Keiichirà  Gotà  (å¾Âè¤æÂ¬ä¸ÂéÂÂ, Gotà  Keiichirà Â; 1918-2004) was a Japanese photographer from Nagoya. Later summaries of his career describe him as a Nagoya-based photographer inclined toward Surrealism who pursued avant-garde expression across changing subjects and styles. After World War II, he co-founded the Nagoya photography group VIVI with Kansuke Yamamoto, Minayoshi Takada, Yoshifumi Hattori, and others, and later became associated with the Japan Subjectivist Photography League.
His works are held in museum collections including the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum, the Nagoya City Art Museum, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
According to a recent profile published by MEM, Gotà  was born in Nagoya, began exploring photography in childhood, and was later influenced by Surrealist artists such as Salvador Dalàand Max Ernst. After finishing school, he trained in photography and worked as an assistant editor for the magazine Kameraman; during and after the war, he focused on photojournalism in Nagoya.
Around 1938, Gotà  became acquainted with Kansuke Yamamoto through Seidà Âsha, an amateur photography group in Nagoya, and the two remained close thereafter.
Museum catalogues and later exhibition materials, including the 2022 Tokyo Photographic Art Museum exhibition ', document a body of prewar and wartime work by Gotà  from the later 1930s to the early 1940s, much of it characterized by Surrealist-inflected montage and staged compositions. Works dated to this period include The Last Judgment, The Unreturning Stage, Valley Form, and Vanishing Landscape.
After the war, Gotà  became one of the founding members of VIVI, a Nagoya-based avant-garde photography group formed in 1947. MEM's account of postwar Nagoya photography describes the group as part of the revival of avant-garde photography in the city, as Yamamoto, Takada, Hattori, and Gotà  sought new forms of expression under changing postwar conditions.
Gotà Â's role in VIVI is important for understanding the postwar continuation of experimental photography in Nagoya. Through the group, he remained closely connected to the same regional network that also sustained Yamamoto's postwar photographic and editorial activity.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art has contextualized his photograph Memorandum (1947), now in its collection, within this same postwar revival of avant-garde photography in Nagoya, linking it to the moment when Gotà  and his collaborators founded VIVI.
By the mid-1950s, Gotà  had also become associated with subjective photography in Japan. Tokyo Art Beat describes him as a prominent Nagoya-based participant in the Japan Subjectivist Photography League, alongside Shà «zà  Takiguchi and Yamamoto. MEM likewise notes that he and Yamamoto participated in the First International Subjective Photography Exhibition held in Tokyo in 1956.
From the 1950s onward, Gotà  was among the photographers who, together with figures such as Kansuke Yamamoto, provided guidance to the Chà «bu Student Photography Federation in Nagoya.
MEM's 2024 profile further notes that Gotà  held more than thirty solo exhibitions, won several photography awards, and published books including Woman Abstraction, Goto Keiichiro Photography Collection, and French Dolls. His works are held in collections including the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum and the Nagoya City Art Museum.
Gotà  is relevant to the history of Photography in Nagoya as a figure linking prewar Surrealist-inflected and avant-garde photography to postwar experimental practice in the city. His career is also relevant to accounts of avant-garde photography in Japan, especially those that connect prewar experimentation in Nagoya with later postwar formations such as VIVI and the spread of subjective photography.
Works by Gotà  are held in the collections of the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum and the Nagoya City Art Museum. In 2025, the Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired his photograph Memorandum (1947).
Works by Gotà  have been shown at institutions including the Nagoya City Art Museum, the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.