Avant-garde photography in Japan

Avant-garde photography in Japan refers to experimental photographic practices associated with Japan's interwar period and early wartime modernism, developing within and alongside the milieu of shinkō shashin (新興写真, "New Photography"). The phrase is used here as an umbrella term linking the broader interwar modernist milieu commonly described as shinkō shashin and the narrower late-1930s "zen'ei" moment in which "avant-garde photography" was explicitly debated and claimed as a public identity. Photographers and critics explored new techniques and procedures—including photomontage, photocollage, and photograms—and adapted ideas and methods associated with Surrealism into photographic work.

Histories of the period often treat the 1931 arrival of the German International Traveling Photography Exhibition (the photographic component of Film und Foto) in Japan as a turning point, coinciding with an expanding culture of photographic magazines and amateur clubs. From 1937 to 1940, a short-lived zen'ei (前衛, "avant-garde") moment became visible in some circles, but wartime cultural and ideological controls made the term politically fraught and encouraged substitutes such as shashin zōkei (写真造形) and shashin bunka (写真文化).

Rather than forming a single organization, these practices circulated through overlapping regional circuits in Tokyo, the Kansai region, and Nagoya, linked by periodicals, exhibitions, and study groups. Figures connected to these networks include the poet-photographer Kansuke Yamamoto and other participants in late-1930s Nagoya groups that developed at the intersection of photography and Surrealism.