4. Anne Wilkes Tucker, et al. The History of Japanese Photography. New Haven: Yale University Press; Houston: in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, 2003, p.236-237.
The only woman featured in the Eyes of Ten exhibits was Toyoko Tokiwa. Women were often the subjects in photographs but rarely the photographer. Tokiwa found that women were less guarded with her than they were with male photographers and she could access places men could not. For example, in her 1959 series Working Women she included images of prostitutes from the Yokohama naval base in the waiting room of a health clinic.
"Rough, Blurred, and Out Of Focus: Provoke Magazine and Post-War Japanese Photography," Case 2, Ryerson & Burnham Libraries, January 2-February 27, 2012
