 'Picture Letters from Commander in Chief' by Tadamichi
Kuribayashi. The island of Iwo Jima stands between the American
military force and the home islands of Japan. Therefore the
Imperial Japanese Army is desperate to prevent it from falling into
American hands and providing a launching point for an invasion of
Japan. General Tadamichi Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) is given
command of the forces on the island and sets out to prepare for the
imminent attack. General Kuribayashi, however, does not favour the
rigid traditional approach recommended by his subordinates, and
resentment and resistance fester among his staff.
Bull City Summer: A Season At The Ballpark unites a group of
artists and documentarians (Hiroshi Watanabe, Alec Soth, and Hank
Willis Thomas) around the 2013 season of minor league baseball in
Durham, North Carolina, evoking an atmosphere described by The New
York Times as "lazing out on the porch of a summer's night and
meditating to your favorite ball team." Alec Soth (b. 1969) is a
photographer born and based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His
photographs have been featured in numerous solo and group
exhibitions, including the 2004 Whitney and SĆ£o Paulo Biennials.
Soth has been the recipient of numerous fellowships and awards,
including the Guggenheim Fellowship (2013). In 2008, Soth started
his own publishing company, Little Brown Mushroom. Soth is
represented by Sean Kelly in New York, Weinstein Gallery in
Minneapolis, Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco, and is a member of
Magnum Photos. Hank Willis Thomas is a photo conceptual artist
working primarily with themes related to identity, history and
popular culture. He received a BFA in Photography and Africana
studies from New York University and his MFA/MA in Photography and
Visual Criticism from the California College of Arts. Thomas has
exhibited throughout the U.S. and abroad, including the
International Center of Photography, Galerie Michel Rein in Paris,
Studio Museum in Harlem, Galerie Henrik Springmann in Berlin, and
the Baltimore Museum of Art, among others. Thomasā€™ work is in
numerous public collections including The Museum of Modern Art New
York, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Whitney Museum of
American Art, The Brooklyn Museum, The High Museum of Art and the
National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. Hiroshi Watanabe Born in
Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan in 1951, Hiroshi Watanabe graduated from
the Department of Photography of Nihon University in 1975. Watanabe
moved to Los Angeles, where he worked as a production coordinator
for Japanese television commercials and later co-founded a Japanese
coordination services company. Watanabe obtained an MBA from the
UCLA Anderson Business School in 1993. Two years later, however,
his earlier interest in photography revived, and Watanabe started
to travel worldwide, extensively photographing what he found
intriguing at each moment and place. As of 2000, Watanabe has
worked full-time at photography.
Waro Kishi first caught the attention of the architectural world
with his house in Nipponbashi, en elegant townhouse in an Osaka
district full of stores marketing electric and electronic goods.
Like a slender volume of poetry in a shelf otherwise crowded with
how-to books, it is a work of remarkable lightness and
transparency, four storeys high, 13 m deep, but only 2.5 m wide.
The award-winning house, which has a steel-frame structure, is
economically constructed of readily available materials such as
cement boards, yet it is put together with enormous care. The
austerity makes the high-ceilinged dining room, a dramatic eerie on
the top floor, seem that much more luxurious. Kishi was educated at
Kyoto University and opened his own office in Kyoto in 1981. Many
of his buildings are located in the Kansai region, which, besides
Kyoto, includes Osaka, Kobe and Nara. Kansai offers a working
environment for architects that is very different from the one in
Tokyo, where almost anything is permitted. It has an older history
and, arguably, a more complex urban fabric that requires the
observation of certain rules. A narrow frontage such as the one in
Nipponbashi is commonplace in heavily built-up districts. The
discipline that is demanded of someone working under such difficult
conditions has helped to nurture Kishi's work. Born in 1950, Kishi
belongs to the generation of Japanese architects that emerged after
Tadao Ando. Although he has acknowledged the influence of the Oska
architect, Kishi has a very different sensibility. His buildings
are more delicate and subtle, and his designs are less driven by
form. A self-described contrarian, who preferred the works of
architects such as Marcel Breuer and Richard Neutra when many
others were embracing Post-Modernism, he refuses in today's changed
climate to be labelled a Modernist or Miesian.
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