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She had her first solo exhibition in 1956 and went on to win several awards such as the Newcomer's Award from the Photographic Society of Japan and the Camera Geijutsu Art Award. [ 3 ] In 1962 Imai was in a car accident that left her temporarily blind for a year and a half, which left her unable to create photographs. [ 3 ]
On 24 October 1974, Nobuko Imai appeared with a Japanese combined orchestra which included the Toho Gakuen School of Music Orchestra and members of the Japan Philharmonic with conductor Seiji Ozawa and cellist Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi in a world-wide telecast (carried on the PBS television network in the U.S.) from the United Nations building in New ...
Imai Yone was born in 1897 in Mie Prefecture of Japan. She traveled to Tokyo for secondary school in 1917, and was baptized in the Christian faith the next year when she was 21. [1] She soon graduated from Tōkyō Joshi Kōtō Shihan Gakkō, or Tokyo Women's Normal School, now known as Ochanomizu University. [2]
The Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (東京都写真美術館, Tōkyō-to Shashin Bijutsukan) is an art museum concentrating on photography. As the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, it was founded by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, and is in Meguro-ku, a short walk from Ebisu station in southwest Tokyo. The museum also has a movie theater.
As the Romanized Japanese name suggests, they are shaped like coffins. [17] The manufacturer then released Imai's signature Dazzler model, modeled after the shape of a mandolin, around the time of the album Razzle Dazzle (2010). [25] For the 30th anniversary of Buck-Tick's major label debut, Fernandes created the signature Gustave model for ...
Melo Imai (今井 メロ, 今井 夢露, Imai Mero, born 26 October 1987 in Suminoe-ku, Osaka) [1] is a Japanese TV personality and half-pipe snowboarder. Her maiden name is Narita ( 成田 ) . Imai's father is snowboarding coach Takashi Narita, and she has two brothers: former snowboarder Dome Narita and trampoliner Grim Narita.
Born in Toyooka, Hyōgo Prefecture, Imai was a member of the Ground Self-Defense Force before starting his acting career in the second half of the 1980s. [1] The founder of the stage company Elle Company, he was the author and the main actor of the play The Winds of God, a 1991 drama he successfully performed for about twenty years. [1]
Isao Imai (今井 功, Imai Isao, 7 October 1914 – 24 October 2004) was a Japanese theoretical physicist, known for fluid mechanics and mathematical physics. Imai was born on 7 October 1914 in Dairen. A few years later, his family returned to Kobe, where he spent his childhood.