
Directing
Born January 28, 1927 in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
Hiroshi Teshigahara (January 28, 1927 – April 14, 2001) was an avant-garde Japanese filmmaker. He was born in Tokyo, son of Sofu Teshigahara, founder and grand master of the Sogetsu School of ikebana. He graduated in 1950 from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and began working in documentary film. He directed his first feature film, Pitfall (1962), in collaboration with author Kōbō Abe and musician Tōru Takemitsu. The film won the NHK New Director's award, and throughout the 1960s, he continued to collaborate on films with Abe and Takemitsu while simultaneously pursuing his interest in ikebana and sculpture on a professional level.

Dream Window: Reflections on the Japanese Garden

Basara: The Princess Goh

Rikyu

Antonio Gaudí

Moving Sculpture: Jean Tinguely

Zatoichi Monogatari

Summer Soldiers

240 Hours in One Day

The Man Without a Map

Explosion Course

The Face of Another

Jose Torres II

Ako

That Tender Age

Woman in the Dunes

Pitfall

Sculptures by Sofu - Vita

Jose Torres

Gaudi, Catalunya

Yurakucho 0 Street
Ryoji (Poet)

The Living Sea

Tokyo 1958

The World Is Terrified: The Reality of the “Ash of Death”

Ikebana

Record of Bloodshed: Sunagawa

It Is Good to Live

12 Photographers

Hokusai