JAPANESE
PHOTOBOOKS
OF THE 1960s AND '70s
Ryuichi Kaneko and Ivan Vartanian
Hardbound,
9" x 12", 240
pages
200 color and 200 black & white illustrations
2009, Aperture
Edited by Ivan Vartanian
Text by Ivan Vartanian, Ryuichi Kaneko
From the Publisher:
The public profile of the Japanese photography book has recently
boomed, from near-complete obscurity to great desirability. And
not only for the aficionados. Photobooks that once were entirely
unknown outside Japan (except to a few well-informed scholars
and collectors) now sell at astronomical prices at auctions and
online. And yet the photobook has been central to the development
of Japanese photography, particularly in its postwar phase. To
sketch the stages of this boom: 1999's Fotografia Publica
included just one Japanese photobook, Kiyoishi Koishi's Early
Summer Nerves of 1937, plus two photo magazines from the
1930s, Nippon and Kôga; Andrew Roth's The Book of 101
Books (2001) listed four seminal titles by Hosoe, Kawada,
Araki and Moriyama; but it was not until 2004, with the first
volume of Martin Parr and Gerry Badger's indispensable The Photobook:
A History, that it began to be clear what a rich body of
work awaited excavation. Japanese Photobooks of the 1960s
and 70s may be seen as a culmination of this trajectory and,
as such, marks a very exciting moment in photo publishing and
in the history of photography. It presents 40 definitive publications
from the era, piecing together a previously invisible history
from some of the most influential works, as well as from forgotten
gems, and situating them against the broader historical and sociological
backdrop. Each book, beautifully reproduced through numerous spreads,
is accompanied by an in-depth explanatory text, and sidebars highlight
important editors, designers, themes and periodicals. A superb
production, Japanese Photobooks is a landmark celebration of the
distinct character and influence of the Japanese photobook.
|