James Whitlow Delano Explained
James Whitlow Delano (born 1960) is an American reportage photographer based in Tokyo, Japan. He has published several books of photography and is known for black and white long term projects based on human rights, the environment and culture. Delano's work, mainly from Asia and Latin America, has received many honors internationally including the Alfred Eisenstadt Award,[1] from Picture of the Year International,[2] National Press Photographers Association (N.P.P.A.),[3] Leica’s Oskar Barnack award (honorable mention),[4] PX3 (Prix de la Photographie, Paris),[5] Photo District News, American Photography,[6] Communication Arts[7] and others. His photographs have shown in galleries and museums on five continents and are held in the permanent collections of La Triennale Museum of Art,[8] and the Museo Fotografia Contemporanea[9] both in Milan (Italy) and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas.[10] [11]
His book project, The Mercy Project / Inochi,[12] which he created and curated was released in 2010 to help raise funds and awareness for hospice and palliative care in memory of his sister, Jeanne Louise Delano. He published, Black Tsunami/Japan 2011 (FotoEvidence, NY 2013), https://fotoevidence.com/books/black-tsunami-japan-2011-by-james-whitlow-delano-available-only-in-the-usa.
He is a co-founder of the Tokyo Documentary Photography Workshop (T.D.P.W.).[13]
In 2016, he founded EverydayClimateChange on Instagram bringing together photographers on six continents documenting the climate crisis on seven continents.https://www.instagram.com/everydayclimatechange/
In 2021, Delano founded EverydayClimateChange Interviews on You Tube to document the stories of photographers witnessing the climate crisis.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCG9VEHtGhlwW0kq-JvpcsJA/videos
Photo books
- Empire: Impression from China[14] (monograph / Five Continents Editions, Milan 2004)
- I Viaggi di Tiziano Terzani[15] (monograph / Vallardi Editions, Milan 2008)
- The Mercy Project / Inochi[12] (Creator, Curator / Madosha, Tokyo 2010)
- Black Tsunami/ Japan 2011 Black Tsunami/Japan 2011 (FotoEvidence, NY 2013), [16]
Notes and References
- http://www.columbia.edu/cu/pr/00/04/eisiesList.html Alfred Eisenstadt Award 2000 winner and runners-up
- http://www.poyi.org/68/02/ POYI 68 Winners, general division and freelance/agency stories (Sunday, Feb. 13), Science/Natural History Picture Story
- http://bop.nppa.org/2008/still_photography/winners/?cat=OPS Best Published Picture Story
- "Leica Oskar Barnack Award 2006", in "Leica Oskar Barnack Award 2007" (PDF), Leica Camera; archived by the Wayback Machine on August 15, 2011.
- http://www.px3.fr/winners/zoom2.php?eid=1-24783-11&uid=3231618&cat=Book+%28Series+Only%29 Exhibition Winners of Px3's Aftermath
- http://www.ai-ap.com/gallery/AP/?search=delano James Whitlow Delano,Gallery
- http://www.commarts.com/annuals/2011-Photography/winners Delano, James Whitlow, List of winners
- http://www.triennale.it/triennale/sito_html/impero_cina/comunicato.htm IMPERO-Impressioni dalla Cina
- http://www.mufoco.org/ Museo Fotografia Contemporanea
- Web site: Fishermen Dragging Pirogue, Cote d'lvoire. October 21, 2020. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
- Web site: Squatter children peeking into Window, Smoky Mountain, Manila, Philippines. October 21, 2020. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
- http://www.mado.co.jp/
- http://tdpw.org/eng/instructors.html Tokyo Documentary Photography Workshop (T.D.P.W.)
- https://web.archive.org/web/20121107121206/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,501051128-1132866,00.html Time magazine article
- http://www.vallardi.it/autori/137.html Fotografie di James Whitlow Delano, presentazione di Angela Terzani Staude
- https://fotoevidence.com/books/black-tsunami-japan-2011-by-james-whitlow-delano-available-only-in-the-usa