Available Formats
Hardback, Multilingual edition
Published: 6th December 2020
Hardback, Multilingual edition
Published: 30th March 2024
Hardback, Multilingual edition
Published: 3rd April 2015
Hardback
Published: 1st July 2019
Araki: Impossible Love
By (Author) Nobuyoshi Araki
Steidl Publishers
Steidl Verlag
1st July 2019
Germany
General
Non Fiction
779.092
Hardback
368
1930g
A young woman with her legs spread wide; buttoned-up dressed workers on a city street. Contrasting photos like these of intensely private scenes, and snapshots of nameless passers-by are Nobuyoshi Araki's early commentary on the heterogeneity of Japanese society, calling the moral responsibility of its members into question. This book combines Araki's Tokyo series from his early works with a selection of his recent Polaroid collages and newly developed slide shows-all of them exploring the contradictions between anonymity and intimacy, the public and private sphere, reality and dream. The legendary Araki is one of the most influential and widely discussed artists today, one who deals with nakedness, sexuality and the body in a radical and realistic way. Through an extreme emotional and physical closeness with his subjects, he becomes not only part of their lives but plays a central role in his own photos, thus transcending voyeurism. Together with Nan Goldin, Larry Clark and Boris Mikhailov, Araki is considered one of the pioneers of intimate subjective photography. Art is all about doing what you shouldn't. Nobuyoshi Araki Co-published with C/O Berlin Exhibition: C/O Berlin, 8 December 2018 to 3 March 2019
Arranged chronologically, the book maps Araki's oeuvre as it unfolds, transforming his photo diary into a visual autobiography of a singular, subversive life in art.-- "AnOther"
The viewer remains the voyeur but this time, it is simply to witness a moment of privacy and it's a privilege to bear witness to such a secret vulnerability.--Ashley Yu "Musee"
Born in Tokyo in 1940, Nobuyoshi Araki worked in advertising after completing his studies in photography and film at Chiba University in Tokyo; he devoted himself exclusively to photography from the mid-1960s. Araki's oeuvre spans erotic portraits of women, artificial still lifes, images of plants, documentary-style depictions of everyday life, architectural photography, as well as diaristic photos of himself and his deceased wife Yoko. He has published around 400 books, shown in many international exhibitions, and his work is part of important collections worldwide. Araki lives and works in Tokyo.