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Takagi NaokoMidorikawa YukiKishimoto MasashiOda Eiichirō
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Michio Hoshino
Michio Hoshino
Artist  (September 27, 1952 ADAugust 8, 1996 AD)
Hoshino Michio
Birth Place: 日本千叶县市川


Michio Hoshino (星野 道夫Hoshino Michio, September 27, 1952 – August 8, 1996) was a Japanese-born nature photographer. He originally hailed from IchikawaChiba Prefecture. Considered one of the most accomplished nature photographers of his era and compared to Ansel Adams, Hoshino specialized in photographing Alaskan wildlife until he was killed by a brown bear while on assignment in Kurilskoye LakeRussia in 1996. Lynn Schooler's book The Blue Bear relates the story of the author's friendship with Hoshino, a man he admired greatly for his skill as a photographer and his humanity. Schooler is a wilderness guide who became a photographer in his own right under Hoshino's tutelage. Another book, The Only Kayak by Kim Heacox, describes Hoshino's journeys to Glacier Bay as well as his own close personal friendship with Hoshino.

A memorial totem pole was raised in Sitka, Alaska, on August 8, 2008 (the 12-year anniversary of Hoshino's death), in honor of his work. Relatives and witnesses from Japan, including his widow, Naoko, attended the ceremony. Hoshino's wife and son survive him.

Last Photo Hoax

A photo of a bear entering a tent circulating the internet has been framed as the last photo that Michio Hoshino took before he got mauled by said bear is in fact incorrect. The photo was in fact a photo entered into the Worth1000 photoshop competition, which theme was "hoax last photo taken before death".

Life

Michio's interest in Alaska began at the age of 19, when he bought a photo book showing the village of Shishmaref. Wanting to see it for himself, he sent a letter to the village's mayor, who replied six months later inviting him to visit. The following summer, he spent three months there, taking photographs and helping to catch fish.

Hoshino's photographs

Further reading


    

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