Suzuki Shin'ichi I


Suzuki Shin'ichi was the older Japanese photographer of that name.

Early life

Suzuki was born as the third son of a family named Takahashi) in Iwashina in July 1835. Both his parents died when he was young, and in 1854 he married into the Suzuki family in Shimoda when he married Suzuki Yoshichi's daughter, working in the family aramono business.
The same year as his marriage, a major tsunami destroyed the building and ended the business.
At first working in sericulture, Suzuki often traveled to Yokohama, where he soon apprenticed at the Yokohama photographic studio of Shimooka Renjō in 1867.

Photographic career

In 1872-1873 Suzuki was commissioned by J. R. Black, publisher of The Far East, to produce a photographic series documenting rural life. Images from this series continued to appear in Suzuki albums until the 1880s. In November 1873 Suzuki set up his own studio, producing portraits and souvenir albums.
The same year, Okamoto Keizō, a successor of his at Shimooka's studio, married Suzuki's daughter, and Okamoto joined the Suzuki family. Okamoto became Suzuki Shin'ichi II, and the older photographer changed his own name in turn.
About this time Suzuki may have studied photography under Yokoyama Matsusaburō. In 1884 he moved to a newly built, western-style two-storey studio. A branch studio was opened in Kudanzaka, Tokyo and operated by Suzuki II. Suzuki's photographs were highly acclaimed and he won an award for them in 1877, and in 1889 he and Maruki Riyō were commissioned to photograph Emperor Meiji and his wife.
Purchasers of his works were mostly foreign residents and visitors, and in addition to sales from his own studio, Suzuki's photographs were distributed by Sargent, Farsari & Co.
His studio was advertised as early as 1880, in Keeling's Guide to Japan, and subsequently in the Japan Directory until 1908, offering daguerreotypes, photographs, and Suzuki's innovation of photographs printed on porcelain, the latter selling for 12 yen each. These advertisements indicate that from 1893 the Yokohama studio was run by I. S. Suzuki, that is, Suzuki's son Izaburō. Suzuki Shin'ichi retired in 1892 and he died in December 1918 at the age of 83.