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Overview"This work is edited by Akiko Miki, Yoshiko Isshiki and Tomoko Sato. It contains essays by Ian Jeffrey, Akiko Miki, Yuko Tanaka and Jonathan Watkins; interview by Hans Ulrich Obrist; and annotated bibliography by Kotaro Iizawa. Born in 1940, Araki is the contemporary of Japan's other great post-war photographers - Daido Moriyama and Shomei Tomatsu. And yet he epitomizes a new era and a new approach. Where the work of Moriyama and Tomatsu was inflected by the experience of war, atomic devastation and the humiliations of American occupation - which found expression in disintegrated, abstracted black and white - for Araki, the war was in the past.His photographic vocabulary was influenced by the vivid colours and glossy imagery of the new commercial culture. Until 1972, he worked for the Dentsu Advertising Agency. Araki was different in making his own life and feelings the central subject of his work: he didn't report on the world around him, like Moriyama, but on himself. Even when photographing the urban landscape, Araki rarely strays from his immediate neighborhood in Tokyo. His first book, ""Sentimental Journey"", 1971, an intimate account of his honeymoon with his wife Yoko, heralded the beginning of 40 years of 'I-photography' (a word he derived from the 'I-novel' a form of popular Japanese fiction written autobiographically and in the first person).For Araki, photography began as a visual diary which grew and grew into a hyperactive, obsessive-compulsive flood of images until the point of separation between his life and his photography crumbled. 'Photography is Life!' he declared. He photographs as continuously as he breathes. And he makes few distinctions between good or bad images. Araki is passionate about photography and equally passionate about sex. Sex is the energizing life force: and the act of photography is itself an erotic act, a declaration of his energy and desire for life. Women are his main subject - but they are also his medium: 'Woman is photography...I think that all the attractions in life are implied in women. There are many essential elements: beauty, disgust, obscenity, purity'.Araki's quintessential kinbaku shots - gorgeous geishas bound in rope or wire, dangling helplessly from the rafters - have a complex and critical relationship to the culture in which they exist, something often misunderstood by Western feminists. In Japan, it is prohibited to depict pubic hair. Araki's highly aestheticised nudes broke social taboos: on several occasions his exhibitions have been raided and he has been arrested by the police. Like de Sade many years before him, Araki can be seen as using pornography to challenge restrictive social conventions. Although Araki himself is typically romantic about his kinbaku images: 'I only tie up a woman's body because I know I cannot tie up her heart'." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Akiko MikiPublisher: Phaidon Press Ltd Imprint: Phaidon Press Ltd ISBN: 9780714849256ISBN 10: 0714849251 Pages: 720 Publication Date: 30 September 2008 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1,200 reproductions * essays by Ian Jeffrey, Akiko Miko, Yuko Tanaka and Jonathan Watkins * interview by Hans-Ulrich Obrist * a complete, illustrated, annotated bibliography of Araki's 200 plus books by Kohtaro Iizawa * anthology of Araki's writings edited by Tomoko Sato and translated into English for the first time * a chronology of Araki's life illustrated with personal picturesReviewsAuthor InformationTomoko Sato is a curator at the Barbican Art Gallery, London, where she has organized and curated a wide range of exhibitions. She has edited and published a number of books and catalogues Yoshiko Isshiki has been working with Araki for over 10 years and has been closely involved in all exhibitions of Araki's work in EuropeAkiko Miki is a curator at that Palais de Tokyo, Paris and contributor to art magazines such as Bijutsu Techo, Studio Voice, Tema Celeste and Exit Express Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |