Japanese Photobook [hot] Review

Before this, photobooks were functional. After this, they became political and poetic.

Moriyama’s Farewell Photography (1972) is arguably the genre’s Ulysses . It is a torrent of black ink. Faces are lost in shadow. Street signs dissolve into noise. The binding is deliberately cheap. When you turn a page, you often don’t know what you’re looking at. Moriyama wasn’t interested in representation; he was interested in the energy of seeing. To hold Farewell Photography is to hold a piece of punk rock nihilism. japanese photobook

: Pioneered by the Provoke movement (including Daido Moriyama), this style—meaning "rough, blurred, and out-of-focus"—challenged traditional notions of "beautiful" art to encounter a more genuine, raw reality. Before this, photobooks were functional

The Japanese photobook—known natively as shashinshū (写真集)—is far more than a mere collection of printed images bound together. While Western traditions traditionally prioritized the singular, framed photographic print hanging on a gallery wall, Japan developed a completely different philosophy. In Japanese visual culture, the book itself is the definitive medium of artistic expression. It is a torrent of black ink

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