Ken ohara biography
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1942 Born in Tokyo, Japan
1961-1962 Studied Photography at Nihon University, Tokyo
1962 Relocated to New York City
1963-1966 Studied at Art Students League, New York
1966-1970 Worked with Richard Avedon Studio and Hiro Studio, Inc., New York
1970-1971 Freelance photographer for Harper’s Bazaar
1974-1975 Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Photography
1973-1983 Technical Director, Menken Seltzer Studios, New York
1983 Established Ohara Studio, New York
1988 Relocated to Glendale, California, established Ohara Studio, Glendale
Solo Exhibitions
2017
Ken Ohara Extreme Portraits 1970-1999, MIYAKO YOSHINAGA Gallery, New York, NY
2006-2007
Ken Ohara In 1970, while working as an assistant to Hiro and Richard Avedon, he emerged as a young artist with his seminal ONE series. ONE features close-up faces of more than 500 New Yorkers, suggesting an essentially thin boundary across all human races and genders. The same year he produced a yearlong photographic diary in an intimate miniature album. These remarkable early accomplishments marked the beginnings of Ohara’s photographic journey for the next 50 years or so. Gratefully built with ACNLPatternTool Ken OharaAmerican, born Japan Not on view Ohara's "One" was featured in the Museum of Modern Art's 1970 exhibition Information, which first summarized Conceptual Art for the wider public. The series in its entirety (published as a book without text) comprised nearly a thousand brightly lit, startling close-ups of blank, anonymous faces in seemingly every color, shape, and texture. In one concise gesture, Ohara synthesized many hallmarks of 1960s Conceptualism: the deadpan typological photography of the Bechers; the seriality and random sampling seen in Warhol and Ruscha; and the modular progressions of primary structures common to the Minimalist sculpture of Judd and Lewitt. By imposing a standard format on a plethora of diverse faces, the artist recalls modern rituals such as the mug shot, passport photo, or police line-up, which filter individual subjects through the homogenizing, bureaucratic systems of contemporary life. The result is what Ohara described as "a telephone bo
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Ken Ohara Japanese, b. 1942
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One, #1
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