词条 | Taro Yamasaki |
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Early lifeTaro Yamasaki was born on December 19, 1945 to Minoru Yamasaki and Teruko Hirashiki in Detroit, Michigan.[4][5][6] He is the second of three children. His father, an architect, is best known for designing the World Trade Center; his mother was a pianist who attended the Juilliard School.[7] He attended high school at Cranbrook School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.[4] When his younger brother built a darkroom in their mother's house, Yamasaki began to experiment with photography. Taro was admitted to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where he majored in Journalism. He began taking photographs for the Journalism department's newspaper. CareerYamasaki dropped out of the University of Michigan in the spring of his senior year and in April 1968 moved to New York City where he embarked on a string of jobs including assistant kindergarten teacher [8] and assistant to fashion photographer William Klein.[3] He took a position at a Community Action Program as a documentary photographer in migrant farm worker camps in western New York State where he realized that he wanted to pursue photography more seriously.[3] In the summer of 1971, Yamasaki moved from New York city to Denver, Colorado with his first wife, Ann. He worked as a taxi driver to support his family. He and Ann moved again in 1973 back to Michigan. 1981 Pulitzer Prize for Feature PhotographyIn Michigan, Yamasaki founded a carpentry company but quit the business in 1977 to work as a staff photographer at the Detroit Free Press. He was hired by chief photographer Tony Spina and eventually worked alongside David C. Turnley. While at the Free Press, Yamasaki asked for permission to create, research and produce his own stories. The first story he conceived of on his own was a documentation of the daily lives of inmates in Jackson Prison, the largest walled prison in the world with 52 acres inside the walls[3][9] He then produced a lead story he had written, researched and photographed entirely on his own titled, "Jackson Prison: Armed and dangerous". The story was published on Sunday, December 14, 1980 as lead story of Free Press Yamasaki has won numerous other awards for his photojournalism work. In 1999 and 2000, he was a Distinguished Visiting Artist at The University of Michigan School of Art and Design.[11] Other workIn 1983 Yamasaki took a leave of absence from the Free Press to work on a book of architectural photography for Herring Press on notable buildings that were built out of travertine from a quarry near Tivoli.[12] During this year, he began receiving different magazine assignments from different Time Inc. magazines.[4] He got an assignment from People magazine to travel to Wales to photograph the village in which Richard Burton was born. After returning from the assignment, he resigned from the Free Press and became a freelance magazine photojournalist. Yamasaki has completed hundreds of human interest stories for Time Inc. magazines such as Time, Life, Sports Illustrated, Forbes, Fortune, Money, Men's Journal and People.[4] "Often his subjects have been children, living with the threats of poverty, disease, natural disasters, and armed conflict."[13] Some of the topics his documentary photography work have covered are:
Family lifeYamasaki's first marriage ended in divorce in 1974. He has one daughter from that marriage. He married his second and current wife, Susan Waderlow, in 1978. Together, they have two boys. He has three grandchildren. References1. ^About the Detroit Free Press Retrieved December 23, 2010 2. ^"The Pulitzer Prizes - Feature Photography." Retrieved December 23, 2010. 3. ^1 2 3 4 [https://books.google.com/books?id=63nvmt4HqTEC&pg=PA209&lpg=PA209&dq=taro+yamasaki+largest+walled+prison&source=bl&ots=VntiO-fbFb&sig=nB5EM-RMdEG_RwpJZjTrR1yFwkw&hl=en&ei=RMUTTfuDF8SkngeexKiXDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=taro%20yamasaki%20largest%20walled%20prison&f=false "Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners"] Elizabeth A. Brennan, Elizabeth C. Clarage. (Google eBook). page 209. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1999. Retrieved December 23, 2010 4. ^1 2 3 4 Taro Yamasaki's Biography{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Retrieved December 23, 2010. 5. ^"Minoru Yamasaki, world class architect." {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20120701110050/http://apps.detnews.com/apps/history/index.php?id=206 |date=2012-07-01 }} Baulch, Vivian M. The Detroit News 14 August 1998. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 6. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=63nvmt4HqTEC&pg=PA209&lpg=PA209&dq=taro+yamasaki+largest+walled+prison&source=bl&ots=VntiO-fbFb&sig=nB5EM-RMdEG_RwpJZjTrR1yFwkw&hl=en&ei=RMUTTfuDF8SkngeexKiXDg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CCcQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=taro%20yamasaki%20largest%20walled%20prison&f=false "Who's who of Pulitzer Prize Winners"] Elizabeth A. Brennan, Elizabeth C. Clarage. (Google eBook). page 209. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1999. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 7. ^"Art: The Road to Xanadu - TIME." Baulch, Vivian M. Time Magazine. 18 January 1963. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 8. ^Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education Volume 4, Issue 2: Winter 2006 Biography. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 9. ^"Portrait, Taro Yamasaki, Detroit, 1981". Spina, Tony. Walter P. Reuther Library. 27 April 2010. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 10. ^1 2 Yamasaki, Taro. "Inside Jackson". Detroit Free Press. 14 December 1980. Accessed December 23, 2010. 11. ^Taro Yamasaki Website Biography. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 12. ^Schulze, Franz. "Mariotti". Herring PRess. 1988. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 13. ^Penn GSE Volume 4, Issue 2: Winter 2006. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 14. ^Visions: Taro Yamasaki Retrieved December 23, 2010 15. ^20 Years: AIDS & Photography. Retrieved December 23, 2010. 16. ^"Children, Literacy and Mass Trauma Teaching in Times of Catastrophic Events And On Going Emergency Situations". {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425092603/http://www.urbanedjournal.org/archive/Unsorted%20Archives/articles/article0029.pdf |date=2012-04-25 }} Taylor, Denny and Taro Yamasaki. Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education | Volume 4, Issue 2 | Feature Articles | Children and Mass Trauma. Retrieved December 23, 2010. External links
8 : Living people|Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography winners|American people of Japanese descent|American photojournalists|University of Michigan alumni|Detroit Free Press people|People from Detroit|1945 births |
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