Chiyo Uno


Chiyo Uno was a Japanese author and kimono designer, known for her contributions to Japanese fashion, film, and literature.

Early years

Uno was born in Iwakuni, Yamaguchi. In 1915, she was fired from her job as a teacher's assistant for having an affair with a colleague. In 1919, she married her cousin, a banker named Fujimara Tadashi. Her initial literary success came in 1921 when she was awarded a prize for her short story, or Painted Face. After receiving the award, Uno left Tadashi and moved to Tokyo.
During the 1920s, Uno was influenced by American and European cultures, reflecting the broader fascination with Western styles among Japanese youth of the time. In 1927, she became one of the first women in Japan to adopt the bobbed hairstyle popularized by flappers. Embracing a free-spirited lifestyle, Uno sought to embody the "modern girl" distancing herself from traditional roles. She became involved in Tokyo's Bohemian circles, forming relationships with writers, poets, and painters..

Career

In 1933, Uno began publishing the serialized novel Confessions of Love. The best seller brought her much fame. The novel details an artist and his various love affairs, and a suicide attempt with his mistress. The novel was based on the biography of Seiji Tōgō, an artist with whom Uno had a romantic relationship. Uno's Confessions of Love was applauded for her ability to write from the perspective of a man, which further added to the book's appeal.
Shortly after the success of Confessions of Love, Uno started a magazine called, or Style, in 1936. The magazine was the first in Japan to focus on foreign fashion. took up much of Uno's time through the following decades until its bankruptcy in 1959.
Uno continued to write for an audience of Japanese women, who found a sense of liberation in Uno's prose. Even if Uno's readers remained within conventional boundaries themselves, they could escape briefly through her stories of lovers and entanglements. Throughout her literary career, she received praise for her ability to write from both male and female perspectives.
Uno later became a successful kimono designer, and, with her assistant designer Tomiyo Hanazawa, staged the first kimono fashion show in the United States in 1957.

Later years

Uno was recognized by the Emperor and assumed the honor of being one of Japan's oldest and most talented female writers. In 1983 she published the memoir I Will Go On Living, which was widely read and adapted for television. She was named a "person of cultural merit" in 1990.
She died in 1996 at the age of 98 due to pneumonia.

Works

Confessions of Love, 1933–1935Ningyoshi Tenguya Kyukichi , 1942Ohan, 1957Sasu , 1964Kaze no Oto , 1969Kofuku , 1970The Story of a Single Woman, 1972Mama no Hanashi , 1976Cheri ga Shina , 1976I Will Go On Living, 1983Ippen Harukaze ga Fuitekita , 1987

Awards and honours