Age, Biography and Wiki
Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) was born on 1977 in Japan. Discover Naoki Ishikawa (photographer)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 46 years old?
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46 years old |
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1977, 1977 |
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1977 |
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Japan |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1977.
He is a member of famous with the age 46 years old group.
Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) Height, Weight & Measurements
At 46 years old, Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) height not available right now. We will update Naoki Ishikawa (photographer)'s Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) worth at the age of 46 years old? Naoki Ishikawa (photographer)’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Japan. We have estimated
Naoki Ishikawa (photographer)'s net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Naoki Ishikawa (photographer) Social Network
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Timeline
Ishikawa's first film venture as a cinematographer Shari, directed by and starring Nao Yoshigai, is set to be released in 2021. The film follows the fictional narrative of a red figure, played by Yoshigai, set in the town Shari of Shiretoko, the northernmost part of Japan. Ishikawa frequently visits Shiretoko and started the group Shashin Zero Banchi Shari (写真ゼロ番地知床) for local Shiretoko photographers.
Through his travels, Ishikawa has developed intimate relationships with the people he encountered, notably the sherpa whom have guided many of his climbs. Ishikawa's latest book Sherpa (2020), featuring portraits of sherpa, was sold to raise funding for sherpas who have been financially impacted by the loss of travel during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In collaboration with Super Labo and Beams, Ishikawa has been working on a 47 book series named Nippon Series, with each book corresponding to one of the 47 prefectures in Japan. The following books have been published thus far: Hokkaido (2018), Akita (2018), Niigata (2018), Tokyo (2018), Oita (2018), Yamaguchi (2019), and Ishikawa (2019).
Ishikawa has returned to the Himalayas repeatedly throughout his climbing career; each year between 2011 and 2019, he has either successfully summited a mountain on the Himalayas or attempted to. In May 2011, he summited Mount Everest for the second time through the Southeast ridge. In May 2012, he attempted to climb Lhotse (in Nepal) but had to withdraw midway due to landslides and dangerous climbing conditions. Later that year, Ishikawa summited Manaslu. In May 2013, he reattempted Lhotse and was able to reach the summit. In May 2014, he climbed Makalu in Nepal. In 2015, Ishikawa attempted K2 in Pakistan and the nearby Broad Peak, but had to withdraw from both mountains because of avalanches. In November 2018, he climbed Ama Dablam in Nepal and in July 2019, he climbed Gasherbrum II in Pakistan. Ishikawa's dedication to the Himalayas can be attributed to his view of the mountains as a "school" where the beautiful, yet harsh, conditions enable him to develop a greater sense of consciousness and appreciation. His affinity for the actual process of climbing mountains with such immense heights can also be attributed to the sensation, as described by Ishikawa, of "being reborn."
Ishikawa's photography methodology trace back to his interests in ethnography and anthropology: In addition to landscapes, Ishikawa also routinely photographs local communities and cultural practices, and writes detailed notes on the customs and natural phenomena relevant to the area. Some of Ishikawa projects are the culmination of years of traveling and research, such as his award winning books Archipelago (2009) and Corona (2010). For Archipelago (2009), Ishikawa shot local festivals and the daily lives of islanders situated north and south of Japan over the course of ten years, as an attempt to reframe the boundaries and histories of Japan through interventions of marginalized cultures. Corona (2010) is similarly the combined travels and research of ten years across the Polynesian Triangle, documenting the people and religious customs of the communities within the "invisible continent" through both image and text.
Ishikawa has received the Kodansha Publication Culture Award for Photography (2008) for his books New Dimension and Polar;; Higashikawa Award’s New Photographer Prize (2009) Sagamihara Award (2010) for Archipelago; Domon Ken Award (2011) for Corona, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Photographic Society of Japan (2020).
In 2004, Ishikawa and balloonist Michio Kanda travelled in a hot air balloon across the Pacific Ocean. About 1,600 km from Japan, Ishikawa and Kanda realized that they did not bring enough fuel and were forced to land in the water. The two spent hours in a gondola until they were picked up and returned to Japan by a Panamanian cargo ship. Over four years after the trip, the gondola was found on the shores of Akusekijima – the person who had found Ishikawa’s gear reached out to Ishikawa. Among the gear was an old SLR that belonged to Ishikawa, which became known as the “drifting camera.” In 2008, Ishikawa wrote a non-fiction book based on the event titled 最後の冒険家 (= The Last Adventurer) which received the Kaiko Takeshi award.
Upon his return, Ishikawa was told by the same editor that the images were unusable and thus felt that he was unfit to become a photographer. However, when he was invited by Daido Moriyama to meet at a bar in Shinjuku's Golden Gai, Moriyama complimented the photos Ishikawa took from his expedition, whose support encouraged Ishikawa to continue traveling and pursuing photography. Eventually the photos were exhibited at Epsite (Epson Imaging Gallery) and used in Ishikawa's first book Pole to Pole (2003). Through Pole to Pole, Ishikawa established his book planning approach wherein the organization of the images is generally in chronological order so as to mirror his lived journey. Ishikawa continues to shoot primarily with film, namely with the Makina 670 and Mamiya 7 II, and has published photobooks yearly from his travels. Many of Ishikawa's photobooks document his climbing expeditions, especially those in the Himalayas, and the towns and roads leading up to them. Ishikawa has been lauded for not only his ability to shoot within extreme climates but also to convey the vastness and intensity of these landscapes within his photographs.
Ishikawa received his bachelor's degree from Waseda University in 2002 with a specialization in anthropology and ethnography. He received his MFA in 2005 and later his Ph. D. in 2008, both at the Tokyo University of the Arts.
Ishikawa began high altitude climbing in his early twenties and quickly became an established climber internationally – at the age of 23, he became the youngest person to reach all seven summits by 2001 (no longer the record holder). His first ascent was at Denali in 1998 and within the next year he reached the summits of both Mount Elbrus and Mount Kilimanjaro on solo trips. In 2000, Ishikawa was selected by Martyn S. Williams to participate in the Pole to Pole project: a 9 month expedition which consisted of 8 young people from 5 different continents that traveled 32,970 km from the North Pole to the South Pole. At the end of the trip, Ishikawa stayed in Antarctica and climbed Vinson Massif in January 2001. Within the same year he climbed Aconcagua in Argentina, then to Mount Kosciuszko in Australia, and finally to the North Wall of Mount Everest to complete the seven summits.
Ishikawa began photography seriously during the Pole to Pole expedition in 2001. He was prompted by a newspaper editor to shoot at least one roll of film per day and keep notes so that they could publish an article or series on Ishikawa’s trip.
Naoki Ishikawa (石川 直樹, Ishikawa Naoki, b. Tokyo, 1977) is a Japanese photographer, writer, and mountain climber. Ishikawa first established himself as an accomplished climber, reaching all seven summits by 2001 in his early twenties. In 2001, he began to take photographs seriously and thereafter his ventures as a photographer and writer have intimately linked to his travels and climbs, as he often photographs and writes about his own adventures to various remote landscapes. Ishikawa's analog photographs frequently capture nature at its most extreme and the people that inhabit it, gaining a broad recognition for his ethnographic sensibility and curiosity, informed by his study of antholopology and ethnography at Waseda University.