Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. As a photographer, Fosco Maraini is perhaps best known for his work in Tibet and Japan. The visual record Maraini captured in images of Tibet and on the Ainu people of Hokkaidō has gained significance as historical documentation of two disappearing cultures.

  2. Fosco Maraini - Wikipedia. Fosco Maraini ( Firenze, 15 novembre 1912 – Firenze, 8 giugno 2004) è stato un antropologo, orientalista, alpinista, fotografo, scrittore e poeta italiano . Indice. 1 Biografia. 1.1 La formazione. 1.2 Gli anni della guerra. 1.3 Dopo la guerra. 2 Biblioteca e archivio fotografico personale. 3 Opere. 3.1 Traduzioni.

  3. Learn about Fosco Maraini, a Florentine photographer, writer, mountaineer, and anthropologist who travelled widely in Asia and Africa. See his photos of Sicily, Japan, Tibet, and more in the I Tatti collection.

  4. MARAINI, Fosco in "Dizionario Biografico" - Treccani - Treccani. MARAINI, Fosco. Domenico De Martino. Nacque a Firenze, il 15 nov. 1912, da Antonio, affermato scultore, e da Yoi Pawlowska Crosse, inglese di origine polacca, vissuta da bambina in Ungheria, scrittrice di novelle e racconti di viaggio. Fin dal bilinguismo familiare, già nella ...

  5. Fosco Maraini. Photographies. Japan 1954. Maraini’s photographic lens succeeded in capturing an unknown view of Japan in its full vitality. It provides a glimpse of a world that is doomed to disappear. Reiterations. Foto gallery. The project.

  6. 2021 •. Rogerio Akiti Dezem. This article aims to analyze some aspects of the photographic gaze on Japan of the Italian ethnologist, university professor, climber and photographer Fosco Maraini (1912-2004) in special his ethnography on the ama divers (jap. 海女) in Hegura and Mikuria islands in Japan.

  7. www.britannica.com › contributor › Fosco-MarainiFosco Maraini | Britannica

    BIOGRAPHY. Writer. Former Lecturer in Japanese, University of Florence. Author of Where Four Worlds Meet and others. Primary Contributions (3) Articles. Hindu Kush, great mountain system of Central Asia. Broadly defined, it is some 500 miles (800 km) long and as much as 150 miles (240 km) wide.