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was a Japanese photographer best known for extensively photographing Nagasaki the day after it was bombed. Yamahata was born in Singapore; his father, Shōgyoku Yamahata (, later to become known as a photographer) had a job there related to photography.〔Hirakata and the ''Biographic Dictionary'' state that Yamahata's original given name was , but do not specify its reading. A likely reading is "Keiichi".〕 He went to Tokyo in 1925 and eventually started at Hosei University (Tokyo) but dropped out in 1936 to work in G. T. Sun (, ''Jīchīsan Shōkai,'' aka Graphic Times Sun), a photographic company run by his father. (He would become its president in 1947.) From 1940, Yamahata worked as a military photographer in China and elsewhere in Asia outside Japan; he returned to Japan in 1942. On August 10, 1945, a day after the Nagasaki bombing, Yamahata began to photograph the devastation, still working as a military photographer. Over a period of about twelve hours he took around a hundred exposures; by late afternoon, he had taken his final photographs near a first aid station north of the city. In a single day, he had completed the only extensive photographic record of the immediate aftermath of the atomic bombing of either Hiroshima or Nagasaki. These photographs appeared swiftly, for example in the August 21 issue of ''Mainichi Shinbun.'' After the GHQ's restrictions on coverage of the effects of the atomic bomb were lifted earlier in 1952, Yamahata's photographs of Nagasaki appeared in the September 29 issue of ''Life.'' The same year, they appeared in the book ''Kiroku-shashin: Genbaku no Nagasaki.'' Some also appeared in the exhibition and book "The Family of Man". Yamahata became violently ill in 1965, on his forty-eighth birthday and the twentieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. He was diagnosed with terminal cancer of the duodenum, probably caused by the residual effects of radiation received in Nagasaki in 1945. He is buried at Tama Cemetery, Tokyo. Restoration work was done on Yamahata's negatives after his death. An exhibition of prints, "Nagasaki Journey", traveled to San Francisco, New York, and Nagasaki in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the bombing. Yamahata's photographs of Nagasaki remain the most complete record of the atomic bombing as seen immediately after the bombing. ''The New York Times'' has called his photographs "some of the most powerful images ever made". ==Gallery== Examples of Yamahata's works in the public domain. Image:NagasakiSurvivors1945.jpg|Survivors of the atomic bombing Image:UrakamiStationAug1945.jpg|Victims of the atomic bombing 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Yōsuke Yamahata」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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