Nobuyoshi Araki MiMoca 2017 Exhibition Catalogue Photography Book
This Nobuyoshi Araki MiMoca 2017 Japan exhibition catalogue is a collectible photography book for readers and collectors seeking official show materials. Condition is good: softcover with light wear, and inner pages are VF-. Check the listing for details on contents, page count, and any included inserts. Shipping is available for $5 (see listing for carrier and delivery options). A practical choice for collectors of Japanese photography catalogues and antiquarian & collectible art publications.
| Location | Los Angeles, California US |
| Shipping | USD 5 · Flat |
| Seller |
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| Listing | FixedPriceItem · Completed |
| Start time | 2024-12-09T20:28:53.000Z |
| End time | 2025-01-09T22:39:51.000Z |
| Time left | PT0S |
| All returns accepted | ReturnsNotAccepted |
| Binding | Softcover, Wraps |
| Language | Japanese |
| Illustrator | Nobuyoshi Araki |
| Publisher | Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art |
| Topic | Photography |
| Country/Region of Manufacture | Japan |
| Subject | Art & Photography |
| Original/Facsimile | Original |
119 pp, 9" x 8.5" __ Since embarking as a photographer in the mid-1960s, Nobuyoshi Araki (1940-) has photographed cities, people, flowers, sky, and still lifes, viewing them all equally as everyday experiences, giving special treatment to none. Doing so, he has captured the “life” his subjects possess, with vivid realism, as well as “death” inseparable from “life.” In each photograph, the weight assigned to life and death seems to differ, a phenomenon, reflecting Araki’s own life and the ambivalence of life and death, that adds greater power and beauty to the photograph. This exhibition selects, from Araki’s immense oeuvre, photographic works manipulated in some form to make us more strongly conscious of life and death and to blur the border between them. This may involve printing corroded film, brushing paint on the photo, or using a cracked lens. These actions are motivated by Araki’s honest desires toward photography arising from his feelings at the time. The works show him stepping outside conventions to try something new and looking with great honesty at photography and himself. Then, as photographic works showing Araki’s life today, we are also displaying pieces created especially for this exhibition —“Flower Cemetary,” his homage to Yukio Nakagawa (1918-2012), the noted Ikebana master from Marugame, and “Northern Sky,” a work taken using the camera of a deceased friend and associate—and other new works. An exhibition revealing Nobuyoshi Araki’s profound oneness with photography.