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Akira Kurosawa/ 2009 - Satoshi Kinoshita
AKIRA KUROSAWA/ 2009  
( Satoshi Kinoshita )

Series: Prints on paper: Portraits 2
Medium: Giclée on Japanese matte paper
Size (inches): 16.5 x 11.7 (paper size)
Size (mm): 420 x 297 (paper size)
Edition size: 25
Catalog #: PP_0128
Description: From an edition of 25. Signed, titled, date, copyright, edition in pencil on the reverse / Aside from the numbered edition of 5 artist's proofs and 2 printer's proofs.



“In a mad world, only the mad are sane.” - Akira Kurosawa

-thinkexist.com/quotes/akira_kurosawa/



Akira Kurosawa -

Akira Kurosawa (黒澤 明 or 黒沢 明, Kurosawa Akira, 23 March 1910 – 6 September 1998) was a Japanese film director, producer, screenwriter and editor. In a career that spanned 50 years, Kurosawa directed 30 films. He is widely regarded as one of the most important and influential filmmakers of his generation. In 1989, he was awarded the Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement "for cinematic accomplishments that have inspired, delighted, enriched and entertained worldwide audiences and influenced filmmakers throughout the world." [1]

Life:

Akira Kurosawa was born to Isamu and Shima Kurosawa on 23 March 1910.[2] He was the youngest of eight children born to the Kurosawas in a suburb of Tokyo.[3] Shima Kurosawa was forty years old at the time of Akira's birth and his father Isamu was forty-five. Akira Kurosawa grew up in a household with three older brothers and four older sisters. Of his three older brothers, one died before Akira was born and one was already grown and out of the household. One of his four older sisters had also left the home to begin her own family before Kurosawa was born. Kurosawa's next-oldest sibling, a sister he called "Little Big Sister," also died suddenly after a short illness when he was ten years old.

Kurosawa's father worked as the director of a junior high school operated by the Japanese military and the Kurosawas descended from a line of former samurai. Financially, the family was above average. Isamu Kurosawa embraced western culture both in the athletic programs that he directed and by taking the family to see films, which were then just beginning to appear in Japanese theaters. Later, when Japanese culture turned away from western films, Isamu Kurosawa continued to believe that films were a positive educational experience.

In primary school, Kurosawa was encouraged to draw by a teacher who took an interest in mentoring his talents. His two older brothers, Heigo and Tachikawa had a profound impact on him.[3] Heigo was very intelligent and won several academic competitions, but also had what was later called a cynical or dark side. In 1923, the Great Kantō earthquake destroyed Tokyo and left 100,000 people dead. In the wake of this event, Heigo, 17, and Akira, 13, made a walking tour of the devastation. Corpses of humans and animals were piled everywhere. When Akira would attempt to turn his head away, Heigo urged him not to. According to Akira, this experience would later instruct him that to look at a frightening thing head-on is to defeat its ability to cause fear.[4]

Heigo eventually began a career as a benshi in Tokyo film theaters. Benshi narrated silent films for the audience and were a uniquely Japanese addition to the theater experience. In the transition to talking pictures, later in Japan than elsewhere, benshi lost work all over the country. Heigo organized a benshi strike that failed. Akira was likewise involved in labor-management struggles, writing several articles for a radical newspaper while improving and expanding his skills as a painter and reading literature.

When Akira Kurosawa was in his early 20s, his older brother Heigo committed suicide. Four months later, the oldest of Kurosawa's brothers also died, leaving Akira as the only surviving son of an original four at age 23.

Kurosawa's wife was actress Yoko Yaguchi.[5] He had two children with her: a son named Hisao and a daughter named Kazuko.

Notes:

1. ^ "Akira Kurosawa - AKIRA KUROSAWA DRAWINGS". Kurosawa-drawings.com. http://www.kurosawa-drawings.com/page/8. Retrieved on 2009-05-19.
2. ^ "Akira Kurosawa: Biography". Bfi.org.uk. 2007-08-31. http://www.bfi.org.uk/features/kurosawa/biography.html. Retrieved on 2009-05-19.
3. ^ a b Richie, Donald (1999). The Films of Akira Kurosawa. University of California Press. pp. 10-11. ISBN 0520220374.
4. ^ Kurosawa, Akira (1983). Something Like An Autobiography. Vintage Books. pp. 53-54. ISBN 0394714393.
5. ^ Kurosawa, Akira (1983). Something Like An Autobiography. Vintage Books. p. 134. ISBN 0394714393

-en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akira_Kurosawa


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Series Prints on paper: Portraits 2
Jimi Hendrix/ 2009Maria from Metropolis Film/ 2009Marcel Duchamp/ 2009Jack Kerouac/ 2009Miles Davis/ 2009Weegee/ 2009Syd Barrett/ 2009Brian Jones/ 2009Walter Benjamin/ 2009South Wind, Clear Sky (also known as Red Fuji)/ 2009Otani Oniji II/ 2009Johnny Rotten/ 2009
Béla Bartók/ 2009Astro Boy/ 2009Ludwig van Beethoven/ 2009Statue of Liberty/ 2009Empire State Building/ 2009Tōru Takemitsu/ 2009Anton Webern/ 2009Young Vincent (c. 1866)/ 2009Vincent van Gogh/ 2009Jean-Paul Sartre/ 2009Marshall McLuhan/ 2009Karlheinz Stockhausen/ 2009
Edgard Varčse/ 2009Pablo Picasso/ 2009Jack Johnson/ 2009Olivier Messiaen/ 2009Akira Kurosawa/ 2009Allen Ginsberg/ 2009William S. Burroughs/ 2009Jean-Michel Basquiat/ 2009László Moholy-Nagy/ 2009Herbert Bayer/ 2009Franz Kafka/ 2009John Cage/ 2009
David Tudor/ 2009Skip James/ 2009Max Ernst/ 2009Peggy Guggenheim/ 2009Elvis Presley/ 2009Young Charlie Chaplin/ 2009F. Scott Fitzgerald/ 2009Arvo Pärt/ 2009Sakamoto Ryōma/ 2009Chiune Sugihara/ 2009John Belushi/ 2009Mark Rothko/ 2009
Ludwig Wittgenstein/ 2011Bertrand Russell/ 2011Mona Lisa/ 2011King Kong climbs The Empire State Building/ 2011Phil Spector/ 2011Luc Ferrari/ 2011Bruce Conner/ 2011Joseph Duveen/ 2011John Coltrane/ 2011Susan Sontag/ 2011The Adam of Your Labors, aka. Frankenstein's Monster/ 2011Teo Macero/ 2011
Osamu Tezuka/ 2011Kazimir Malevich/ 2011Francis Bacon/ 2011Jasper Johns/ 2011Mississippi Fred McDowell/ 2011Frank Zappa/ 2011Pierre Schaeffer/ 2011Alfred Nobel/ 2011Roman Polanski/ 2011
Biography of 'Satoshi Kinoshita'
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