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The Emperor's Tutor

As the tutor to then Crown Prince, now Emperor Akihito, Elizabeth Gray Vining provides one of the most important connections between the...
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Koichiro Kurita - Landscape as Metaphor

September 11 - October 26th
Opening Reception: Thursday, September 11, 6:00 PM
Gallery Talk with Stuart Rome: October 24, 7:00 PM
Project Basho Gallery; 215-238-0928
1305 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia PA 19122
www.projectbasho.org
Born in Manchuria and educated in Japan, Koichiro Kurita made his commitment to photography early in life. First working in the 1960s for an advertising agency in Tokyo, he became an independent commercial photographer for such diverse clients as Takashimaya, Sharp Electronics and Kanebo Cosmetics until 1983. Then, at age 40, Kurita began to emerge as a fine art photographer. In 1990, a grant from the Asian Cultural Council (part of the Jhon D.Rockefeller Found) allowed him to concentrate on his artistic interests and within the year he had his first solo exhibition in the United States. In 1993 Kurita moved from Japan to live permanently in New York, but he has traveled extensively, taking photographs throughout the US, Canada, the United Kingdom and France. Wherever he works, Kurita's vision remains focused on the elements of nature. He is not so much an environmental advocate, intent on capturing and preserving the beauty of nature (though he does so), but rather he is more a philosopher of life who finds solace in the contemplation of nature. "I believe that in nature, the smallest things, or seemingly most insignificant phenomena, have their reason and their role" he says. As Diogenes took his lantern, seeking an honest man, so Kurita uses his camera in his search for honest answers to life's enigmas.

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