Ko Nakajima
0.1Directing

Ko Nakajima

Jan 1, 1941 - Kumamoto, Japan

Nakajima Ko began his career in experimental animation with the creation of works such as Seizoki (1964). At his solo exhibition at the Sogetsu Art Center, a space for avant-garde art in 1960s Tokyo, he produced Seizoki by painting directly on the film between screenings. His perennial interest in integrating new technologies, exploring the potential of film, video, and eventually computer animation, joined his desire to explore human intersections with nature, as seen in his Biological Cycle series (1971-); he created the first work in the series, Biological Life (1971-), by copying manipulated film footage onto video, then further manipulating the work with a video synthesizer.

In 1971, Nakajima established Video Earth Tokyo, the pioneering video-art collective. Nakajima used one of the earliest available portable video recorders to document Video Earth Tokyo performance pieces and teach the new technology. Video Earth Tokyo members created works, broadcast works on cable television, and participated in international exhibitions and emergent CG (computer graphics) conferences. In 1982, Nakajima introduced his Aniputer. Aniputer technology allowed wide access to creation of video animation, as this personal portable computer integrated with a video camera, developed in collaboration with Japan Victor Company (JVC), allowed any user to directly manipulate video and images on a screen, creating animations in real time. Nakajima used his expertise manipulating film, photography, and video with computer technology to create what is perhaps his best known work, Mt. Fuji (1984), a ninety-minute rhythmic meditation on nature, spirituality, and perspective. Nakajima has produced works in France, Canada, New Zealand, and Denmark. Representative works include Biological Cycle series (1971-), My Life series (1976-), Mt. Fuji (1984), and Dolmen (1987). His works are in permanent collections internationally, including in Centre Georges Pompidou (France), The Museum of Modern Art (U.S.), Long Beach Museum of Art Video Archive (U.S.), and the Getty Research Institute Special Collections (U.S.).

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie2013KIKAIDE MIRUKOTO = Eye Machine / To See by Chance –The Pioneers of Japanese Video Arts–

Crew

Media
Movie1975A Graveyard and BeggarDirectorDirecting
Movie1989Waveforms: Video/JapanDirectorDirecting
Movie1974Under a BridgeDirectorDirecting
MovieN/AEarly Work of Video Earth: Izu Shimoda CATV/ Hokkaido Ikeda CATVDirectorDirecting
Movie1987DolmenDirectorDirecting
Movie1984Mt. FujiDirectorDirecting
Movie1988RangitotoDirectorDirecting
Movie1990Esprits de SelDirectorDirecting
Movie1976My LifeDirectorDirecting
Movie2014Dance of the DeadDirectorDirecting
Movie1971HorizonDirectorDirecting
Movie1975Shinkansen Researching FoodsDirectorDirecting
Movie2019The Rooms in the Photographs — Ko Nakajima’s RoomsDirectorDirecting
Movie1975ShadowDirectorDirecting
Movie1971Under a Tree...DirectorDirecting
Movie1973Film ScrambleDirectorDirecting
Movie1970Documentation of Osaka Expo '70DirectorDirecting
Movie1971Biological Cycle No. 2DirectorDirecting
Movie1971Biological Cycle No. 3DirectorDirecting
Movie1963AnapokoDirectorDirecting
Movie1971Biological Cycle No. 1DirectorDirecting
Movie1982Biological Cycle No. 5DirectorDirecting
Movie1964SeizokiDirectorDirecting
Movie1971Biological Cycle No. 4DirectorDirecting