BARAKEI
Eikoh Hosoe
Hardbound,
10½" x 16½",
100 pages
43 tritone illustrations
2008, Aperture
edited by Oliver Halsman Rosenberg
From the Publisher:
In the fall of 1961, the photographer Eikoh
Hosoe, then in his late 20s, agreed to make a series of portraits
of the controversial author Yukio Mishima. Hosoe visited Mishima
at his home and was immediately intrigued by a marble mosaic of
the zodiac in the middle of Mishima's lawn. Taking the rubber
hose with which Mishima's father was watering the garden, Hosoe
wrapped it around the half-naked writer (who had been sunbathing)
and photographed him in various poses against the zodiac mosaic
and around the grounds. They named their collaboration Barakei
(bara' meaning 'rose' and 'kei' meaning 'punishment,' although
the two decided on Killed by Roses as the English title). The
original edition, designed by Kohei Sugiura, established the standard
for the two subsequent editions of 1971 (which chimed with Mishima's
suicide) and 1985. Aperture now issues this facsimile of the 1963
original, making available once again one of the most infamous
and intriguing photobooks of the twentieth century. This edition
has been lovingly produced by the Japanese art shop NADiff, in
close consultation with Eikoh Hosoe. It is published in a limited
edition of 500 copies for Aperture and 500 for NADiff. Each copy
is signed and numbered by the artist.'
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