Frank Kunashige

Japanese-American photographer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroJapanese-American photographer
PlacesUnited States of America
wasPhotographer
Work fieldArts
Gender
Male
Birth1878
Death1960 (aged 82 years)
The details

Biography

Portrait of unidentified woman, "Betti" (4951162555)

Asakichi “Frank” Kunishige was a Japanese-American Pictorialist photographer. He was a founding member of the Seattle Camera Club. He created and sold his own photographic paper, Textura Tissue, which was a favorite of club members because it emphasized the soft qualities that Pictorial photographers prized. Along with Wayne Albee and Soichi Sunami, he worked for Ella E. McBride at the McBride studio. During the 1920s, Kunishige’s work was included in many prominent international exhibitions including those of the Royal Photographic Society, London; the Pittsburgh Salon; the Buffalo Salon; the Paris Salon; and numerous others. From 1925 through 1929, he was one of the most exhibited Pictorialist photographers in the world. His work was illustrated in national and international publications including Photofreund, the American Annual of Photography and Photo-Era.

During the Internment of Japanese Americans during WWII, Kunishige was detained at Camp Harmony before being transferred to Minidoka in Idaho.

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