Yoshito Matsushige

Yoshito Matsushige (松重 美人, Matsushige Yoshito, January 2, 1913 January 16, 2005) was a Japanese photojournalist who survived the dropping of the atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 and took five photographs on the day of the bombing in Hiroshima, the only photographs taken that day within Hiroshima that are known.[1]

Yoshito Matsushige
Born(1913-01-02)January 2, 1913
DiedJanuary 16, 2005(2005-01-16) (aged 92)
OccupationPhotojournalist
Known forSurvivor of 1945 Atomic Bomb explosion in Hiroshima
The images of Human Shadow Etched in Stone (the left) and Yorozu Bridge (the right) photographed by Matsushige after the atomic bombing. It is possessed by Australian War Memorial

Matsushige was born in Kure, Hiroshima in 1913. He took a job at a newspaper after finishing school and in 1943 entered the photography section of the newspaper Chugoku Shimbun.[1]

Matsushige was at home 2.7 km south of the hypocentre at the time of the explosion. He was not seriously injured, and determined to go to the city centre. A fire forced him back to Miyuki bridge, where the scene of desperate and dying people prevented him from using his camera for twenty minutes, when he took two frames at about 11:00. He tried again later that day but was too nauseated to take more than three more frames.[2] The first two frames are of people who escaped serious injury next to Miyuki bridge; the second of these is taken closer up and shows them having cooking oil applied to their burns. A third shows a policeman, his head bandaged, issuing certificates to civilians. The last pair are taken close to home: one of the damage to his family's barbershop, and another out of his window.[3]

Matsushige was unable to develop the film for twenty days, and even then had to do so at night and in the open, rinsing it in a stream.[4] The negatives had severely deteriorated by the 1970s, requiring intensive restoration work.[5]

References

  1. "松重美人(まつしげ よしと)とは - コトバンク" (in Japanese). kotobank. Retrieved 2017-09-13.
  2. Ryuichi Kaneko, "The Half-Life of Awareness: Photographs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki", 2122.
  3. Descriptions summarized from Tsutomu Iwakura, "The Need for a Photographic and Motion Picture Museum for Peace", 13.
  4. Iwakura, 13.
  5. Iwakura.

Further reading

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