In support of Oyako Day, TSUTAYA has initiated a campaign asking parents to give their children a book this month. Our hope is that the present will serve as inspiration for the child. We believe in the power of books stimulate positive change.
In support of Oyako Day, TSUTAYA has initiated a campaign asking parents to give their children a book this month. Our hope is that the present will serve as inspiration for the child. We believe in the power of books stimulate positive change.
Posted at 16:53 in news | Permalink | Comments (0)
Bruce Osborn and Yoshiko Inoue were presented with the Higashi-Kuninomiya Culture Award for contributions they have made through their Oyako Day project. Bruce and Yoshiko are so grateful to the sponsors and volunteers who have supported their social action, without them Oyako Day would have never have reached so many people.
Posted at 18:18 in news | Permalink | Comments (0)
Twenty eight years ago I published “OYAKO", my photo book on Japanese parents and children. The book coincided with an exhibition I was having at Seed Department Store in Shibuya and the response was unbelievable. It was introduced on several TV programs including NHK Evening News, NHK Educational TV, and Tetsuko no Heya. In addition, articles were published in all the major newspapers and in a number of magazines. Needless to say, all the attention was amazing and this project has continued being a very important project for me.
Posted at 16:11 in news | Permalink | Comments (0)
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The Kyotoku Maru no.18, a 330 ton fishing vessel over 60 meters long, has focused a lot of attention. It was washed over 700 meters inshore from the harbor and tossed by one of the main roads leading to City Hall. This young girl with her parents don't weigh much in comparison, yet each is a monument of equal importance, one to past destruction, the other to hope and the future. As of October 9, 2015, the earthquake's toll is at 15,893 persons. Thewreckage of the Kyotoku Maru was removed in October 2013. more Tohoku photos
Posted at 22:26 in news | Permalink | Comments (0)
This was the first time since March 11 that this family returned to the place where their home once stood. They were nervous about going at first, but when they saw a big sunflower growing on their lot, they took it as a sign of hope. Some 230,000 people have yet to return to their homes since the disaster. More Tohoku photos
Posted at 21:45 in news | Permalink | Comments (0)
Video clip of Oyako at 2015 Super Photo Session and other locations visited during their Mimi Tomo Oyako Tour in Tokyo
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The Foreign Correspondences’ Club of Japan (Main Bar) March 5 - April 1, 2016.
When the Great Eastern Japan Earthquake struck on March 11, 2011, I grabbed a camera as we made our escape. Running towards the evacuation center, with the tsunami close on our heels, my family and I began our lives as refugees.
3/5, at the foreign correspondents ' Club Japan in Yurakucho, Tokyo Electric Bill living in Kamaishi, Iwate Prefecture Kikuchi shimpei, (Kikuchi Gallery) photo exhibition has started. Kikuchi is the photographer owns a photo studio in Iwate Prefecture. East Japan earthquake since the camera in one hand to local victims continue to record, has recorded a lot of reconstruction. Off went out to Tokyo because of photos can be taken from the local displays up to 4/1 Please come see make your time. more
Posted at 15:34 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Lianhe Zaobao, Singapore's largest Chinese newspaper, introduced Bruce Osborn's Oyako exhibition at JCC (Japan Creative Centre). See the article here
Posted at 19:40 | Permalink | Comments (0)