T. Enami

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
T. Enami, circa 1909

T. Enami (江南 信國, Enami Nobukuni, 1859 – 1929) was the trade name of a Meiji period Japanese photographer.[1] The T. of his trade name is thought to have stood for Toshi, though he never spelled it out on any personal or business document.

Biography[edit]

Born in Edo (now Tokyo) during the Bakumatsu era, Enami was first a student of, and then an assistant to the well known photographer and collotypist, Ogawa Kazumasa. Enami relocated to Yokohama, and opened a studio on Benten-dōri (Benten Street) in 1892. Just a few doors away from him was the studio of the already well known Tamamura Kōzaburō. He and Enami would work together on at least three related projects over the years.

Enami became quietly unique as the only photographer of that period known to work in all popular formats, including the production of large-format photographs compiled into what are commonly called "Yokohama Albums". Enami went on to become Japan's most prolific photographer of small-format images such as the stereoview and glass lantern-slides. The best of these were delicately hand-tinted. His images in all formats eventually appeared in books and periodicals having press-runs in the millions. The Japanese stereoview lines of at least three major American publishers were made up entirely of T. Enami images.

Enami survived the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, and rebuilt his studio which had been destroyed by the quake and subsequent fire. After his death at age 70 in 1929, his first son Tamotsu took over the studio until it was once again demolished in 1945 by the Allied bombing of Yokohama during World War II.

Legacy[edit]

Because Tamotsu shared the initial "T" with his father, photo-historians later confused attribution of the father's photographs with those produced by his son. Terry Bennett, in his book Photography in Japan 1853–1912[2] offered interesting commentary concerning the "father or son" attribution problem. The Enami family in Yokohama later resolved the mystery: Tamotsu was not a photographer, and T. Enami never stood for Tamotsu Enami. Rather, the son maintained the studio, and continued the production and sale of his father's old photographs. Fortunately, due to sharing the same first-name initial with his father, he didn't have to change the letterheads or labels of the company ephemera. These revelations, and other biographical data appeared in an essay and stereoview index entry written by Okinawa-based photo researcher Rob Oechsle,[3] and published in Bennett's follow-up volume, Old Japanese Photographs – Collectors' Data Guide.[4][5]

Philbert Ono of PhotoGuide Japan[6] has also speculated on the possibility that T. Enami intentionally named his son with a leading T in the hope that he would someday take over the studio.

Perhaps the greatest posthumous honor conferred on Enami was the selection of one of his images to be the sole inset-photograph appearing on the first-edition cover of the monumental Odyssey, The Art of Photography at National Geographic.[7] Early in their history, Enami had been a contributing photographer to the magazine.

Photographs by T. Enami[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Enami Nobukuni (江南 信國).
  2. ^ Bennett, Terry. Photography in Japan 1853–1912. Tuttle, 2006.
  3. ^ Oechsle, Rob. http://www.t-enami.org/.
  4. ^ Bennett, Terry. Old Japanese Photographs – Collectors' Data Guide. London: Quaritch, 2006.
  5. ^ Although the two Bennett books mentioned above have quickly become standard references for collectors and archivists, some additional information has surfaced since those references appeared. On Oechsle's T. Enami website, the latest information has been integrated with some of the original data. Further, over fifty sample illustrations of Enami's work are given, some of which may be directly copied for fair use. Links are also provided to other sites discussing T. Enami, or showing his verified images.
  6. ^ Ono, Philbert. http://photoguide.jp/txt/T._Enami.
  7. ^ Odyssey, the Art of Photography at National Geographic. Charlottesville: Thomasson-Grant, 1988.