Renowned photographer Kishin Shinoyama was indicted Thursday after he allegedly shot photos of a naked woman posing on a tombstone at a public cemetery.

Shinoyama, 69, was charged with public indecency and disrespect for a religious site for allegedly snapping the nude photographs in October 2008 at Tokyo's Aoyama Cemetery, the Tokyo District Prosecutor's Office said.

If convicted, Shinoyama faces up to six months in prison or a fine of up to ¥300,000.

The cemetery was one of a dozen public locations in Tokyo where two models posed nude for a photo collection titled, "No Nude by Kishin 20XX," which was released in January 2009.

Shinoyama said Thursday the models took off their clothes only briefly, "seconds or up to two minutes at the longest."

He was concerned about the definition of public indecency, which could discourage artistic expression, he said.

But he added, "I humbly accept the case as a lesson, and I will pursue my challenges to new forms of expression."

Shinoyama, a prolific photographer who for decades covered a variety of genres, shot the "Sante Fe" book that sparked Japan's so-called hair nude phenomenon in the 1990s, featuring teen actress Rie Miyazawa.