Toshio Matsumoto
Toshio Matsumoto (松本 俊夫 Matsumoto Toshio) (March 25, 1932 – April 12, 2017) was a Japanese film director, a pioneer of avant-garde experimental movies, multimedia, and video in his homeland and abroad. Matsumoto was born in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan and graduated from Tokyo University in 1955. His first short was Ginrin, which he made in 1955, however his most famous film is 1969's wildly experimental Funeral Parade of Roses (also known as Bara no soretsu). Funeral Parade of Roses influenced Stanley Kubrick's film A Clockwork Orange heavily. The film was a retelling of Oedipus Rex, featuring a trans person (portrayed by Pîta) trying to move up in the world of the Japanese hostess clubs.
Matsumoto published many books of photography and art and was a professor and dean of Arts at the Kyoto University of Art and Design. He was also the President of the Japan Society of Image Arts and Sciences.

Engram

Under the Skin

KIKAIDE MIRUKOTO = Eye Machine / To See by Chance –The Pioneers of Japanese Video Arts–

Funeral Parade of Roses

Funeral Parade of Roses

Dogra Magra

Kimoto

For My Crushed Right Eye

Ecstasis

Demons

Shift

The War of the 16 Year Olds

Atman

White Hole

Metastasis
Magnetic Scramble

Old/New

Enigma: Nazo

Ki or Breathing

Mona Lisa
Andy Warhol: Re-Reproduction

A Girl

I'm Nylon

Autonomy

Fly

Wave

Dissimulation
Nichiray a la carte
Silver Wheel

Phantom

Mothers

The Song of Stone

The Weavers of Nishijin

Everything Visible Is Empty

Connection

The Weavers of Nishijin

Engram

Relation

Expansion

Dogra Magra

Sway

Space Projection Ako

Security Treaty

Record of A Long White Line

Security Treaty

300 Ton Trailer

The Catch

The Devil In Mary

1986 Summer

Atman

Delay Exposure

Vibration

Demons

EE Control

Toro Axe Part 3: All Things Change

Murder Catalogue

Caisson

Nippon Express Carries the Olympics to Tokyo
