Toshio Fukada (深田 敏夫, Fukada Toshio, 1928–2009) was a Japanese photographer. [1] Fukada died in 2009. [2]
Yoshito Matsushige was a Japanese photojournalist who survived the dropping of the atomic bomb on the city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 and took five photographs on the day of the bombing in Hiroshima, the only photographs taken that day within Hiroshima that are known.
Terushichi Hirai was one of the most prominent Japanese photographers in the first half of the 20th century in Japan.
The Tokyo Photographic Art Museum is an art museum concentrating on photography.
Yōsuke Yamahata was a Japanese photographer best known for extensively photographing Nagasaki the day after it was bombed.
Shōmei Tōmatsu was a Japanese photographer. He is known primarily for his images that depict the impact of World War II on Japan and the subsequent occupation of U.S. forces. As one of the leading postwar photographers, Tōmatsu is attributed with influencing the younger generations of photographers including those associated with the magazine Provoke.
Taku Aramasa is a Japanese photographer.
Miyako Ishiuchi, is a Japanese photographer.
Kenji Ishiguro is a Japanese photographer.

Shunkichi Kikuchi was a Japanese photographer best known for his documentation of Hiroshima and Tokyo immediately after the war.
Toshio Shibata is a Japanese photographer known for his large-format photographs of large-scale works of civil engineering in unpopulated landscapes.
Hiromi Tsuchida is a Japanese photographer. His creative photo career is over 40 years long. Tsuchida has produced several collections of photographs of the aftermath of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He has produced many photo books such as Zokushin, Counting Grains of Sand, New Counting Grains of Sand and The Berlin Wall. There is also a retrospective of his life's work titled, Hiromi Tsuchida's Japan. Tsuchida has received the Nobuo Ina Award and the Ken Domon Award.
Ken Domon is one of the most renowned Japanese photographers of the 20th century. He is most celebrated as a photojournalist, though he may have been most prolific as a photographer of Buddhist temples and statuary.
Shigeichi Nagano was a Japanese photographer. He won the Ina Nobuo Award in 1986 and had a major retrospective at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography in 2000.
Shinzō Hanabusa is a Japanese photographer. As a member of the Japanese Youth Delegation, he visited China during the Chinese-Japanese Youth Meeting in 1965.
Shigeo Hayashi was a Japanese photographer. After three years of Army service he began his career as a photographer with the Japanese propaganda magazine FRONT, in 1943. In September 1945 he was one of two photographers assigned by the Special Committee for the Investigation of A-bomb Damage to document the aftermath of the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In subsequent decades he worked as a commercial photographer. He died in 2002 at the age of 84.
Eiichi Matsumoto was a Japanese photographer.
Mitsugi Kishida was a Japanese photographer.
Shinichiro Kobayashi is a Japanese photographer, and "the leading practitioner if not the founder of the ever-popular 'Ruins' or 'Urban Exploration' genre of photography".
Wang Wusheng was a Chinese photographer known for his black-and-white photographs of Mount Huangshan.
Tokuko Ushioda is a Japanese photographer whose Bibliotecha series won the Domon Ken Award, the Photographic Society of Japan’s Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Higashikawa International Photo Festival's Domestic Photographer Award in 2018.